The towers are quickly becoming a regional landmark with their signature curved balcony designs and high visibility from a distance from Highways 400 and 7.

The towers are quickly becoming a regional landmark with their signature curved balcony designs and high visibility from a distance from Highways 400 and 7.
This is a nice town inland near Collingwood, Blue Mountain, and Wasaga Beach.
There is a small main street with historic buildings, a local school, a Michelin Star restaurant, a cafe, and a bakery.
Some of the homes are historic-contemporary with beautiful landscapes.
The arches motif with the solid stone panels on the exterior are a welcome addition to the neighbourhood with a unique design.
Coboconk Main Street in Ontario, Canada.
As we venture into the towns of Southern Ontario, there are patterns that begin to emerge with the organization, layout, and how these towns are developed.
These similarities can also be seen in historic villages of Toronto such as Forest Hill, Thornhill, Rosedale, and so on. Street names, types of shops and stores, road layouts, are just some of the ways these can be easily seen on the surface.
The previously vacant south-west corner of Sheppard Avenue and Yonge Street now has activity. There is a large construction project with a building crane and a large excavation pit. The developer is Menkes as named on the construction crane, and there are also site offices located in portables above the sidewalk.
Located at 1200 Sheppard Avenue East, this sales centre looks to be inspired by the New Eglinton Line 5 LRT station boxes that are currently also under construction just south of here.
Some of the creative infrastructure in the North York park includes ski lifts, an amphitheater, and a community centre.
These condominiums in the Yonge-Sheppard North York Downtown Corridor are coming along, with the pencil inspired public art in the foreground.
Right along Yonge Street, these condominiums will provide much needed housing to the neighboring community and GTA alike.
An early morning sun rise on a spring morning in Hendon Park, North York. The sun is viewed through a permanent gazebo shade structure with a historic plaque.
The Port Lands bridges are quickly becoming an attraction in themselves in addition to being a vital infrastructure link between the various islands and peninsulas in the evolving waterfront lands.
Originally transported to Toronto via barge from the East Provinces, their vivid colours and curved forms have been a nice backdrop to the myriad of weekend fitness enthusiasts, dragon boat trainees, cycling groups, and runners.