The Eaton Centre Ontario Canada

The Eaton Centre Ontario Canada

The Eaton Centre Ontario Canada

The Eaton Centre Ontario Canada

CN Tower Toronto Canada

Toronto, Ontario, Canada - CN Tower Toronto.

The Art Gallery of Ontario

Toronto, Ontario, Canada - The Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO).

Chinatown Toronto

Downtown Chinatown, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Chinatown Toronto

Downtown Chinatown, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The Eaton Centre

The Eaton Centre

If you have ever been thinking if there is something outside the US, surely there is at the borderlines, the great Toronto Attractions that offers you amazing sights to enjoy each and every moment of your time here. There are multiple options and thousands of things to see here, so no matter even if you dedicate one month to visit all the places here you would face a shortfall of time.

The sprawling city of Toronto offers you amazing sight seeing along with varied downtown attractions and midtown boast of the best attractions of the place with wonderful accessible areas within the city limits. The visitors here enjoy every bit of the time with all new renovated and expanded Art galleries of Ontario. The other major prime most Toronto Attractions here are the Royal Ontario Museum, the Ontario Science centre and the Gardiner Museum and other completely renovated places of importance. Every single location in Toronto might take up an entire day, some of such locations hare Ontario Science centre, paramount Canada's wonderland and the Harborfront that is one of the best mind relaxing locations.

Given below is the list of the most exciting Toronto Attractions that are visited by millions of people every year, Toronto as a city possesses a vibrant mix of culture and history along with commercial importance of the place. Each of the locations stated below are easily accessible from Union Station in downtown Toronto that takes a 20-minute walk:


The Eaton Centre - the Eaton centre is one of the brightest and airy shopping mall that is located in the heart of downtown that has more than 250 stores of different brands worldwide. This place is best suitable for spendthrifts as it offers lots of budget shopping elements. The popular locations at downtown are the CN tower and the Eaton centre amongst the tourists.

Is a galleria mall featuring 320 shops and restaurants, 17 cinemas and a 400 room Marriott Hotel located in the heart of downtown Toronto. The mall boasts sales of $746 per square foot of retail space - the highest in North America - and was one of the first major "downtown" shopping malls on the continent. The Eaton Center is the number one tourist attraction in Toronto with more than 1,000,000 visitors a week.

Depending on the outcomes of the upcoming elections, it’s quite possible that many of us will find on Wednesday that some of our friends are Canadaphiles, or people who have an extreme fondness for (and in many cases, harbor empty threats to move to) Canada. Truth be told, there’s plenty to love about our great neighbor to the north, especially if you have an interest in malls and retail. Sure, they call Kmart “Zellers” (though they’re no longer the same company), and instead of TJMaxx, they have Winners. But in Canada, practically every major shopping center is enclosed (as a sweeping generalization!) and one of the largest malls in the world (The West Edmonton Mall) is up in the great white north.

Toronto’s Eaton Centre is perhaps Canada’s second-most famous shopping mall. Located in the center of the city between Yonge, Queen, Dundas, and Bay Streets, the 330-store center is the most popular tourist attraction in Toronto, Canada’s largest city. The mall stands on the site of the original flagship Eaton’s store, which was once one of Canada’s premier department store chains. The mall itself, along with the modern 1,000,000 square-foot Eaton’s flagship store, opened in 1977, with a second phase following in 1979. The mall immediately became one of the most successful in North America, and (as required by the city of Toronto), the mall’s interior remains open 24 hours a day since its construction userped several public streets.

The mall’s greatest feature is perhaps its vaulted glass ceiling, which stands an astonishing 127 feet above the first level. It’s easily one of the tallest and grandest malls that I’ve seen, and its busy, active Yonge Street frontage (which is the closest that Canada has to a “Times Square” district) is a sight to behold at night.

The mall today includes Sears (who purchased the bankrupt Eaton’s in 1999, and rebranded them 2001 or 2002ish), H&M, Canadian Tire, and Best Buy spread across 1,600,000 square feet. The Eaton Centre is also connected via skywalk to the nearby flagship of The Bay (or, in Quebec, La Baie), also known as The Hudson’s Bay Company, one of Canada’s largest remaining department store chains.

