North York Centre (TTC)

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North York Centre
5152 Yonge Street
Opened June 18, 1987
Line Yonge-University-Spadina line
Next station ≅1.5 km north to Finch 2 min

≅0.9 km south to Sheppard-Yonge 1 min

Connections 97 Yonge, GO Transit Newmarket B
Rank of Subway Boardings [1] 36th busiest out of 69
Daily Boardings 22,690
No. of Elevators 0
Platforms Side platforms

North York Centre is a station on the Yonge-University-Spadina line of the subway system of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located at 5152 Yonge Street at the intersection of Yonge, Park Home Avenue and Empress Avenue. It opened in 1987. The neighbourhood is also known as North York Centre; the Willowdale neighbourhood is also close by. Nearby landmarks include Mel Lastman Square and the North York Civic Centre, the North York Central Library, Empress Walk, Earl Haig Secondary School, Gibson House, the Toronto Centre for the Arts, and York Cemetery.

 The Station's Mezzanine.
The Station's Mezzanine.

This station was added by excavating alongside the existing tracks, on a level section of route provided for this purpose when the line was built. The view across the tracks between platforms is not as open as most stations, as the solid concrete wall had to retain its load-bearing strength, and smaller openings were cut.

 The view across the tracks is not as open as most stations.
The view across the tracks is not as open as most stations.

[edit] Public art

Artwork in the station consists of North York Heritage Murals by North York artists Nicholas and Susana Graven, located at the platform level. The two murals, each made of over 5000 pieces of glazed ceramic tiles using a process invented by Artessa Studios of North York, depict scenes of North York in the 19th century in an abstract way and are titled

  • Top of the North Hill—1850’s on the northbound platform (surtitled with the historic place names “Don Mills, Flynntown, L’Amaroux, Lansing, Milneford, Newtonbrook, Oriole, O’Sullivan’s Corners, Willowdale”), and
  • Traffic at Yonge and Sheppard—1860’s on the southbound platform (surtitled with the historic place names “Downsview, Dublin, Eglinton, Elia, Emery, Fairbank, Fisherville, Humber Summit, Kaiserville, York Mills, Weston”).

The historic place names shown above each of the murals are names of historic communities near an imaginary line from the northwest to the southeast through the historic Lansing.


Top of the North Hill—1850’s
Top of the North Hill—1850’s


Traffic at Yonge and Sheppard—1860’s
Traffic at Yonge and Sheppard—1860’s


[edit] Surface connections


[edit] External links

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