What to do in Toronto? - The final guide

toronto

Here is your key to the city. The final guide on what to do in Toronto.

Art Gallery of Ontario

gallery Ontario

This is an art museum in Toronto. His collection includes more than 80,000 works covering the first century to this day. The gallery has 45,000 square meters (480,000 square feet) of physical space, making it one of the largest galleries in North America. Significant collections include the largest collection of Canadian art, an extensive collection of Renaissance and Baroque works, European art, African and Oceanic art and a modern and modern collection.

Ripley's Aquarium Canada

aquarium Canada

The newest attraction in Toronto should attract the attention of tourists of all ages. In the aquarium, there are several water exhibits, including a passage tank. The aquarium has 5.7 million liters (1.5 million gallons) of marine and freshwater habitats from around the world. Exhibits contain 13,500 exotic marine and freshwater specimens from more than 450 species.

St. Lawrence Market

lawrence market

The best and biggest market in Toronto! Domestic market with many bakers, butchers, and artisans. A lot of fresh food, meat, and fish on weekends. North / Farm market: from 5 to 15 hours. South market: Tu - T - from 8 to 18 hours, or - from 8:00 to 19:00, Sat - from 5:00 to 17:00. The antique market: Sun - dawn - 17:00. Here you can buy special meat, cheese, and confectionery products for your cooking or enjoy a meal on many sales stands to sell grilled fish, Montreal peameal sandwiches, pancakes and many other delicacies.

CN Tower

tower

What was once the highest separately standing structure in the world is now the 3rd highest in the world! You can see it from afar or walk straight to the ground. There are several observational floors on which you can go upstairs and even a revolving restaurant! Try to go when the sun goes out, and the sky becomes clear so that you can get a better view of the city! If you have guts and you are not afraid of heights, try the "Edge Walk" where you pay to walk on the edge (of course, hidden for security), the 3rd highest structure in the world.

Rogers Centre

rogers centre

Close to the CN Tower, the Rogers Center (formerly called SkyDome) was home to the Toronto Blue Jays, and along with the CN Tower, is one of the key features of the Toronto skyline. If you can catch the game Jays or something else that can happen there, you will not regret it.

Kensington Market

kensington market

One of the most famous and cosmopolitan areas in Toronto is worth a visit. Go there to enjoy one of the many cafes, restaurants, brunches or just take a stroll and watch people who live or perform in the market. The Kensington market is also an excellent place for products, fresh and affordable products all year round. Festivals of pedestrian Sundays are held from May to October, on the last Sunday of the month with food vendors, live music, and an impressive parade ... do not miss out if you're in town!

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Dundas Square

dundas square

Yonge Street is the longest street in the world! Next to it are the most famous shopping and entertainment centers of Toronto. The Hudson Bay and Eton Center in Yong and the Queen (take the western Tram in the Queen and Jones) have cinemas on Dundas Square and enough shops in Eaton Center and around it so that someone is busy for hours.

High Park

high park

My favorite exit to the city. A huge green space full of trees, a lot of squirrels, a large pond, a tiny zoo with beautiful llamas, lots of hiking trails and fresh air. Go camping! Very safe throughout the day. (It's too dark and isolated at night to explore.Don't do this.) In the center of the park, there is an excellent cafe with good food and coffee, open early. If you reach the High Park St, metro station and follow the signs from Bloor St, you will find a café. The zoo is next to the cafe on Deer-Pen-Rd. Look for the Grenadier Pond. It's great. It's true; beavers live in it! Look, can you find the trees with their teeth in them!

The Royal Ontario Museum

ontario museum

You can easily spend two days in ROM, a real Canadian institution - there is something for everyone! For families, a favorite exhibition of dinosaurs, bat caves, and eco-galleries. For history buffs, Egyptian and Asian artifacts are seduced, including the exhibit mummy and the tomb's temple reproductions. Look for special exhibits that show global and Canadian finds of all kinds, from prehistoric excavations to art tattoos to modern architecture. For Costco members, look online for discount coupons to cut the entry fee! And for any couples or families returning to Toronto ROM more than twice a year, membership is a great deal at 145 dollars, which includes unlimited children.