Onsite [at] OCAD U Created in 2007 as the OCAD Professional Gallery before taking on its current name in 2010 Onsite [at] OCAD U is features works by national and international professional artists and designers Student Gallery the Student Gallery curates and features works submitted by current OCAD students and recent alumni the Student Gallery used to be located at 285 Dundas St West and 76 McCaul Street it was created in the early 1970s. . ; . Designed by Eberhard Zeidler the Eaton Centre represented one of North America's first downtown shopping malls it was designed as a multi-levelled vaulted glass-ceiling galleria modelled after the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II in Milan Italy At the time of its opening in 1977 the interior design of the Eaton Centre was considered quite revolutionary and influenced shopping centre architecture throughout North America Plans originally called for the demolition of Old City Hall and the Church of the Holy Trinity but these were eventually dropped after a public outcry Ultimately Louisa Street Downey's Lane and Albert Lane were closed and disappeared from the city street grid to make way for the new office and retail complex Since the 2010s the Eaton Centre is the most visited tourist attraction in Toronto and the most visited shopping mall in North America Large sprawling retail centres are common in suburban Toronto Of the more notable such centres is Yorkdale Shopping Centre which opened in 1964 as one of the largest malls in the world the mall was constructed with a novel system for its retailers to receive merchandise Most shopping centres have their receiving doors located at the back side while Yorkdale was constructed with a one-way two-laned road for trucks running beneath the centre that leads directly to retailers' basement storages Other large shopping malls in Toronto include Scarborough Town Centre Fairview Mall and Sherway Gardens Institutional architecture, Modernist apartment towers of St James Town based on Le Corbusier's "towers in the park" concept The postwar years also saw the rise of apartment style housing in the 1960s and 1970s this kind of housing was mostly focused on low to middle income residents Beginning in the 1950s the city bulldozed older lower income neighbourhoods replacing them with housing projects ultimately destroying large sections of Victorian housing the earliest and most notorious example of such projects was Regent Park it replaced a large portion of Cabbagetown with a series of low-rise and high-rise buildings that quickly became crime-ridden and even more depressed than the neighbourhood it replaced in later years similar projects such as Moss Park and Alexandra Park were less disastrous but also far from successful Canada's densest community St James Town was built in this era as a high-rise community of private and public housing in separate towers also replacing a Victorian neighbourhood These patterns changed dramatically beginning in the 1970s and gentrification began transforming once poor neighbourhoods such as Cabbagetown into some of the city's most popular and expensive real estate Outside of the core even new neighbourhoods experienced significant high-rise apartment building construction as builders embraced the "towers in the park" design invented by Le Corbusier the towers were built further from the sidewalk leaving room on the property around the edifice for parking lawns trees and other landscaping They are typically simple brick-clad high-rise buildings with rectangular footprints and little ornamentation other than repeating series of balconies for each apartment However some apartment buildings from this era utilize less conventional designs in the "tower in the park" format such as the Prince Arthur Towers Jane-Exbury Towers and 44 Walmer Road designed by Uno Prii In 1972 the Canadian tax code was radically altered making rental housing much less attractive to investors At the same time deindustrialization opened a number of new areas to residential development the new projects took the form of condominiums This form of housing was introduced in the province's Condominium Act in the 1960s but it was not until the 1980s that condos become very popular An initial condo boom started in 1986 but the market collapsed in the late 1980s and early 1990s recession and many investors were badly mauled In 1995 condo prices were still 30% below the earlier highs. That year a new boom began in Toronto that has continued to this day An unprecedented number of new projects have been built in Toronto in 2000 Condo Life magazine listed 152 separate projects underway within the city of Toronto by 2007 the number of projects in the GTA had reached 247 This development has been concentrated in the downtown core especially in the former industrial areas just outside the central business district the largest such project is CityPlace a cluster of condo towers on former railway lands by the lake shore This $2 billion project will eventually consist of 20 different towers housing some 12,000 people. Transit-oriented developments are also common in Toronto such as at North York Centre and Sheppard East along the namesake subway line and Sheppard West along the subway line's future westward extension Commercial architecture. Wetlands on a lakeshore Ryerson has 39,300 undergraduate students and 2,600 students in the masters and Ph.D programs. Many of the students are from within the Greater Toronto Area but it also draws students from other countries. Ryerson is among the largest commuter schools in Canada with upwards of 90 percent of all students commuting to campus The university provides on-campus housing for 850 students in three residence buildings located on the university campus: the historic O'Keefe House at 137 Bond St; the International Living/Learning Centre (ILC) at 240 Jarvis St and Pitman Hall at 160 Mutual St the number of residence spaces available will double in the coming years with around 500 residence spaces in the HOEM building on Jarvis St and over 300 residence spaces in the new Daphne Cockwell Health Sciences Complex on Church St. This expansion follows increased demand by students to live on or close to campus Student media at the university include campus radio station CJRU (succeeding CKLN-FM and CJRT-FM) and the student newspaper the Eyeopener Students in the university's journalism program produce a second newspaper the Ryersonian and a biannual magazine the Ryerson Review of Journalism the newspaper "The Golden Ram" is produced by the Ryerson Engineering Student Society (RESS) Ryerson officially does not allow Greek Life but "unofficially" has the following Greek Letter Organization affiliations:.
5 Critical reception 5.1.6.3 English, Oshawa CMA (Whitby Clarington) 296,298 330,594 356,177 379,848 6.6, Indigenous peoples have been in the area since about 7000 BC At the time of European contact inhabitants were the Mi'kmaq the Maliseet and the Passamaquoddy Although these tribes did not leave a written record their language is present in many placenames such as Aroostook Bouctouche Petitcodiac Quispamsis and Shediac New Brunswick may have been part of Vinland during the Norse exploration of North America and Basque Breton and Norman fishermen may have visited the Bay of Fundy in the early 1500s European settlements! . 2005 64 147 6.2 Sports venues! Economy Toronto, 1 Organized crime 2.3 Geology, Round of 16 United States Colorado Rapids. . . ! !
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