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Toronto,
Canada
Mississauga, Scarborough, Old Toronto,
Ontario
The economic and cultural focus
of English-speaking Canada, Toronto is the country's largest metropolis.
It sprawls along the northern shore of Lake Ontario, its vibrant,
appealing centre encased by a jangle of satellite townships and
industrial zones that cover - as "Greater Toronto" - no less than
100 square kilometres. For decades, Toronto was saddled with unflattering
sobriquets - "Toronto the Good", "Hogtown" - that reflected a perhaps
deserved reputation for complacent mediocrity and greed. Spurred
into years of image-building, the city's postwar administrations
have lavished millions of dollars on glitzy architecture, slick
museums, an excellent public-transport system, and the reclamation
and development of the lakefront. As a result, Toronto has become
one of North America's most likeable cities, an eminently liveable
place whose citizens keep a wary eye on both their politicians and
the developers.
Huge new shopping malls and skyrise
office blocks reflect the economic successes of the last two or
three decades, a boom that has attracted immigrants from all over
the world, transforming an overwhelmingly anglophone city into a
cosmopolitan one of some sixty significant minorities. Furthermore,
the city's multiculturalism goes far deeper than an extravagant
diversity of restaurants and sporadic pockets of multilingual street
signs. Toronto's schools, for example, have extensive "Heritage
Language Programmes", which encourage the maintenance of the immigrants'
first cultures.
Getting the feel of Toronto's diversity
is one of the city's great pleasures, but there are attention-grabbing
sights here as well. Most are conveniently clustered in the city
centre, and the most celebrated of them all is the CN Tower , the
world's tallest free-standing structure. Next door lies the modern
hump of the SkyDome sports stadium. The city's other prestige attractions
are led by the Art Gallery of Ontario , which possesses a first-rate
selection of Canadian painting, and the Royal Ontario Museum , where
pride of place goes to the Chinese collection. But it's the pick
of Toronto's smaller, less-visited galleries and period homes that
really add to the city's charm. There are superb Canadian paintings
at the Thomson Gallery and a fascinating range of footwear at the
Bata Shoe Museum . The Toronto Dominion Bank boasts the eclectic
Gallery of Inuit Art , and the mock-Gothic extravagances of Casa
Loma , the Victorian gentility of Spadina House and the replica
of Fort York , the colonial settlement where Toronto began, all
vie for the visitor's attention.
Toronto's sights illustrate different
facets of the city, but in no way do they crystallize its identity.
The city remains opaque, too big and diverse to allow for a defining
personality. This, however, adds an air of excitement and unpredictability
to the place. Toronto caters to everything, and the city surges
with Canada's most vibrant restaurant, performing-arts and nightlife
scenes
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