The Toronto Zoo

The Toronto Zoo

Situated on 710 acres of land, the zoo is the third larges in the world. It has more than 10 kilometers on trails through displays of more than 5000 animals separated by geographic regions. The walking trails are opened for cross-country skiing in the winter. The newly opened Savanna Exhibit features a 32 acre East African hiking experience.

Toronto Zoo - In Desperate Need of a Facelift

I just visited the Toronto Zoo on the weekend with my wife and six year old daughter. We had previously been to Wonderland the day before and had a fantastic day in the summer sun and heat with all the fun and exciting roller coaster rides, kids rides, the water park and lazy river. We had such a fantastic time we were sure to have the same fun time we had had a day earlier at Wonderland, but boy oh boy was I wrong.


When we arrived at the Toronto Zoo, we decided to get a stroller for my daughter as we were told that there was quite a bit of walking to see all the animals at the zoo. When we started walking the zoo site, we quickly noticed just how much walking we had to do just to see one section of the animals. Before the journey began I read about the exciting new coral reef exhibit and decided I had to see it first before anything else so we headed there. The much hyped was really just a large aquarium in a wall inside a room with some tropical fish in the tank. The corral reef or aquarium was beautiful with all the colors and colourful fish swimming around. All in all though I really did not find it lived up to the hype the colorful brochure suggested it was. When we finished there, we started walking to the next exhibit, and again we could not believe just how much walking we had to do to see any animals at all, so we decided to take the Zoomobile which was located at the front gate and paid to take the easy way to see all the animals.

The zoomobile was not very impressive as you still could not really see many animals at all during the course of the trip. At this point we were really disappointed with the overall amount of distance that you needed to go to see any of the zoo animals. Our observations were that after being to Granby Zoo in Quebec, Wonderland and other parks and zoos, the Toronto Zoo which is run by the city of Toronto fell extremely short on fun and excitement with no rides for kids, no water park other than a small area with sprinklers and water fountains and literally miles and miles of walking to see anything of any real value. The zoo reminded me of a building or restaurant in dire need of a facelift. We were so disappointed with the experience that we left without even seeing what the zoo had to offer. My next trip to Toronto with my family will be two days at Wonderland instead of visiting the Toronto Zoo.

The Art Gallery of Ontario

The Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO)

Toronto, Ontario, Canada - The Art Gallery of Ontario

Canada's oldest Art Gallery houses more than 15,000 works of art and attracts more than 800,000 visitors a year. It has the world's largest collection of sculptures by Sir Henry Moore and has recently undergone a massive expansion designed by the world-famous Toronto architect Frank Geary, best known as the designer of the Bilbao Museum.

Toronto's great gallery of art, strong in European and Canadian art, has been enriched and extended many times since the early 20th century, when it inherited the splendid Georgian mansion, The Grange. It is at present undergoing a major expansion to house the Thomson Collection of about 2,000 works given to the gallery by Canadian millionaire and art collector, Kenneth Thomson.

View of a room of historical European works at the redesigned Art Gallery of Ontario

The European collections include many old masters, among them Brueghel the Younger, Tintoretto, Rembrandt, Frans Hals, de la Tour, and Poussin. Most of the late 19th- and early 20th-century movements in painting are represented; among the pictures by the French Impressionists are canvases by Monet, Gauguin, Degas, and Renoir, and there are works by Chagall, Picasso, Dufy, and Modigliani. This collection will be enhanced by the addition of such works as the "Massacre of the Innocents" by Peter Raul Rubens, part of the Thomson Collection. The evolution of Canadian art can be followed, both in Quebec, with fine pictures by artists such as Joseph Legare and James Morrice, and most comprehensively of all, in English Canada, where there is a splendid selection of works by the Group of Seven and their associates. A real attraction is an innovative installation where you are taken through an intimate encounter with one of Canada's modern masterpieces.

