… and Roncesvalles and Queensway.
King Street merges with Queen Street twice, once in the east at River Street and once in the west when King turns north and joins Roncesvalles. At this point Queen becomes the Queensway.
below: Queen streetcar traveling westbound (center of picture) while a King car makes the turn north into the intersection (right side).
If that King car continues north, it travel up Roncesvalles to Dundas West station.
below: Looking west on the Queensway with all the overhead streetcar wires because….
below: … the TTC Roncesvalles Carhouse is right there. It is 28 streetcar tracks wide and is used for storage and maintenance of part of the TTC’s streetcar fleet.
below:The Queensway also runs parallel to (and within sight of) Lakeshore Blvd, the Gardiner Expressway, and Lake Ontario.
below: There is access to the waterfront is by a pedestrian bridge.
below: Also at this intersection is a memorial to all the Polish citizens who died at the hands of the Soviets during WWII.

Plaque reads: “1940-2000, In Memoriam … Lest we forget… May the tragic deaths of tens of thousands of Polish citizens in Soviet forced-labour camps, political prisons and execution sites, always remind the world that freedom is bought with great sacrifice.
Dedicated to the memory of over one million seven hundred thousand Polish soldiers and civilians arrested in EAstern Poland by the Soviet secret service (NKVD) in 1940-1941, for the only reason that they were Polish citizens and were deported to the far reaches of the Soviet Union (siberia), where many were executed or died of hunger, cold, disease, and exhaustion during World War II.
[words in Polish]”
Alliance of the Polish Eastern Provinces in Toronto, February 10, 2000.
The rest of this post are images of some of the sights along Queen West and in the alleys behind. Some of them may look like photos that have appeared in prior blog posts…. Many things have changed over the years and yet many things remain the same.
below: North side of Queen West, looking towards Roncesvalles.
below: South side of Queen West, looking towards Roncesvalles
Some of the old architecture remains – Volumes could probably be written about all the old architectural features that can still be seen out Queen West and King West. Many of which date from when Parkdale was an affluent suburb of Toronto.
below: An old Royal Bank of Canada building (now used for other purposes).
below: An old Second Empire type of building, that is now home to the Easy Restaurant as well as Rosa’s restaurant.
below:Back of the building – King Street side.
below: The original mural with its yellow convertible once seen on the back of the building is still there, it’s just hidden by a more recently built structure to store garbage bins and other stuff in.
below: If you have passed by this intersection, you may have noticed the yellow motorcycle rider on the King Street side of the building.
below: Dancing in the window
below: A doggie in the window!
below: Ford among the light fixtures. Who is the dimmest bulb?
below: An anchor, many stickers, and a red skull and crossbones
below: Potato sack racers in a mural by Jim Bravo. The sacks all say “Eva’s Fine Deli” on them so perhaps this was once the wall of said deli? Now it is the Dosa restaurant on Roncesvalles.
below: Dreamer
below: Birdo paintings that have faded and weathered. Check out an earlier post if you want to see what they once were like (Animals and Birdo Birds) This post was from March 2015, ten years ago!

below: Still Alive! It’s always marvelous to encounter Lovebot the Robot in the wild.
below: More alley backyard views…. another house with a rooftop terrace or deck. I have mentioned before in other posts with other alleys, that this type of renovation/expansion has become very common throughout the city.









































Having myself a little nostalgia wallow… I remember that yellow-convertible mural in its more-or-less heyday, and also lovebots. Thanks for the tour
I was surprised to find both the yellow convertible and the large lovebot! It’s always nice to find that some of the good things haven’t disappeared.