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Spadina Museum is currently undergoing a restoration to reflect the inter-war period with a focus on the 1920s. This video features a glimpse into the lives ...
Much Ado About Nothing Sept. 28-30, Oct. 5-8, Oct. 12-16 Spadina Museum: Historic House & Gardens, 285 Spadina Road Performances: 8pm -10pm Tickets: $20 Tick...
M and I hang out around Spadina house.
bianca begins her investigation.
im back with more ghost trackers a little something for halloween we investigate the spooky spadina house.
Much Ado About Nothing Sept. 28-30, Oct. 5-8, Oct. 12-16 Spadina Museum: Historic House & Gardens, 285 Spadina Road Performances: 8pm -10pm Tickets: $20 Tick...
A walk from Spadina House, south to Yorkville, in 1999, when I was playing tourist in Toronto.
Let's take a look to the oldest mansion in Toronto, the Spadina House. There is more to mornings than your usual daily-paper-and-coffee habit. GMK showcases ...
we find out the winner.
Toronto Spadina House around 2003.
Spadina House Museum http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spadina_House http://www.toronto.ca/culture/museums/spadina.htm.
Spadina House was build in 1898 as a residence with the 3rd floor added in 1912.
The Spadina House gardens has a big yard and lots of flowers, constructed in 1898.
12th July 2011.
The face of the Spadina House.
12th July 2011.
Spadina Museum: Historic House & Gardens is currently undergoing a restoration to reflect the inter-war era, with a focus on the 1920s. The restoration will ...
12th July 2011.
Great pot of boiling liquid that makes good food.
12th July 2011.
Halifax.
Footage shot with a DJI Phantom 2 (aka Sally),GoPro 3 Black,Canon 70D,Mogopod over 5 days and 3 seasons. Toronto,Canada.
Visite minha página no facebook. https://www.facebook.com/imigrantenocanada Se preferiri envie um email para: olhardeimigrante@gmail.com.
For more information visit: http://www.house-connect.ca/listings/1481315-4k-spadina-ave-toronto-ontario-c2986493
Join Casa Loma and Spadina Museum for a private specialty tour of their historic gardens. At Casa Loma, learn about the transformation of Sir Henry Pellatt's...
Create your own video on http://studio.stupeflix.com/?w=1 ! Map of Toronto, 1894. Toronto Harbour, 1919. Subway construction on Yonge Street, 1949. A simulat...
Join Casa Loma and Spadina Museum for a private specialty tour of their historic gardens. At Casa Loma, learn about the transformation of Sir Henry Pellatt's...
These video clips were taken during my walking tour with famous Toronto historian and tour guide Bruce Bell on July 16, 2007. After meeting at the famous and eclectic OCAD Building (I call it the "gift box on stilts") just south of the University of Toronto, Bruce took us past the Grange, Toronto's oldest building, past the Art Gallery of Toronto to some of the mansions along Beverley and Baldwin Streets. Along the way Bruce explained to us the early history of Toronto, and the family compact -- a group of extremely wealthy and powerful English families that used to rule Toronto in the early days. We then walked westwards to Chinatown and the ethnic mix of the Kensington Market area which started as a Scottish market, then became a popular Jewish residential area in the 1910s and 1920s (evidenced by two local synagogues) and morphed into the diverse, multicultural and hip neighbourhood that it is today. Vendors sell fruits, vegetables, cheeses, dry goods, meat, fish, vintage clothing and all sorts of other unique items in this Bohemian neighbourhood. A great variety of different ethnic restaurants caters to eclectic tastes. We then visited Denison Square and admired a statue of one of Toronto's popular actors, Al Waxman, the "King of Kensington". We then continued on our walk through busy Chinatown to Toronto's Garment district along Spadina and Queen Avenues and then headed east along a variety of restaurants and bars on Queen Street West to end in front of the Italianate palace occupied by City TV. Along the way we got informed and entertained about Toronto's history from a small English enclave that started in 1793, to the exciting, vibrant and multicultural metropolis that it is today. You can read the full story at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos/chinatown_kensington.htm. The clips from this walking tour are part of my "Toronto Favourites" series and many more of these discoveries are to come. I am actually a travel writer, and whenever I am not out of town, I write about the city that I live in: Toronto, a city that has many cool places. I love to get out and explore the city and discover some new cool spots, and now you can enjoy them with me. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm. Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are going up right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html.
