A view of downtown Toronto and the CN Tower as seen from Canoe Landing Park. Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Canoe Landing Park is an 8 acres ( ha) privately funded urban park in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada, adjacent to the Gardiner Expressway that received its name on November 2009. The name was chosen as part of a city-run contest and the final name was announced on the free evening commuter paper. Formerly, it was tentatively known as CityPlace Park. The park's ribbon cutting ceremony was on September 9, 2009. The Park was designed by Landscape Architects Phillips Farevaag Smallenberg of Vancouver in collaboration with Landscape Architects, The Planning Partnership of Toronto, Public Art Consultant Karen Mills and Douglas Coupland. The park incorporates integrated artwork in the form of a landform (the bluff) and stand alone art pieces by Douglas Coupland: a canoe large enough for people to stand in and see over the Gardiner to Lake Ontario, a colourful display of large fishing bobbers, a sculptural beaver dam, programmed tree lighting (which will be more evident as the trees fill out), a pair of "iceberg benches" situated near the canoe, the "heart-shaped stone" bronze artwork which was cast from a stone retrieved by Terry's brother at the end of his journey and a one-mile run called the Terry Fox Miracle Mile.
Size: 4160px × 3120px
Location: Canoe Landing Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Photo credit: © Felix Choo / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: art, bobber, bobbers, canada, canoe, city, cityplace, cityscape, cityscapes, cn, condo, condos, copy, copyspace, coupland, douglas, downtown, fishing, high, highrise, landing, market, ontario, park, public, rise, skyline, space, spring, toronto, tower, urban