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Toronto Train/ Bus Station Query
Gareth Slee:
I'm staying at Residence Inn Toronto Downtown/Entertainment District which is on 255 Wellington Street West Toronto, Ontario M5V 3P9. How far is it to the closest bus station where I can purchase Greyhound tickets? "Mike": The main Greyhound terminal is at 610 Bay street, 1.5 miles from your hotel. - easy to get to on the subway (Tube) Also is there a Train station nearby? Union station, 65 Front Street West, is only a half mile from your hotel It is also a major subway terminal. From your hotel you can easily walk (few hundred yards) up to King St. where you can take public transit a TTC street car to the subway or to any major city location. The subway in that area follows a U-shaped route. I will show it as a line of # signs against the grid of streets; stations are marked O and labeled in block capitals. University Av. Bay St. Yonge St. # | # # Bus | # # Station | # Dundas St. # | # DUNDAS --------------------O---------------+-------O----------- ST. PATRICK # | # # | # Canon Theatre # | # # | # # | # Queen St. # | # QUEEN --------------------O---------------+-------O----------- OSGOODE # | # # | # ST. # | # King St. ANDREW # | # KING --------------------O---------------+-------O----------- Wellington St. # | # --------------------#---------------+-------#----------- Front St. # UNION | # --------------------################O########----------- Union | | Station | | (trains) Of course you must view this in a monospaced font. The diagram is more or less to scale. From Front to Dundas St. is about 3/4 mile. Your hotel is near the left edge of the diagram, maybe 1/2 mile west of Yonge St. Only relevant streets are shown. Most of the streets shown are dead straight in this area, and the few curves that there are aren't important now. I have marked the train station, bus station, and Canon Theatre. As noted, there are streetcars along King. (There are also streetcars along Queen and Dundas and buses along Bay, but you won't likely use those. The Bay bus is less frequent than the subway.) I expect that when going somewhere from the hotel you will either (1) walk north to King and get a streetcar, then transfer to the subway; (2) walk to St. Andrew station and get the subway, (3) walk all the way to your destination, or (4) take a taxi. I should note that in this area essentially all major office buildings and major shops are connected by underground passages, which are mostly lined with shops. From Metro Hall, on King St. roughly north of your hotel, during shopping hours you could actually walk indoors all the way to the bus terminal, to Union station (railway or subway), or to any of the other four subway stations from St. Andrew around to Dundas. However, I would not recommend doing this unless you found it desirable to avoid some bad weather. While the system (called PATH) does have signs and route maps posted, they are not very easy to follow, and in places the experience is kind of like taking a long walk through an airport terminal. What you do want to know if you're taking an inter-city bus is that you can walk indoors from Dundas subway station to a building called the Atrium on Bay, and from that to the bus terminal. Now some transit details. Because of the U-shaped route, to travel between (for example) Dundas and St. Patrick stations, you board a SOUTHBOUND train in each direction. Incidentally, Dundas station has separate fare barriers for northbound and southbound trains (it's the only one like that on the system), so be sure to use the right entrance. At Union station the train directions are signposted as YONGE NORTHBOUND and UNIVERSITY NORTHBOUND. The TTC is a flat-fare system with transfers included. A single ride is $2.75. Stores, and human fare collectors at subway stations, will sell you tickets or tokens (they are equivalent except that tokens operate the automatic turnstiles at subway stations) at 5 for $11.25 (= $2.25). Machines at subway stations will sell you 4 tokens for $9 if you pay with a $10 bill or 8 for $18 if you pay with a $20 bill. If you start your ride at a subway station and will transfer to a streetcar (or bus), then after entering the barrier, take a transfer (i.e. transfer ticket) from the dispenser just inside (it's red). When you board the streetcar you just show it to the driver. Note: transfers are only good for changing vehicles within the same journey, not for stopovers or return travel. If you start your trip on a streetcar, you must have a ticket or token already, or else you must pay the single-ride fare and change is *not* given. Once you pay, you can then ask the driver for a transfer. At the subway station, just show this to the fare collector. Have a good trip. -- Mark Brader "You can do this in a number of ways. Toronto IBM chose to do all of them... why do you find that funny?" --D. Taylor My text in this article is in the public domain. |
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