#OnThisDay in 2009, Scott Pilgrim vs. the Universe hit store shelves. Check out our map of Toronto locations from all six books in the series. 🗺️👀 https://t.co/E7RsNSI1C2
Did you know the first game in @NBA history took place at Maple Leaf Gardens? Today, we look back at both the game and the #Toronto team that played in it. https://t.co/WlmfDXaJVM
Fascinated by the history of hay farming before baling machines. Big piles moved by pitchfork, huge haystacks in the late summer. Must’ve been something.
Have you seen our interactive election map yet? Get a live look at candidates from each ward, voting locations, and more. #TOpoli https://t.co/V0gYyprrAe
This is a great one, when you zoom you can see every single poll location and its geography. Interesting way to look at the city.
Oh and we will be updating this with live results on election night!
Have you heard? Torontoverse's own @chrisdinn will be featured on Civic Hacknight!
Hacknights bring together Torontonians who share an interest in making the city more sustainable and equitable through design, tech, and data. Come and be a part of it! https://t.co/p9WiaNYPGY
What if Toronto could optimize how its garbage collection was run? Or use sensors to learn which areas had more cyclist traffic than others? @rebeccaga0 delves into the future of smart-city tech in Toronto. https://t.co/gOqO6lmcEh
🎶 This is the construction that never ends...🎶
Guess the #Toronto intersection, where the tiger-tails are numerous and the construction stretches on and on and on and on...
Our #POIoftheweek is Allan Gardens Conservatory!
This place of interest and indoor botanical garden was built in 1858 — just 24 years after Toronto became a city and a full nine years before Confederation.
What plant from the greenhouse would you want to add to your home? 🍃
What’s political speed-dating, and how does it relate to @TheGreenLineTO? Check out our Q&A with editor-in-chief Anita Li (@neeeda). #TOPoli https://t.co/ioyaztOeW1
Guess the neighbourhood, #TorontoverseCommunity!
This colourful neighbourhood was named after the vegetables and other leafy greens grown on the front lawns of Irish immigrants, who came to the area in the 1840s. Bonus points if you can guess the intersection.