By air: Toronto’s main airport is Lester B. Pearson International, one of
the busiest in North America. It’s located 45 minutes—about a $40 cab
ride—from downtown and North by Northeast club-zone central. In addition to
taxi and limo services, there’s an airport bus that picks up and drops off
at several hotels in the city centre (at about one-third the cost of cabbing
it). Even cheaper--$3.00—is the TTC city bus that runs between the airport
and Kipling subway station in the city’s west end. There’s also the much
smaller—and much-hated by local residents—Toronto City Centre Airport
located on the Toronto Islands, which is used primarily by private planes.
By train: Union Station, on Front (at Bay), is next door to the Air Canada
Centre and just a few minutes walk to the Entertainment District, the Rogers
Centre (formerly Skydome), the CN Tower and the Metro Toronto Convention
Centre—and a few minutes further to many NXNE live-music venues. VIA Rail
trains to destinations in Canada and the U.S. operate out of Union, which is
also directly linked to the subway and the GO Train system of trains and
buses to the ‘burbs.
By bus: Toronto’s bus station is conveniently located a few blocks north of
City Hall and the Financial District (610 Bay, at Edward).
By car: Driving into Toronto can be a bit complicated (although not compared
to entering Montreal). Highway 401 (the 401) runs east-west into the city,
north of the downtown core. Highway 400 (the 400) connects to the 401 from
the north. Approaching from the south, the Queen Elizabeth Way (QEW) sweeps
up from Niagara Falls and along Lake Ontario into the city, where it becomes
the Gardiner Expressway, an elevated highway that cuts along the city’s
waterfront.
Click here for directions to the center of the known universe!