View of a room at the redesigned Art Gallery of Ontario displaying the works of Betty Goodwin

The setting for the magnificent and unrivaled collection of Henry Moore sculptures dates from 1974 and was designed by the artist himself. Bronzes, plasters, and plaster maquettes are displayed in a large space with natural light entering the ceiling. The gallery's collection of Henry Moore's works contains several "Reclining Figures," one of the sculptor's favorite themes.

Chinatown Toronto

About Chinatown, Ontario

Chinatown Restaurants :- Toronto's Chinatown is one of the largest in North America and has come to reflect a diverse set of Asian cultures through its shops and restaurants, including Chinese, Vietnamese, and Thai.

Chinatown Restaurants :- Originally Toronto's Chinatown was located on Dundas Street, but with the building of City Hall in the 1960's, the shops and restaurants were forced to closed and move to the current area but there are still a few Chinese businesses that remain near City Hall today.

Chinatown Restaurants :- Chinatown's population has changed since the 1990's with an exodus of young Chinese and an influx of Vietnamese, who are now turning some parts of Chinatown into Little Saigon. With the ageing Chinese population, most of the better known restaurants along Dundas Street have closed and the area has seen a rise in Latin-American immigrants moving in. The face of Chinatown is changing quickly and with the rising gentrification, Chinatown may lose its distinct style.

Toronto's Chinatown Restaurants

Chinatown's restaurants have become very diverse and prices can have an extreme variance because of the large body of university students that live in the area. Differentiating between bad cheap and good cheap can be a harrowing experience, which is why HiHenry.com is your new friend. Choose from thousands of Toronto's best and cheapest restaurants, complete with reviews, menus and restaurant details. With HiHenry.com, you'll always end up at the restaurant that's right for you.


Canada's first Chinatowns, in the British Columbia cities of Victoria and Vancouver, were formed by the thousands of immigrants from villages in Kwantung Province who came to work as labourers on the Canadian Pacific Railway. Their willingness to work long hours for much less pay created a growing animosity; rampant unemployment and the perception that the Chinese were taking the local jobs brought resentment and discrimination. The two west coast settlements grew out of that prejudice and enmity; they were as much bastions as communities.

When the railway was completed, many Chinese headed east, to cities like Toronto, ironically escaping racism on the railway built to unite a nation.

By 1900, there were two hundred Chinese residents in Toronto, and most worked in laundries. Chinese Canadians now comprise the largest ethnic group in what the United Nations has designated the world's most multicultural city. After English, Chinese is the most spoken language in the homes of The Greater Toronto Area. The small pocket of hand laundries at the turn of the century has evolved into six distinct Chinatowns with a combined population of half a million And they no longer do laundry.


1. Downtown Chinatown

Toronto's original Chinatown was located in the area now occupied by the twelve-acre complex of the "new" city hall. During its construction in the early 1960s, the Chinese community, by then the third largest in Canada, moved to its present site at the crossroads of Spadina Avenue and Dundas Street.

Downtown Chinatown has all the vitality and hustle bustle street energy that is characteristic of similar neighbourhoods around the world. The wide promenades of Spadina become extensions of stores and narrow to single file in front of makeshift stands displaying fruits and vegetables, labelled with Chinese characters drawn on pieces of cardboard. Lychees and rambutans hang in bunches from canvas awnings; a sliced durian is displayed, the foul odour hanging like a fetid cloud. It seems like every other store has barbequed ducks and whole pigs hanging in the window. Wing Fong, Hong Fok, Ting Hing, Po Chi Tong, Chung Mee -- trading companies, herbalists, and restaurants have names that form a tone poem.

Neon signs flash the message "Herbalist and Acupuncturist on Duty". There is a clamour as a press of jostling customers throng around a hole in the wall shop, which is selling assorted vegetables on a foot long bun for a dollar each. A monk in a grey robe stands in the middle of the people-thick sidewalk, an alms bowl on a box in front of him; the crowd flows around him like water around a rock. His hands gesture towards the bowl with choreographed, ritualistic, articulated moves; a serene smile is locked on his face.

