Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. While Chinatown now offers shops from the Asian diaspora and beyond, its cultural DNA as a walkable, food-obsessed, Chinese-Canadian heritage district remains. Here’s how to cover 12 hours in Toronto’s downtown Chinatown.

    • Overview and History
    • How to Get There
    • What to See and Do
    • What to Eat and Drink
    • Tips and Things to Know

    Toronto’s Chinatown is one of the largest Chinatowns in North America, the history of which dates back all the way to the late 1870s, with the opening of the first Chinese business in Toronto (a laundry business). Between the late 1800s and early 1900s, many more Chinese-owned businesses opened up in a small enclave on Elizabeth Street, from Queen ...

    Your best bet for getting to Chinatown is to do so via public transit so you don’t have to search for or pay for parking. Toronto Chinatown runs along Spadina Avenue between Sullivan Street and College Street and along Dundas Street West between Augusta and Beverley Streets. To get there, you can take the King streetcar (number 504) to Spadina and ...

    The best way to enjoy Chinatown is simply to explore it on foot, popping into the many stores, herbal remedy shops, cafes, restaurants, and produce markets that line the area. In addition, the Chinatown area is also in close proximity to the always impressive Art Gallery of Ontario and eclectic Kensington Market. Also in the area, you’ll find Bau-X...

    It’s hard to visit Chinatown in Toronto without stopping somewhere to eat. The area is packed with restaurants covering a variety of Chinese and other Asian cuisines. These eateries range from hole-in-the-wall and fast-casual spots, to fine dining restaurants and all-day dim sum. Your best bet is to walk around reading menus until you find what app...

    Although you can wander through Chinatown year-round, the warmer months are best for seeing the area at its liveliest and most colorful.
    Chinatown is a great place to find and stock up on Asian ingredients of all kinds, many of which can be hard to find elsewhere in the city.
    Toronto’s Chinatown can often feel very crowded, so when walking through it, be patient. You will likely have to walk slower than usual due to all of the people on the sidewalk, but use that as an...
    • Jessica Padykula
  2. Toronto's main Chinatown has the honor of being the largest in North America. Gaping down across Dundas Street West and Spadina Avenue, the area is a wonderful medley of shops and restaurants, busy signs and bright red gates, a destination for foodie fun.

    • (1K)
    • Attraction
    • Toronto
    • i cover chinatown toronto1
    • i cover chinatown toronto2
    • i cover chinatown toronto3
    • i cover chinatown toronto4
    • i cover chinatown toronto5
  3. May 3, 2019 · Tap Phong, the restaurant supply store-with-it-all in the heart of Toronto's Chinatown, is a pleasing paradox; it's both deft at adapting while remaining, somehow, an unchanging presence in an...

    • i cover chinatown toronto1
    • i cover chinatown toronto2
    • i cover chinatown toronto3
    • i cover chinatown toronto4
    • i cover chinatown toronto5
  4. Chinatown, Toronto (also known as Downtown Chinatown or West Chinatown) is a Chinese ethnic enclave located in the city's downtown core of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is centred at the intersections of Spadina Avenue and Dundas Street West.

  5. Mar 27, 2021 · March 27, 2021 Richard Trapunski. What is the future of Chinatown in Toronto? To understand that, it helps to look at the past and how we choose to preserve it. Embedded in the history and...

  1. People also search for