King William Street (Hamilton, Ontario) Explained
King William Street is a Lower City collector road in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. It starts off at the western-end at James Street North and is a one-way street (Eastbound) until Mary Street, where it becomes a two-way street that ends at Wentworth Street North. It is named after King William IV of the United Kingdom.
Landmarks
Note: Listing of Landmarks from West to East.
- Hamilton City Centre (Mall, formerly the Eaton's Centre)
- Lloyd D. Jackson Square (Mall)
- Lister Block Building
- Homegrown Hamilton
- Club Absinthe
- Downtown Bingo Hall (back-end)
- Geyer Studio
- The Baltimore House
- Manta Contemporary Art Gallery
- Hamilton Central Fire Department (just north of King William Street on John Street North)
- Seventy-Seven Night Club
- The Underground, Steel City Music Venue
- Children's International Learning Centre
- Theatre Aquarius, Dofasco Centre for the Performing Arts, downtown
- Hamilton Regional Police station
- Tweedsmuir Elementary School (demolished in 2006)
- Cathedral High School
Communities
Note: Listing of neighbourhoods from West to East. [1]
See also
References
External links
43.2548°N -79.8587°W
Notes and References
- Web site: Hamilton Neighbourhood Boundaries, (map.hamilton.ca) . PDF . 2007-05-11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070927235056/http://map.hamilton.ca/Static/PDFs/General%20Interest%20maps/Overall%20City/NeighbourhoodBoundaries.pdf . 2007-09-27 . dead .