Merchandise lines the steep steps to the basement location of the Tai Kong Supermarket; inside, the narrow aisles are bustling. On the floor, a small Buddhist shrine protects against evil spirits. The miniature temple has a golden dragon motif and is strung with red lights; tiny golden cups of tea and pieces of apples and oranges have been placed as offerings. Numerous sticks of incense fill the air with wisps of sandalwood

In a doorway, two elderly women in baggy pyjama-like pants and Mao style tops sit on their haunches behind overturned cardboard boxes on which are displayed a few bunches of chives, a couple of white radishes, and several stalks of Bok Choi. One is clipping her nails, both are smoking, and neither seems interested in making a sale as they speak, simultaneously, in low tones.

Near a passenger shelter jammed with people awaiting streetcar number 510, a monk in a saffron robe, his head freshly shaved, paces while talking on a cell phone.

A sandwich board sign promoting the services of an astrologer and geomancer advertises, in both Chinese and English, his mystical talent as a "destiny reform specialist"

At the corner of Dundas and Huron is the Chinese Gospel Church, which offers services in Cantonese, Mandarin, and English. Across from the church is the Ten Ren's Tea Shop which has a large display of hand crafted teapots as well as a vast selection of teas, including one called "monkey pick" since it is harvested from steep cliffs by specially trained monkeys In front of a traditional medicine shop, barrels are mounded with different varieties of ginseng, dried mushrooms, ground seashells, pieces of antler, and dried seahorses. There are boxes of what appears to be animal tongues priced at $30 a pound.

Noticing our curiosity at the various items, the owner, in spite of his limited English, attempted to explain. Picking up a piece of ginseng, he tapped his chest with the palm of his hand; he pointed to the dried seahorses and then put his hand on his stomach. When we asked about the tongues, he seemed reluctant. We soon realized that his hesitancy was in deference to the presence of a lady, for when Doris turned and walked a few steps away, he whispered "Viagra", apparently one of the few English words he knew, and then, with a wide grin, made the universal sign with his forearm. By gesture he indicated that this elixir was consumed in the form of tea, and then with thumbs up exclaimed, "Good".

The street sounds are suddenly punctuated by exploding firecrackers and the beating of drums as four men under a dragon costume herald the opening of a restaurant and augur good fortune by driving away evil spirits.

To the north and south of the Spadina and Dundas intersection are two "gateways"; unlike the large traditional Chinese gates, which span streets, both of these are in the broad, tree-lined median used by streetcars. At each location is a pair of red columns at the top of which are figures from Chinese mythology; a phoenix, a dragon, a unicorn, and a monkey flow together and intertwine to create the two sculptures entitled "Gateway", created by Millie Chan.

Another pair of columns has been erected in the median further south on Spadina on either side of the streetcar tracks. On the top of the east side column there is a dragon, and on the west side column is a cornucopia. Created by David Hlynsky and Shirley Yanover, the monuments not only symbolize the union of eastern and western cultures, but also perhaps reflect the Asian concept of the west as a land of plenty and opportunity.

Although the majority of enterprises in the area are located in traditional shophouses, there are two mall concept establishments of note. Chinatown Centre, on the west side of Spadina, south of Dundas, has numerous glassed in stores built around an open middle. Street level and second floor stores sell such diverse items as shoes, clothes, electronics, Asian CDs and videos, jewellery, and cameras, as well as popular tourist chinoiserie as silk slippers, fans, kimonos, emerald coloured Buddhas, back scratchers, and replica thousand dollar bill key chains. In the basement level is a food court with outlets such as "Dragonball Deli." Each eatery prominently displays a green "Pass" certificate issued by the Health Department, which inspects all Toronto restaurants.

We were at one of many luggage stores in the centre and quickly learned that haggling over prices is not only acceptable, but also expected. A two-piece set of hand luggage on wheels with matching shoulder bag was discounted by twenty percent and then an additional ten percent with very little prompting. As is the custom in most stores in the area, both the sales tax and the goods and service tax, which normally add fifteen percent to the bill, were waived.

