Toronto Coach Terminal | |||||
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General information | |||||
Location | 610 Bay Street (main terminal) 130 Elizabeth Street (annex) Toronto, Ontario Canada | ||||
Coordinates | 43°39′22″N 79°23′03″W / 43.65611°N 79.38417°W | ||||
Owned by | Toronto Coach Terminal Inc. (Toronto Transit Commission)[1] Ownership transferred to City of Toronto in 2021 | ||||
Bus stands | 14 bays (2 per platform, main terminal), 5 bays (Elizabeth Street Terminal) | ||||
Bus operators | Gray Coach, GO Transit, Voyageur Colonial, Greyhound, PMCL, Pacific Western, Can-Ar Coach Service, Travelways, Trailways of New York, Danforth Bus Lines/ Toronto Coach Lines, Hollinger, Collacutt,[2][3] Ontario Northland | ||||
Connections | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ||||
Construction | |||||
Parking | No | ||||
Bicycle facilities | No | ||||
Accessible | Yes | ||||
Architect | Charles B. Dolphin | ||||
Architectural style | Art Deco | ||||
History | |||||
Opened | December 19, 1931[4] | ||||
Closed | July 3, 2021[5] | ||||
Rebuilt | 1984 (east bus bays) / 1990 (main terminal) | ||||
Previous names | Toronto Motor Coach Terminal, Gray Coach Terminal (1930s–1990) | ||||
Key dates | |||||
1931 | Toronto Motor Coach Terminal opens, replacing the open-air Union Coach Terminal at the same location | ||||
1968 | Elizabeth Street Terminal opens as the annex for the main terminal | ||||
1990 | Facility renamed the Toronto Coach Terminal | ||||
July 3, 2021 | Ontario Northland, the last remaining bus operator, ends use of terminal | ||||
July 8, 2021 | Ownership of property transferred to City of Toronto for redevelopment | ||||
Passengers | |||||
2012 | 1,000,000+[6] | ||||
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The Toronto Coach Terminal is a decommissioned bus station for intercity bus services in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The building was the central intercity bus station in Toronto until mid-2021, when it was replaced by the Union Station Bus Terminal. It is located at 610 Bay Street, in the city's downtown. Opened in 1931 as the Gray Coach Terminal, the Art Deco style structure was the main hub for Gray Coach, an interurban coach service then owned by the Toronto Transportation Commission (later renamed the Toronto Transit Commission) (TTC). It replaced an earlier open air depot, the Union Coach Terminal.[4][7]
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