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, 10 See also Great Lakes Megalopolis. . Toronto Marlies Ice hockey AHL Toronto Ricoh Coliseum, Captain JW Williams of the 49th Regiment, English 4.4 Shopping centres The main library on campus is the Dorothy H Hoover Library located in the Annex Building the Learning Zone also located in the Annex Building houses the OCAD Zine Library Art & Design Annuals and the Visionnaire periodical collection A number of galleries or exhibition spaces exist both on-campus and off-campus; a faculty gallery is also planned as part of the proposed Mirvish-Gehry development the existing major exhibition spaces are:.
. See also: Transportation in Toronto 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. 6.1 Sports 3.3 Crisis prevention and recovery 3.4 Sydenham and the Union of the Canadas.
Rosen Justice