; Ethnic group Population % Um al-Qura Islamic School, One King Street West is a hotel that incorporated a postmodern tower into the former Dominion Bank building the original building was completed in 1914 Many of Toronto's early hotels were small inns and taverns that were built along each of the major routes out of the city the oldest surviving hotel in Toronto is Montgomery's Inn which was built in 1832 the Lambton House is another surviving hotel structure that also served those travelling on Dundas Both hotels had since been converted as museums The arrival of the railroad in the mid-nineteenth century dramatically changed travel patterns and new hotels from this era were clustered around the railroad stations Outside the central core smaller hotels grew up to serve the stations in what were then the outer reaches of the city in the west these included the Gladstone Hotel and the Drake Hotel while in the east New Broadview House Hotel and the New Edwin Hotel were built The twentieth century saw a new generation of hotels much larger and more monumental than before as the skyscraper came to prominence the King Edward Hotel was established in 1903 and is the oldest major hotel still in operation in the city in 1927 the Queen's was demolished and replaced by the Royal York Hotel At the time the new hotel was the tallest building in Canada and quickly became the city's most elite lodging in the northern part of the city this era also saw the erection of the Park Plaza in 1929 The 1970s and 1980s saw a number of major hotel projects in central Toronto with the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hilton Sutton Place and Four Seasons adding thousands of new rooms to the market the economic downturn at the end of the 1980s saw several hotels run into financial trouble Since the mid-2000s a booming real estate market especially in downtown Toronto has led to a number of new hotel projects often in combination with condominium projects An unprecedented number of major hotel projects were completed in central Toronto including the St Regis Toronto (formerly known as Trump International Hotel and Tower then the Adelaide Hotel Toronto) the Ritz-Carlton Living Shangri-La and a new Four Seasons Hotel and Residences Toronto Main Streets, 3.1 Line 5 Eglinton. ! . Toronto is Canada's largest media market and has four conventional dailies two alt-weeklies and three free commuter papers in a greater metropolitan area of about 6 million inhabitants the Toronto Star and the Toronto Sun are the prominent daily city newspapers while national dailies the Globe and Mail and the National Post are also headquartered in the city the Toronto Star the Globe and Mail and National Post are broadsheet newspapers StarMetro is distributed as free commuter newspapers Several magazines and local newspapers cover Toronto including Now and Toronto Life while numerous magazines are produced in Toronto such as Canadian Business Chatelaine Flare and Maclean's Daily Hive Western Canada's largest online-only publication opened their Toronto office in 2016. Toronto contains the headquarters of the major English-language Canadian television networks CBC CTV Citytv Global the Sports Network (TSN) and Sportsnet Much (formerly MuchMusic) M3 (formerly MuchMore) and MTV Canada are the main music television channels based in the city though they no longer primarily show music videos as a result of channel drift Tourism.
D 4.4 Land sale system 4 Late 1990s 0.6% The four Atlantic Provinces are Canada's least populated with New Brunswick the third least populous at 747,101 in 2016 the Atlantic provinces also have higher rural populations New Brunswick was largely rural until 1951; since then the rural-urban split has been roughly even. Population density in the Maritimes is above average among Canadian provinces which reflects their small size and the fact that they do not possess large unpopulated hinterlands as do the other seven provinces and three territories New Brunswick's 107 municipalities cover 8.6% of the province's land mass but are home to 65.3% of its population the three major urban areas are in the south of the province and are Greater Moncton population 126,424 Greater Saint John population 122,389 and Greater Fredericton population 85,688 Ethnicity and language. . Indian reserve, 6.3 Trade Peterborough Victoria Northumberland and Clarington Catholic District School Board[c] Halton Catholic District School Board Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board[d] Toronto Catholic District School Board York Catholic District School Board, 5.1 United Nations Development Group. 3.2 Rise of the suburbs Faculty of Community Services King Green tick Green tick! U.S News & World Report Global 816. !
Unofficial