"Competition is cut throat," the vendor explained with an exaggerated wince, and then repeated for emphasis, "Cut throat. If I didn't also do tailoring, I would be bankrupt. Finished."

In our conversation with him we mentioned that we were going up to the third level for dim sum at a restaurant that we had been to a couple of years ago. He shook his head. "It closed over a year ago. Too much competition. It's cut throat."

Dragon City, on the southwest corner of Spadina and Dundas, is a smaller version of Chinatown Centre. Establishments like Dai Kuang Wah Herbs, Ginseng and Antler Market stand near a Giorgio Armani boutique. At Yummy Refills, bubble teas are available in numerous flavours, and signs advertise quick snacks like "Counterfeit Shark's Fin Soup", "Pork Intestine", and "Pig Skin with Radish".

There is no difficulty in finding a place to eat in this neighbourhood; restaurants abound. One of the most popular, Bright Pearl Seafood Restaurant, is located in the distinctive yellow walled, green tile roofed Hsin Kuan Centre at 346-348 Spadina. Guarded by two lions, the entrance to the second floor banquet hall is around the corner on St. Andrew Street. Scores of varieties of dim sum on carts stacked almost to the tottering point with bamboo steamers and are wheeled by ladies who sing out their wares in Cantonese, their voices barely audible over the echoing din. In the evening the room is much quieter and less hectic as dim sum gives way to Cantonese cuisine on a menu featuring over a hundred and fifty choices.

Other restaurants along Spadina that are always busy, a reliable indicator of quality and reasonable prices, include Lee Garden at number 331 which lists the day's specials on a chalk board, Swatow at number 309 which specializes in Chiu Chow cuisine, and Lucky Dragon at number 418 which features both Hunan and Szechuan cooking. Peking style cooking, including a large selection of vegetarian dishes can be found at the popular Champion House at 480 Dundas where the house specialty is Peking duck

Downtown Chinatown is in the midst of a transformation that has been in progress over the last few years; there is an ever-growing Vietnamese presence. Although most of the older Chinese are remaining in the area, the younger generations have chosen to relocate to the northern suburbs.

Restaurants especially reflect the Vietnamese influence. Pho eateries are everywhere, and it is easy to discover those with the best food since they are always crowded. One of the busiest is Pho Hung at 350 Spadina; it is easily found because of an unusual landmark in front-a cat stands on a large chair, which sits atop a red column.

We visited at two o'clock on a Tuesday afternoon and there was a line up. Sitting at one of the twenty or so tables was akin to eating on an airplane, in economy class. The cramped seating required that elbows be pressed tight to the sides, making chopstick use even more challenging. The flavourful rich pho made up for the confined conditions. Steaming large bowls about the size of a tureen were overflowing with thinly sliced beef on top of rice noodles, bean sprouts, chopped shallots, and coriander; side dishes provided additional crispy bean sprouts, sprigs of Vietnamese mint, lime wedges, fish sauce, garlic sauce and tiny green chili peppers which should be avoided unless you enjoy eating fire. Like most pho houses in the area, Pho Hung forgoes décor to concentrate on the food. In the summer, there is a covered patio along St Andrews that doubles the seating capacity.

Two other Vietnamese restaurants that are always busy are Sai Gon Palace at 454 Spadina where the Special Beef Pho, number one on a menu of 173 items, is exceptional, and Bun Saigon at 252 Spadina. As the name suggests, the latter specializes in "Bun", a vermicelli soup with radishes, carrots, basil leaves, and bean sprouts with a choice of beef or chicken.

2. Chinatown East

As the population of the Spadina and Dundas neighbourhood grew, and property became expensive, a second Chinese community formed around the intersection of Broadview Avenue and Gerrard Street, in Toronto's east end.

