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Hi friend, today I'm walking with you from Queens Quay West Street & Bay Street to Queens Quay West Street & Rees Street in Toronto Downtown Canada. On the way, we'll see Toronto Harbour Square Park, Jack Layton Ferry Terminal, Harbourfront Centre, Harbourfront Canoe&Kayak Centre, CN Tower, Harbour Tours Information, Queen’s Quay Terminal, Harbourfront HTO Beach...And we'll try a World Famous Canadian Snack "BeaverTails 🦫" 😋 Hope you enjoy! ❤️ Please feel free to leave your comments blow if you have any thought to share or question to ask. I'll be happy to chat with you : ) Chapters 00:02:56 Jack Layton Ferry Terminal 00:04:07 Toronto Harbour Square Park 00:15:37 BeaverTails Pastry 00:17:48 Harbour Tours Information 00:19:09 Queen’s Quay Terminal 00:28:58 Harbourfront Centre 00:29:44 Harbourfront Canoe&Kayak Centre 00:33:02 Harbourfront HTO Beach Toronto Waterfront The Toronto waterfront is the lakeshore of Lake Ontario in the city of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It spans 46 kilometres between the mouth of Etobicoke Creek in the west and the Rouge River in the east. To the east of Exhibition Place begins a long stretch of former commercial and industrial areas that are rapidly being converted into some of Toronto's most expensive residences and condominiums. Historic commercial structures such as the Tip Top Tailors Building and the Queen's Quay Terminal have been turned into luxury condominiums with waterfront views. Associated with this Queens Quay has become home to a number of high end shops and restaurants. This area is also home to the Harbourfront Centre, a large cultural centre occupying 10 acres (40,000 m2) of former industrial land including an old power plant that is now a gallery. Some large industrial structures remain though most are shut down, most prominently the imposing Canada Malting Silos. Just to the north of the Gardiner is the former railway lands that have also seen rapid development in the years since deindustrialization. This area is home to the Rogers Centre (SkyDome) and CN Tower, both of which are prominently visible from the waterfront. Between York and Yonge Streets is a cluster of large skyscrapers, many built in the 1970s in the first wave of redevelopment on the waterfront. This includes the Westin Harbour Castle Hotel and One Yonge Street. Also in this area was Captain John's Harbour Boat Restaurant, a permanently docked cruise ship that served as a restaurant popular with tourists (now closed, and the ship has been removed) and the Redpath Sugar Building which remains an industrial site. East of Yonge Street running to Cherry Street is a stretch of area known as the East Bayfront, centred on the Parliament Street slip. Currently a mix of warehouses and brownlands it is slated for development in the near future. Corus Quay is the first building to be built in the district as part of a public-private partnership led by TEDCO. It is expected that, in the next few years, thousands of new residences and millions of feet of commercial space will be built in this area. South of this, on two large projections separated by a ship canal, is the still-operating portion of Toronto Harbour which includes docking facilities for both freight and cruise ships.