The Hamilton Series Grand Finale
Hamilton, Ontario is probably the most maligned, misunderstood, and underappreciated city in Canada. Long overshadowed by Toronto,
Hamilton is known mainly for its vast concentration of heavy industry. Its various nicknames reflect that: "The Ambitious City", "Steelcity",
"The Hammer" and less flatteringly, "The Armpit of Canada". Hamilton's greatest asset is undoubtedly its natural setting at the tip of Lake
Ontario with the Niagara Escarpment dividing the city into upper and lower sections. But fewer know about Hamilton's incredible architectural
heritage and great urban neighbourhoods. Even fewer know that medicine, education, and research have long surpassed heavy industry as
Hamilton has made the transition to a post-industrial economy. I hope this series has shown that Hamilton is much more than the industrial
wasteland of urban decay that many imagine. The twenty photo tours of this series show some of the most interesting streets and
neighbourhoods in Hamilton--I could easily have done twenty more--but, anyways, thank you for the great response to the series.
1
King Street
2
3
4
5
6
7
Hughson Street
8
James and York
9
10
King Street East
11
12
13
14
City Hall
15
James and Main
16
17
18
Main Street
19
20
King William Street
21
22
King and James
23
Gore Park
24
25
26
27
Piggott Building
28
James Street South
29
30
31
32
33
34
Lister Block
35
Chateau Royale
36
BDC Building
37
38
King Street looking west
39
40
Main Street looking west
41
The Harbour
42
Hamilton Beach & The Bayfront
43
44
45
46
The historic town of
Dundas, a suburb on the westside
47
48
Heading down the mountain into Dundas
49
Concession Street, the only Hamilton Mountain neighbourhood that I profiled.
50
51
The phototour of the
Inner City was the most popular.
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
Looking out over
Stoney Creek, Hamilton's eastern suburb
63
Locke Street, the antiques district in the western part of the lower city
64
Jamesville, a vibrant multi-ethnic neighbourhood along James Street North
65
66
The Delta, where Main and King cross
67
68
Westdale, home to many specialty shops, cafes, beautiful homes, and a massive highschool
69
70
The
Textile District on Ottawa Street
71
The infamous
Barton Street
72
Some Victorian homes in the
Stinson neigbourhood
73
A side street in
Corktown
74
McMaster University, a major research university
75
76
Can't forget Hamilton's
Industry
77
78
Hess Village
79
80
Durand, one of the most beautiful neighbourhoods in Hamilton
81
82
83
Ancaster, a wealthy western suburb
84
85
Dundurn Castle
86
Custom House
87
The James N. Allan Skyway Bridge
88
Lift Bridge
89
Cathedral of Christ the King
90
Ivor Wynne Stadium, home of the CFL's Hamilton Tiger-Cats
91
92
93
94
This arte moderne building was built in 1933 by the Toronto, Hamilton, and Buffalo Railway, which operated from 1894 to 1987.
In 1996, it was refurbished and now serves as the Hamilton GO Centre, connecting Hamilton to the Greater Toronto Area by
bus and train.
95
96
97
98
99
One last look from the mountain
SCROLL->>>>>
100
A map showing the locations of each of the phototours: