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89 Chestnut Residence is a university residence operated by the University of Toronto, opposite the downtown Toronto DoubleTree hotel (formerly the Metropolitan Hotel) at 89 Chestnut Street. It was converted from the Colony Hotel in 2004 and turned into a student residence to accommodate the incoming double cohort in 2003 and 2004.
254-256 McCaul Street [RM] 1912 263 McCaul Street [OA] Faculty of Medicine 1915 C.H. Bishop Formerly headquarters of the Toronto Board of Education, called the Old Admin Building. Connected to the Health Sciences Building via an elevated walkway. 370 Huron Street [CA] 1884 Campus Co-Op Day Care Centre 455 Spadina Avenue [TT] 665 Spadina Avenue [XG]
200 Winchester Street (Toronto Necropolis) Cabbagetown: Old Toronto 6, 18 Toronto Necropolis Superintendent's Lodge 1872 200 Winchester Street (Toronto Necropolis) Cabbagetown: Old Toronto 18 45–49 Front Street East 1873 W. R. Strickland Commercial/industrial 45–49 Front Street East St. Lawrence: Old Toronto [40] 106 Huron Street 1873
10 Toronto Street Toronto ON 43°38′59″N 79°22′34″W / 43.6498°N 79.3762°W / 43.6498; -79.3762 ( Toronto Street Post Office / Bank of Canada
For ten years, Shomrei Shabbos was housed in rented buildings along Richmond Street. The first permanent synagogue was on Chestnut Street. A year later, the first rabbi was brought to Toronto, Rabbi Joseph Weinreb of Busk, Galicia. In 1933, the synagogue moved to a larger building that could seat 300 on the corner of Brunswick and Sussex.
At the time, it was the second-largest hotel in Toronto, behind only the Royal York Hotel. Sharp was unhappy with the partnership, and sold his 49 percent share in the hotel in 1976 for $18.5 million, and it was renamed The Sheraton Centre of Toronto. [7] The name has since been modified slightly to the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel.
The Toronto Mail Order Building complex - which eventually came to be known by the less cumbersome name of "the Mutual Street Building", continued to serve the needs of Simpsons-Sears. In 1971, the complex was connected to the department store chain's new head office building at 222 Jarvis Street .
Merged with Glen Rhodes United Church, building now home to Metropolitan Community Church of Toronto: St. Andrew's United Church: Downtown 1949 Merger of Old St. Andrew's United Church (from 1830) and Westminster (Yorkville Canada Presbyterian 1860)- Central (Yorkville Methodist 1841) in former Westminster (1892, gutted by fire 1922) building.