These video clips were taken during my walking tour with famous Toronto historian and tour guide Bruce Bell on July 16, 2007. After meeting at the famous and...
View virtual tour at http://www.myvisuallistings.com/vt/53628 Address: 188 Spadina Ave, Units #288 & 208, Toronto, M5T 3A4, Ontario Presented by Sutton G...
Toronto Travel: Chinatown http://www.fabulouslivingcoach.com Welcome to China......Ok, we're in Chinatown, Toronto. This is one of North America's largest Ch...
Powered by http://www.tanmarket.com - Spadina Avenue is one of the most prominent streets in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Running through the western section of...
http://www.torontopropertysource.com One Bedroom Condo at Neo Located at Concord City Place. Who Said You Can't Have It All? This Immaculate 1 Bed, Cityplace...
These video clips were taken during my walking tour with famous Toronto historian and tour guide Bruce Bell on July 16, 2007. After meeting at the famous and eclectic OCAD Building (I call it the "gift box on stilts") just south of the University of Toronto, Bruce took us past the Grange, Toronto's oldest building, past the Art Gallery of Toronto to some of the mansions along Beverley and Baldwin Streets. Along the way Bruce explained to us the early history of Toronto, and the family compact -- a group of extremely wealthy and powerful English families that used to rule Toronto in the early days. We then walked westwards to Chinatown and the ethnic mix of the Kensington Market area which started as a Scottish market, then became a popular Jewish residential area in the 1910s and 1920s (evidenced by two local synagogues) and morphed into the diverse, multicultural and hip neighbourhood that it is today. Vendors sell fruits, vegetables, cheeses, dry goods, meat, fish, vintage clothing and all sorts of other unique items in this Bohemian neighbourhood. A great variety of different ethnic restaurants caters to eclectic tastes. We then visited Denison Square and admired a statue of one of Toronto's popular actors, Al Waxman, the "King of Kensington". We then continued on our walk through busy Chinatown to Toronto's Garment district along Spadina and Queen Avenues and then headed east along a variety of restaurants and bars on Queen Street West to end in front of the Italianate palace occupied by City TV. Along the way we got informed and entertained about Toronto's history from a small English enclave that started in 1793, to the exciting, vibrant and multicultural metropolis that it is today. You can read the full story at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos/chinatown_kensington.htm. The clips from this walking tour are part of my "Toronto Favourites" series and many more of these discoveries are to come. I am actually a travel writer, and whenever I am not out of town, I write about the city that I live in: Toronto, a city that has many cool places. I love to get out and explore the city and discover some new cool spots, and now you can enjoy them with me. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http//www.travelandtransitions.com. My personal travel stories are located at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/stories_photos.htm. Also, my FREE travel ebooks containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are going up right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/ebooks.html.
These video clips were taken during my walking tour with famous Toronto historian and tour guide Bruce Bell on July 16, 2007. After meeting at the famous and...
Welcome to the scenic community of Casa Loma home to Toronto's very own castle. The borders of this community are Bathurst Street to the west, St. Clair Aven...
This modern and affordable starter condo at 4K Spadina Avenue is perfect for the savvy investor or first time buyer. This spacious 560 square foot one bedroo...
These video clips were taken during my walking tour with famous Toronto historian and tour guide Bruce Bell on July 16, 2007. After meeting at the famous and...
In 1834, when Toronto had a population of 9000 people there were already 300 taverns. New immigrants William Gooderham and James Worts seized the opportunit...
