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Dixon Road

Queens Quay Street Sign.jpg

Queens Quay
Location: Stadium Road – Lake Shore Boulevard East
(continues north as Parliament Street)
Length: 3.6 km (2.2 mi)

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Lake Shore Boulevard
Location: Etobicoke Creek – Ashbridge's Bay
(continues north as Woodbine Avenue)

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Gardiner Expressway
Location:  Highway 427 – Carlaw Avenue
(continues west as Queen Elizabeth Way)

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Front Street
Location: Bathurst Street – east of Cherry Street
Length: 3.8 km (2.4 mi)

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Wellington Street
Location: Strachan Avenue – east of Leader Lane
Length: 3.3 km (2.1 mi)

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Eastern Avenue
Location: Trinity Street – Queen Street
(continues west as Front Street
east as Kingston Road)

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King Street
Location: Roncesvalles Avenue – Don River
(continues west as The Queensway
east as Queen Street East)

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Adelaide Street
Location: Shaw Street – Don River
(begins from Eastern Avenue)

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Richmond Street
Location: Strachan Avenue – Don River
(continues east as Eastern Avenue)

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The Queensway
Location: Etobicoke Creek – Roncesvalles Avenue
(continues east as Queen Street
west into Mississauga)

The following is a list of the east–west arterial thoroughfares in the Canadian city of Toronto. The city is organized in a grid pattern dating back to the plan laid out by Augustus Jones between 1793 and 1797. Most streets are aligned in the north-south or east-west direction, based on the shoreline of Lake Ontario. In other words, major north–south roads are generally perpendicular to the Lake Ontario shoreline and major east–west roads are generally parallel to the lake's shoreline. The Toronto road system is also influenced by its topography as some roads are aligned with the old Lake Iroquois shoreline, or the deep valleys. Minor streets with documented history or etymology are listed in a separate section.

Roads are listed south to north.

Queens Quay Street Sign.jpg

Queens Quay begins west of Bathurst Street at Stadium Road and ends at Lake Shore Boulevard East, where it continues north as Parliament Street. The road bed is built entirely on infill, and is the closest road to Lake Ontario throughout the downtown core. Though once abutted by industrial and transportation uses from end to end, much of its length has been gentrified since the 1990s, with dozens of condominium towers rising and the installation of the 509 Harbourfront streetcar line. In 1999, the Toronto Transit Commission opened a dedicated streetcar right-of-way in the median from Bay Street to Bathurst Street.


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Wikipedia

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