Puneet Varma (Editor)

Scarborough City Centre

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Country
  
Canada

Province
  
Ontario

City
  
Toronto

Community
  
Scarborough

Scarborough City Centre httpsneighbourhoodwalksfileswordpresscom201

Changed Municipality
  
1998 Toronto from Scarborough

Restaurants
  
Canbe Foods Inc, La Sani Grill, Terry's Restaurant & Bar, The Avenue Restaura, JC's Banquet

Hotels
  
Holiday Inn Express Toronto E, Best Western Plus Exec, Scarboro Centre Luxury B, DelSuites Short Term Rentals S, Tridel Short Term Rentals S

Scarborough City Centre is a central business district in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Once considered a central business district for the former city of Scarborough, which was amalgamated with the rest of Toronto in 1998, the city centre remains as one of the major commercial districts outside of Downtown Toronto.

Contents

Map of Scarborough City Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada

It is roughly bounded by Kennedy Road to the west, Markham Road to the east, Ellesmere Road to the south, and Sheppard Avenue to the North, spanning the official neighbourhoods of Bendale, Agincourt, and Woburn. At its core is the Scarborough Civic Centre (including Albert Campbell Square), Scarborough Town Centre, the Canada Centre (Government of Canada), the Scarborough Centre rapid transit station, and the Scarborough Centre Bus Terminal.

Condominium towers surround these central buildings and public spaces, forming the skyline. The major office towers in the area are those at Consilium Place, which was completed in 1991. In a band around the southern side of the city centre are densely forested parklands, between Borough Drive and Ellesmere Road. Outside the immediate city centre is mostly industrial parks and low-density housing.

History

Prior to the 1940s, the area was mainly agricultural and the closest communities were Agincourt and Malvern. One farm was the farm of George and Lena Bick, who founded the Bick's Pickle brand from pickles grown and processed on their farm. Although the farm was eventually converted to residential and industrial land, the production facility was located on Progress Avenue until 2001. Development in the area had first come in the 1950s when Ontario Highway 401 was built through the area. One early development was the TV studios of CFTO-TV at the intersection of the 401 and McCowan Road.

Scarborough became part of Metropolitan Toronto in 1954. As part of the federation, a planning policy was to build "sub-centres" to the central business core of the then-City of Toronto. Scarborough Civic Centre, built to house the Scarborough and Metro district offices and the accompanying mall of Scarborough Town Centre were built in the 1970s. The area was connected to the core by rapid transit in the 1980s. Under policies to build up the area, office towers and condominium towers have been built to surround the complex.

References

Scarborough City Centre Wikipedia