These video clips were taken during my walking tour with famous Toronto historian and tour guide Bruce Bell on July 16, 2007. After meeting at the famous and...
Having grown up in Austria, I had never made it to the Czech Republic, one of our neighbouring countries. Prague, in particular, had interested me for a long...
These video clips were taken during my walking tour with famous Toronto historian and tour guide Bruce Bell on July 16, 2007. After meeting at the famous and...
These video clips were taken during my walking tour with famous Toronto historian and tour guide Bruce Bell on July 16, 2007. After meeting at the famous and...
... Austin children and the working-class lives of the chauffeur's children who lived at Spadina House.
noodls 2014-02-13Spadina Museum, also ... The Spadina House served as the setting for a spooky Blu-ray/DVD release party.
The Examiner 2013-01-30Spadina Museum, also called Spadina , is a historic manor on Spadina Road in Toronto, Canada that is now a museum operated by the City of Toronto Cultural Services. The museum preserves the house much as it existed and developed historically. The art, decor and architecture of the house used to reflect the contemporary styles of the 1860s through the 1930s, including Victorian, Edwardian, Arts and Crafts, Art Deco, Art Nouveau and Colonial Revival styles. After being closed for a year for restoration work, Spadina Museum re-opened in November 2010 in the inter-war era style of the 1920s and 1930s. The estate's gardens reflect the landscape during the Austin family's occupation of the house.
Many Torontonians follow a convention of pronouncing Spadina Road with the i as /aɪ/ as in mine, and Spadina House with the i as in /iː/ as in ski. Occasionally Spadina Road is pronounced the second way. South of Bloor Street, however, Spadina Road becomes Spadina Avenue, which is always pronounced the first way. The distinction between the two ways was once an economic class marker in Toronto with the upper classes favouring the second pronunciation. Now, however, even the official TTC stop announcements pronounce the i in Spadina as the one in mine.
I've had it up to here with people that don't think
I'm sick of people asking me why I don't drink
I'm sick of wannabe DJs I'm sick of marijuana
I'm sick of the nineties I'm sick of Americana
I'm sick of indecision I'm sick of religion
I'm sick of commercial radio I'm sick of television
I'm sick of the taxes I'm sick of the weather
I'm sick of these wack MCs altogether
I'm sick of casinos and big wager tables
I'm sick of foreign policy I'm sick of major labels
I'm sick of the rednecks I'm sick of Street Fighters
I'm sick of videogames and I'm sick of beat biters
I'm sick of student loans and building bigger debts
I'm sick of fast food and I'm sick of cigarettes
I'm sick of being cold and I'm sick of being broke
And going out to a bar and breathing second-hand smoke
I'm sick of suggestions I'm sick of stupid questions
I'm sick of flat tires I'm sick of big fat liars
I'm sick of being spoonfed bleeding crossfaders
I'm fed up with the gossip I'm sick of rollerbladers
I'm sick of second place and being ripped off
I'm sick of seeing angels with their wings clipped off
I'm sick of cheap thrills and no penetration sex
If you know what I mean I'm sick of Generation X
I'm sick of the mix tapes and heroin chic
I'm sick of peoples minds that are narrow and weak
Thanks but no thanks I'm sick of the skanks
I'm sick of disease and I'm sick of the banks
I'm sick of finding hair when you're chewing your pie
I'm sick of people acting like they're still in junior high
I'm sick of the theory I'm sick of conspiracy
I'm sick of being taken for a joker too seriously
I'm sick of the helmet law I'm sick of taking risks
I'm sick of these God damned compact discs
I'm sick of baggy pants and I'm sick of tea and coffee
I'm sick of being low key and the focus being off me
I'm sick of feeling useless I'm sick of abuses
I'm sick of the red tape and I'm sick of excuses
I'm sick of certain people I'm sick of tuna casserole