Sightseeing OverviewLike a needle jabbing into the sky, the
CN Tower dominates Toronto’s cityscape and is its most famous attraction. Since its completion in 1976, the tower has attracted company - at its foot stands the
Rogers Center (formerly the
SkyDome), the world’s first retractable dome stadium, while further east is the
Air Canada Center (a state-of-the-art hockey and basketball arena). Immediately to the north is the dense cluster of office towers that comprise the Financial District, including some architectural wonders by Mies van de
Rohe (
Toronto-Dominion Center) and Santiago Calatrava (the galleria at
BCE Place). Interspersed between these (and even underlying many of the buildings) are some of the city’s main shopping areas, with the theaters and nightclubs of the Entertainment District to the west, and some of Toronto’s chief tourist attractions just to the north. The latter include
Toronto City Hall, a gem of modern architecture, the nearby
Art Gallery of Ontario, the vast collections of the
Royal Ontario Museum, and the medieval-inspired 20th-century castle,
Casa Loma, which stands a bit further to the north. In the city’s west end, the enormous, sweeping patch of green known as
High Park unfurls, while along the waterfront
Ontario Place and the
Canadian National Exhibition Grounds provide fun days out for families with children. Beyond the trail-laced ravine of the Don Valley, to the east of the center, is
The Beaches, with chic boutiques and a waterfront promenade.
Toronto is known as a city of neighborhoods and many of these are a short distance from the Financial District’s towers. Unlike many major North American cities, Toronto has a thriving, vital, leafy downtown that keeps home owners and families from fleeing to the suburbs. The city’s most affluent areas are Rosedale and Forest Hill - pleasant for walks and people-watching. Yorkville, a hippy enclave in the 1960s, predictably went chi-chi in the 1970s, today offering elegant cafés and restaurants, a
Prada store and even a postmodern park. Spadina Avenue is home to Toronto’s Chinatown, arguably North America’s best due to Toronto’s enormous Chinese community. Danforth Avenue is home to Greektown. Toronto has the highest population of Italians outside Italy and many of them have made their homes in Little Italy, west of the city center. Near the University of Toronto, the Annex is a trendy, popular neighborhood known for its lively nightlife and cultural scene. The area around Church and Wellesley Streets is home to the city’s out and proud gay and lesbian village.
Tourist InformationTourism Toronto
Suite 590, 207 Queen’s Quay West
Tel: (416) 203 2600
or 1 800 499 2514.
Website:
www.torontotourism.comOpening hours: Mon-Fri 0830-1700.
Ontario Travel Information Center
20 Dundas Street West
Tel: (416) 314 5899
or 1 800 668 2746.
Website:
www.ontariotravel.net Opening hours: Mon-Fri 1000-1900, Sat 1000-1800, Sun 1200-1700.
PassesThe
Toronto CityPass includes entry to the
Royal Ontario Museum,
CN Tower,
Art Gallery of Ontario,
Ontario Science Center,
Toronto Zoo and
Casa Loma. The pass is available from the participating attractions or from
CityPass (tel:
1 888 330 5008; website:
www.citypass.com).
Key Attractions:CN Tower
At a height of 553m (1,815ft), the
CN Tower is the world’s tallest tower and the defining symbol of this lakefront city. On a clear day, it offers stunning views of up to 120km (75 miles) across the surrounding cityscape and Lake Ontario. A glass-fronted elevator ride leads to the main section (at an equivalent to 114 storys high) where a terrifying glass floor enables visitors to stare 342m (1,122ft) straight down. A more leisurely view can be had from the revolving
360 Restaurant on the floor above. Another set of elevators leads to the
SkyPod, 33 storys further up. There is also a group of entertainment venues at the base of the tower, including two motion-simulator rides.
301 Front Street West
Tel: (416) 868 6937.
Website:
www.cntower.caOpening hours: Usually from early morning until 2200 or 2300 in the evening. Opening hours are adjusted seasonally, so visitors should call the tower to check.
Admission charge.
Casa Loma
Toronto seems an unlikely location for a castle, but since 1911 the soaring battlements of
Casa Loma have lent an element of magic to the city. The 98-room castle was completed in 1914 by Sir Henry Pellatt, a charismatic financier, industrialist and philanthropist, to be his home. Financial ruin forced its sale years later and the castle eventually became the popular tourist attraction it is today. The castle is a bizarre hybrid of a medieval-style stonework exterior (replete with turrets and battlements) and an early 20th-century interior. Highlights include the splendidly carved
Oak Room, secret passageways and pseudo-gothic
Great Hall, which has 18m-(60ft-) high ceilings. The 2-hectare (5-acre) gardens are open between May and October.
1 Austin Terrace
Tel: (416) 923 1171.
Website:
www.casaloma.orgOpening hours: Daily 0930-1700 (last admission 1600).
Admission charge.
Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO)
Currently in the process of expansion,
Canada’s premier art gallery, the
AGO, contains 50 galleries displaying temporary exhibitions and a large permanent collection of international art. The ground floor houses a European collection covering the Italian Renaissance, Flemish Masters, 17th-century French painting and the Impressionists, right through to 20th-century works by Chagall and Picasso and beyond. The gallery’s greatest attraction, however, is the Canadian section on the first floor, featuring a cross-section of work from the Group of Seven - a group of early 20th-century painters whose work embodies the sublime beauty of Canada’s boreal wilderness. The gallery is also home to the world’s largest collection of Inuit art, as well as works by Henry Moore, in the
Henry Moore Sculpture Gallery. It is worth allowing extra time to visit
The Grange, a restored 19th-century house, adjacent to the gallery. A dramatic C$207m expansion of the
AGO, led by the world-famous and Toronto-born architect Frank Gehry, is underway. It is scheduled for completion in spring 2008 and will increase the gallery’s exhibition space by nearly 50% and give the whole complex a new face that will stretch a full city block in a dramatic sweep of glass and Douglas fir.
317 Dundas Street West
Tel: (416) 979 6648.
Website:
www.ago.netOpening hours: Wed-Fri 1200-2100, Sat-Sun 1000-1730, closed Mon-Tues.
Admission charge.
Bata Shoe Museum
The
Bata Shoe Museum is the only museum of its kind in the world. Housed in an equally unique building shaped, appropriately enough, like a shoebox, the museum owns some 10,000 items of footwear, dating as far back as 4,500 years. Pieces range from Elvis Presley’s loafers and Queen Victoria’s ballroom slippers to 19th-century beaded Native American shoes and leather broad-toed Tudor shoes.
327 Bloor Street West
Tel: (416) 979 7799.
Website:
www.batashoemuseum.caOpening hours: Tues, Wed, Fri and Sat 1000-1700, Thurs 1000-2000, Sun 1200-1700.
Admission charge, free Thurs 1700-2000.
Royal Ontario Museum (ROM)
The
ROM is one of the most exciting museums in Canada, and it is in the process of getting even better due to a massive redevelopment project. The museum’s striking facade alone will take your breath away, but deeper within, the museum houses excellent collections featuring almost 6 million artifacts. The exhibits representing East Asia include a renowned collection of Chinese art, with wall paintings, snuff bottles and ceramic head cushions, as well as the only complete example of a Ming tomb in the west. Other levels handle the life sciences, the ancient Mediterranean and a Canadian heritage collection. Ten new ROM galleries opened in late 2005, and the spectacular new Michael Lee-Chin Crystal galleries and public spaces will open in 2007, featuring a grand new entrance and six new galleries overlooking the street. Designed by Daniel Libeskind, the new crystal will be covered in a luminous skin of aluminum and glass, and is certain to become an architectural jewel.
100 Queen’s Park (Bloor Street West at Avenue Road)
Tel: (416) 586 8000.
Website:
www.rom.on.caOpening hours: Sat-Thu 1000-1800, Fri 1000-2130.
Admission charge.
Ontario Science Center
The
Ontario Science Center was opened in 1969, with a mission to ‘open minds to science by creating environments that excite curiosity, inspire insights and motivate learning in science and technology’. This difficult task is successfully accomplished with over 800 fascinating exhibits. Themes explored in depth include the ‘Human Body’ and the ‘Information Highway’. Interactive exhibits include piloting a spacecraft or touching the hair-raising Van der Graaf generator. An
Omnimax Cinema offers a 24m (79ft) domed screen. A new 7,620 sq m (25,000sq ft) innovation center featuring over 50 unique interactive experiences geared to teenagers and young adults opened in 2006. It includes garbage art, fish music, a sound panel room, vibrating chair and other challenges designed to encourage skills, attitude and behaviors that enable innovation.
770 Don Mills Road
Tel: (416) 696 1000 (recorded information).
Website:
www.ontariosciencecenter.caOpening hours: Daily 1000-1700.
Admission charge.
Toronto Zoo
Situated on a sprawling 287-hectare (710-acre) forested piece of land next to the Rouge Valley, in the suburb of Scarborough, the
Toronto Zoo, one of the largest zoos in the world. The collection of over 5,000 animals is truly international, since the zoo features pavilions named Africa, the Americas, IndoMalaya, Australasia and the Malayan Woods. Underwater exhibits showcase polar bears, South African fur seals, beavers in their dens and otters swimming at eye level.
Meadowvale Road, 2km (1 mile) north of Highway 401
Tel: (416) 392 5900.
Website:
www.torontozoo.comOpening hours: Daily 0900-1930 (20 May-4 Sep); daily 0930-1630 (10 Oct-9 Mar); daily 0900-1800 (10 Mar-19 May and 5 Sep-9 Oct); last admission one hour before closing.
Admission charge.
