

Museo Aga Khan, North York e la Diversità Suburbana di Toronto
Toronto is the most ethnically diverse large city in the world — approximately 50% of Toronto residents were born outside Canada (the highest proportion of any large city in the world), and the city is home to communities from over 200 countries speaking over 140 languages; the suburban areas of Toronto (North York, Scarborough, Etobicoke) house the majority of Toronto's immigrant communities and represent one of the most extraordinary experiments in multicultural urbanism in history.

La Scena Gastronomica di Toronto — Poutine, Butter Tarts, Peameal Bacon e Cucine Globali
Toronto's food scene is defined above all by its extraordinary diversity — a direct reflection of the city's multicultural composition; no city in the world has a more complete representation of the world's cuisines in a single urban area, with authentic Vietnamese, Ethiopian, Sri Lankan, Trinidadian, Georgian, Peruvian, Sichuan, Lebanese, Iranian, and hundreds of other national and regional cuisines all available within the city limits, alongside distinctively Canadian food traditions including poutine, butter tarts, peameal bacon, and Nanaimo bars.

Scogliere di Scarborough, The Beaches e la Zona Est di Toronto
The Scarborough Bluffs (the 15-kilometre stretch of dramatic clay and sand cliffs rising up to 90 metres above Lake Ontario along the eastern Toronto waterfront, from the foot of Brimley Road east to the Rouge River) is one of the most spectacular natural geological features within a major North American city, and The Beaches neighbourhood (the lakefront neighbourhood of Queen Street East between Woodbine Avenue and Victoria Park Avenue) is one of Toronto's most desirable and distinctive residential areas.

Kensington Market, Chinatown e il Distillery Historic District
Le esperienze di quartiere più distintive di Toronto — la vita di strada bohémien di Kensington Market, il Chinatown su Spadina Avenue e il Distillery Historic District (la più fine collezione di architettura industriale vittoriana in Nord America) — offrono il gusto più concentrato della caratteristica definitoria di Toronto: l'extraordinaria diversità culturale.

Gita di un Giorno alle Cascate del Niagara — Horseshoe Falls e il Maid of the Mist
Niagara Falls (130 kilometres south of Toronto, accessible by GO Bus, Megabus, or car in approximately 1.5 hours) is the most-visited natural attraction in Canada and one of the most famous waterfalls in the world — the Horseshoe Falls (the Canadian falls, 670 metres wide, 57 metres high, with a flow of approximately 2,400 cubic metres of water per second) is significantly larger and more dramatic than the American Falls across the international border.

Torre CN, Harbourfront e il Lungofiume del Centro di Toronto
La Torre CN — il simbolo definitorio di Toronto e per 34 anni la struttura autoportante più alta del mondo — ancora un corridoio fronte lago del centro che combina gli spazi artistici dell'Harbourfront Centre e l'Acquario Ripley del Canada.

Hockey Hall of Fame, Maple Leafs e la Cultura Sportiva Canadese
Ice hockey is to Canada what football is to the United States or cricket to England — the defining national sport and the sport most deeply embedded in Canadian cultural identity; Toronto, as the largest city in Canada and home of the Toronto Maple Leafs (one of the Original Six NHL franchises, founded 1917), is the centre of Canadian hockey culture, and the Hockey Hall of Fame (in the historic Bank of Montreal building in the Financial District) is the sport's most sacred shrine.

Royal Ontario Museum, Università di Toronto e Bloor-Yorkville
Il corridoio Bloor-Yorkville — la striscia commerciale e culturale più prestigiosa di Toronto — combina collezioni museali di livello mondiale, una delle grandi università del Canada e il commercio al dettaglio di lusso più concentrato del paese.

Isole di Toronto — L'Arcipelago del Cortile della Città sul Lago Ontario
The Toronto Islands (the archipelago of 15 small interconnected islands and peninsulas 800 metres off the downtown Toronto waterfront, accessible by ferry from the Jack Layton Ferry Terminal in approximately 10 minutes) are the closest green space to the downtown core and provide the best views of the Toronto skyline from across the water — the view of the CN Tower and the downtown skyline from Centre Island or Hanlan's Point is the most iconic view of Toronto.