Like its downtown counterpart, the road signs are in both Chinese and English, and like downtown, it is a lively shophouse neighbourhood with living quarters above stores with street displays that burst out onto the sidewalks. Salted black duck eggs are piled beside chicken eggs that have been boiled in a mixture of medicinal herbs. Red Dragon Fruit, their white meaty flesh flecked with thousands of black seeds are individually wrapped and stacked in a mound.

At a makeshift display on numerous inverted boxes, a girl of about ten folded and organized T-shirts into stacks according to size and colour. Finding the correct size was easy, but the desired colour was not.

"This is nice," the young vendor suggested, spreading the shirt wide in front of her. "Eight dollar," she shouted from behind the shirt. As she reappeared, she saw my shaking head, and frowning, she folded it up and put it into a plastic bag. "OK. Five dollar. Take."

We entered a traditional apothecary and were greeted with glances of suspicion, making us feel like trespassers. Our uneasiness quickly passed as the herbalist's initial misgivings gave way to an appreciation of our interest and a patient willingness to answer questions.

An elderly woman sat on a chair at the rear of the narrow store and was conferring with the doctor. We took turns discretely observing the consultation. Her tongue was thoroughly perused, her pulse was taken, her eyes were scrutinized; the patient and doctor conversed in low tones. A prescription was written and she took it to the counter to be filled, eyeing us with apprehension.

The herbalist spread three squares of paper on the glass counter top and then, using a hand held balance scale, carefully weighed out dried herbs, pieces of bark, slices of antler, portions of twigs, and additional unfamiliar items. Shell fragments were ground by mortar and pestle and added to the growing mounds on each paper square.

Floating in a large jar in the enclosed glass below the counter, a ginseng root floated in a brown tinged liquid, thin tendrils meandering in suspension; its price, we learned later, was $1200. Behind the counter were numerous drawers hiding arcane and mysterious ingredients. Lining the shelves were large jars containing dried items labelled with Chinese characters, which the herbalist, with much forbearance, and much straining for words, agreed to translate. "Abalone...shark fin...ah, fish maw...I don't know how you say this one in English...sea cucumber...ah, geoduck...brown fungus...I don't know how you say this one...."

Still regarding us with what appeared to be distrust, the patient left after paying thirty dollars for the consultation and fifteen dollars for her three doses of prescribed remedy.

We learned that the ingredients would be boiled for forty minutes, strained, and consumed as tea. Although he didn't disclose her malady, the herbalist had no reluctance in predicting the efficacy of the medicine. "It will work," he said matter of factly. "The doctor is very skilled."

When we inquired how the tea would taste, we were surprised by his offer to sample a tonic that he had steeping in the back room. Two small steaming cups of a foul smelling concoction were produced, and we soon regretted our curiosity. As the herbalist watched, peering over his reading glasses, his bushy eyebrows arched, we sipped the tea. It was vile. "Medicine is supposed to taste bad," he stated without smiling. "For good taste, eat dim sum."

Finding dim sum in this area, however, is now difficult. The Vietnamese presence seen in Downtown Chinatown has occurred in this neighbourhood to such a degree that the sobriquet "Little Saigon" is now used.

Pho restaurants are plentiful. Again using the busy factor as an indicator of quality, Pho Hung Long at the corner of Broadview and Gerrard and Pho Xe Lua at 625 Gerrard are the most popular eateries. Pho Xe Lua, which also has a location on Spadina, has a menu with over seven hundred items. Our lunch of two huge bowls of beef pho, and shared orders of deep fried calamari, and both fried and cold spring rolls, with tea came to $16.

While the older Chinese are content to remain in both Chinatown East and Downtown Chinatown, a desire for newer, larger homes on more spacious lots, along with the wish to integrate, have prompted the younger generations to join the waves of new immigrants from Hong Kong who have avoided the city's ethnic pockets in favour of settling in the suburbs, towns, and cities that fringe Toronto's metropolitan area. To meet the changing demographics, the construction of Chinese theme plazas and malls quickly followed. With modern malls replacing traditional shophouse neighbourhoods, the satellite Chinatowns came into existence.

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More