Fort York
Fort York harks back to the days when Toronto, then as British as afternoon tea, was named York. As a colony, the city occasionally had to deal with revolutionaries to the south, so Fort York was founded in 1793 to ensure British control of Lake Ontario. Most of the buildings, however, date from 1814 because, during the War of 1812, the evacuating British blew up the gunpowder magazine - an explosion so unexpectedly large that it killed 10 of their own men, 250 advancing Americans, and destroyed a good deal of the fort. Highlights of Fort York include blockhouses, barracks, officers’ quarters, costumed staff and period demonstrations.
100 Garrison Road, off Fleet Street
Tel: (416) 392 6907.
Website:
www.toronto.ca/culture/fort_york.htmOpening hours: Daily 1000-1700 (late May-early Sep); Mon-Fri 1000-1600, Sat-Sun 1000-1700 (early Sep-late May).
Admission charge.
Gardiner Museum
After a two-year, C$20m makeover, the
Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art reopened in 2006. One of the world’s premier ceramic art museums, it now boasts 2,694 sq m (29,000 sq ft) of exhibition space and now features Asian ceramics, 19th-century ceramics made at Minton, and contemporary studio ceramics, in addition to collections including Ancient American, Italian Renaissance maiolica, and 17th and 18th century English delftware. The transformed museum also features a destination restaurant and a new shop specializing in artist-designed and handmade objects.
111 Queen’s Park
Tel: (416) 586 8080.
Website:
www.gardinermuseum.on.caOpening hours: Sat-Thu 1000-1800, Fri 1000-2100.
Further Distractions:The Distillery Historic District
The collection of 44 stone and red-brick buildings that began life as the early 19th-century Gooderham and Worts Distillery (once the largest in the British Empire) has been re-cast as a new arts and cultural district to rival the likes of Boston’s Faneuil Hall and Vancouver’s Granville Island. What is perhaps the best preserved example of Victorian industrial architecture on the continent is now a 5.3-hectare (13-acre), brick-paved pedestrian precinct of restaurants, galleries, boutiques, cafés, artists studios and a brewery, enlivened throughout the summer by a host of cultural and arts festivals and events. Tours of the site cover themes like architecture, galleries, a cinema (which was, for many years, used as a location for shooting films) and brewery.
55 Mill Street (corner of Parliament Street)
Tel: (416) 364 1177. For tours call (416) 642 0008
or 1 866 405 8687.
Website:
www.thedistillerydistrict.comOpening hours: varies according to individual venue.
Free admission.
Toronto Islands
Located in Toronto Harbour, facing the downtown skyline, the
Toronto Islands have long been regarded as a place for leisure and relaxation. They did not become islands, however, until 1858, when a storm caused a rift between the then peninsula and the mainland. Over the years, the main islands (Ward Island, Center Island and Hanlan’s Point) were popular resort areas and included the baseball park where Babe Ruth hit his first professional home run. In the last 50 years, as a 230-hectare (568-acre) public park, the islands have become popular picnicking places. Facilities include designated picnic areas (with fire pits), wading pools, softball diamonds, beaches, a farm, plenty of restaurants and the
Centerville Amusement Park. Today, the islands offer an ideal outdoor environment in which to take a waterside walk, relax at a café or enjoy an unparalleled view of the city’s skyline. The islands are only accessible by ferry.
Toronto Harbour
Tel: (416) 392
8193 (ferry information).
Website:
www.toronto.ca/parks/to_islands/island_index.htmOpening hours: All day, all year.
Centerville Amusement Park
Center Island
Tel: (416) 203 0405.
Website:
www.centerisland.caOpening hours: Daily from 1030 (2 Jun-4 Sep); Sat-Sun from 1030 in May and Sep (weather permitting).
Admission charge.
Paramount Canada’s Wonderland
Located in the northern suburb of Maple,
Canada’s Wonderland is, as its name suggests, an amusement park. Although not on quite the same scale as a Disney or Universal outfit, it nevertheless features over 200 attractions on its 134 hectares (330 acres) of landscaped grounds and 8-hectare (20-acre) waterpark. There are more than 60 rides, including
Cliffhanger, Drop Zone, Top Gun, Scooby-Doo’s Haunted Mansion and
Shockwave. Popular attractions include the
Psyclone ride, where visitors are swung around at the end of a giant pendulum, and the
Sledge Hammer, which
pummels riders with accelerated jumps and free-falls. There is also a
Nickleodeon Central theme area for kids.
9580 Jane Street (Highway 400, exit 33)
Tel: (905) 832 8131.
Website:
www.canadas-wonderland.comOpening hours: Daily 0900-2200 (Jun-Aug); Sat and Sun 0900-2000 (May, Sep and Oct).
Admission charge.
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The Columbus World Travel Guide has been published for 26 years and is sold in over 90 countries worldwide.
Word Travels is a comprehensive travel guide covering hundreds of cities and holiday resorts in more than 125 countries.
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