King Street (Toronto)

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King Street and its intersection with Bay Street, the core of the Financial Business District of Toronto. The view is of the Toronto-Dominion Centre by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.
King Street and its intersection with Bay Street, the core of the Financial Business District of Toronto. The view is of the Toronto-Dominion Centre by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.

King Street is a major east-west commercial thoroughfare in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The street was named for King George III, the reigning British monarch at the time when the street was being built in early Toronto (then called the Town of York).

It runs from The Queensway, splitting off to the south-east from Queen Street West at Roncesvalles Avenue in the west, to the Don River where is merges and is absorbed by Queen St. in the east.

Yonge Street, the north-south divider of many Toronto east-west streets, divides King Street into King Street East and King Street West.

King Street is also served along its entire length by the Toronto Transit Commission's 504 King streetcar, the busiest line in the fleet with an average of 50,000 passengers per day. It connects with the Yonge-University-Spadina subway line at St. Andrew Station at University Avenue, and at King Station at Yonge Street. It connects with the Bloor-Danforth subway line at Dundas West and Broadview stations. The street is also served by the 508 Lake Shore car.

In recent years there has been a proliferation of chique restaurants, clubs and galleries in the area (such as West, Brant House, Susur, Senses Bar and Restaurant, Theut Cuisine, Lux, Old Yorke Pub and Grill, etc.) as King Street West becomes more oriented to Toronto's nightlife crowd, and is near major attractions such as the Rogers Centre (formerly Skydome), Air Canada Centre, The Distillery District, Hockey Hall of Fame, Roy Thompson Hall, Hummingbird Centre, St. Lawrence Market and the historic King Edward Hotel.

Canada's Walk of Fame runs along King Street from John Street to Simcoe Street and south on Simcoe. It is a tribute in granite to Canadians who have gained fame in the fields of music, literature, journalism, dance, sports, acting, entertainment and broadcasting.

King Street East is predominantly known as the high-end, luxury furniture district of downtown Toronto, with dozens of stores on King Street East as well as the surrounding area.


Popular attractions along King Street include:

Office towers on King:

Neighbourhoods


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