Colborne Street, Toronto

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Colborne_Street,_Toronto an entity of type: SpatialThing

Colborne Street is a street running several hundred metres east of Yonge Street in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It crosses Victoria Street and Leader Lane, ending at Church Street. It is located between and parallel to King Street East and Wellington Street East. The street is notable for retaining several historic buildings built during the reign of Queen Victoria. In 1822, a two-storey building, Masonic Hall, with a cupola was built on what is now Colborne Street. The Milburn building was built in 1886 at 47-55 Colborne Street, in Toronto, by architect Edward James Lennox. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Colborne Street, Toronto
xsd:float 43.64889907836914
xsd:float -79.37580108642578
xsd:integer 34204271
xsd:integer 1118573850
xsd:string 43.6489 -79.3758
rdf:langString Colborne Street is a street running several hundred metres east of Yonge Street in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It crosses Victoria Street and Leader Lane, ending at Church Street. It is located between and parallel to King Street East and Wellington Street East. The street is notable for retaining several historic buildings built during the reign of Queen Victoria. In 1822, a two-storey building, Masonic Hall, with a cupola was built on what is now Colborne Street. The Milburn building was built in 1886 at 47-55 Colborne Street, in Toronto, by architect Edward James Lennox. The 15 storey Trader’s Bank Building at the corner of Colborne and Yonge streets was the tallest building in the British Empire when it was built in 1906. In 1914, the King Edward Hotel requested a permit to build a pedestrian bridge across Colborne Street to an annex on the south side.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3962
<Geometry> POINT(-79.375801086426 43.648899078369)

data from the linked data cloud