11 Managers (including General Managers Acting General Managers), 1.2.2 Religious schools Toronto Ontario Canada Business directory. . Main articles: Charles Poulett Thomson 1st Baron Sydenham and Province of Canada Abelard School The modernist design of Toronto City Hall was a result of a competition after the original proposal was negatively received the photo was taken in 2008 Toronto is the provincial capital of Ontario the Romanesque Ontario Legislature is one of the most prominent monuments in the city forming a terminating vista at the end of University Avenue to the east of the legislature are a number of governmental buildings with the best known being the Whitney Block Constructed over many decades they embrace a number of different styles the provincial government have been unwilling to pay for structures as lavish as those of the private sector and few of the provincial buildings are of much prominence Two of the most distinct and well known structures in downtown Toronto are the old and current city halls the Old City Hall was built in 1899 and is a prominent example of the late Victorian Romanesque Revival style Across the street is the starkly different new Toronto City Hall opened in 1965 This brashly modernist structure was designed by Finnish architect Viljo Revell it fronts Nathan Phillips Square which was also designed by Revell Today both buildings are considered symbols of the city the 3D Toronto sign was installed in Nathan Phillips Square for the 2015 Pan American Games Post-secondary educational institutions. Completed in 1927 Princes' Gates is a neoclassical triumphal arch The most prominent landmark in Toronto and its best known symbol is the CN Tower it was the world's tallest free-standing structure for 31 years from its completion in 1975 until Burj Khalifa in Dubai United Arab Emirates surpassed it in 2007; it remains the tallest free-standing tower in the Western Hemisphere the CN Tower is used as an observation tower as well as a communications tower Another landmark structure is Casa Loma Constructed by E J Lennox during the early 1910s it is a Gothic revival-style castle located on Walmer and Davenport roads it was originally the residence of Sir Henry Pellatt a Canadian financier and soldier the city later took over the castle when Pellatt could no longer afford to keep it the building presently operates as a museum The Princes' Gates is a neoclassical style triumphal arch monumental gateway at Exhibition Place it was built to commemorate the 60th anniversary of Canadian Confederation and was to be named the Diamond Jubilee of Confederation Gates the structure's name was changed when it was learned that Edward Prince of Wales and Prince George were travelling to Toronto the princes cut the ribbon on the structure on August 30 1927 Prince's Gate was designed local architectural firm Chapman and Oxley The Rouge River and its valley at Rouge National Urban Park the Rouge Valley is one of many hills and valleys in the area that was carved out during the last glacial period Main article: Toronto ravine system.
; . Bnei Akiva Schools of Toronto. . Toronto Victorian-era Bay-and-gable houses are a distinct architectural style of residence that is ubiquitous throughout the older neighbourhoods of Toronto The pre-amalgamation City of Toronto covers the area generally known as downtown and also older neighbourhoods to the east west and north of downtown It is the most densely populated part of the city the Financial District contains the First Canadian Place Toronto-Dominion Centre Scotia Plaza Royal Bank Plaza Commerce Court and Brookfield Place This area includes among others the neighbourhoods of St James Town Garden District St Lawrence Corktown and Church and Wellesley From that point the Toronto skyline extends northward along Yonge Street Old Toronto is also home to many historically wealthy residential enclaves such as Yorkville Rosedale the Annex Forest Hill Lawrence Park Lytton Park Deer Park Moore Park and Casa Loma most stretching away from downtown to the north East and west of downtown neighbourhoods such as Kensington Market Chinatown Leslieville Cabbagetown and Riverdale are home to bustling commercial and cultural areas as well as communities of artists with studio lofts with many middle- and upper-class professionals Other neighbourhoods in the central city retain an ethnic identity including two smaller Chinatowns the Greektown area Little Italy Portugal Village and Little India along with others Suburbs, English and French displayed on a gantry sign Communities with sizeable Francophone populations are able to receive provincial services in French The principal language of Ontario is English the province's de facto official language, which is spoken natively by about 70 per cent of the province's population according to the 2011 census There is also a French-speaking population concentrated in the northeastern eastern and extreme Southern parts of the province where under the French Language Services Act, provincial government services are required to be available in French if at least 10 per cent of a designated area's population report French as their native language or if an urban centre has at least 5,000 francophones Roughly 4 per cent of Ontarians speak French as their mother tongue and 11 per cent are bilingual speaking both English and French according to the 2011 census Other languages spoken by residents include Arabic Bengali Cantonese Dutch German Greek Gujarati Hindi Italian Korean Malayalam Mandarin Persian Polish Portuguese Punjabi Russian Sinhalese Somali Spanish Tagalog Tamil Tibetan Ukrainian Urdu and Vietnamese Economy, St Catharines CMA (Niagara Falls Welland) 377,009 390,317 392,184 406,074 3.5 Faculty of Science. ; .
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