and Dundas, near
Sankofa Square northbound approaching interchange with Dundas Street, with
Cloverdale Mall in the right of the background The route of Dundas Street through the city of Toronto is irregular. The street, as laid out today, is made up of what were originally several smaller named streets. Proceeding west through central Toronto, Dundas Street East originates near
the Beaches neighbourhood at
Kingston Road, itself a historic route to eastern Lake Ontario and the town of
Kingston. Originally, the street began at today's Queen and Ossington intersection, and incorporated today's Ossington Street north to the current Dundas intersection, then proceeded west along the route still used today. Crossing the lower reaches of the
Don River west of
Broadview Avenue, Dundas serves as one of the few arterial roads connecting the
central city to the city's
original eastern suburbs. At
Yonge Street, Dundas passes
Sankofa Square, within sight of downtown landmarks such as the
Eaton Centre and
Toronto Metropolitan University. Designated Dundas Street
West from this point westward, the route passes to the north of
Toronto City Hall and
Nathan Phillips Square. At
McCaul Street, the road fronts the
Art Gallery of Ontario in proximity to some of the city's institutions of higher learning, including
OCAD University,
Michener Institute, and the
University of Toronto. At
Spadina Avenue, Dundas serves as the east–west axis of the city's
largest Chinatown, with the Chinatown sections of Dundas (from Beverly Street in the east to Kensington Avenue in the west) having street signs in Chinese as 登打士街, which is the same as Dundas Street in the Kowloon Peninsula of Hong Kong. West of
Ossington Avenue, it meanders northwards towards
Bloor Street near the intersection of
Roncesvalles Avenue, heading north toward
the Junction district at
Keele Street. Proceeding due west from Keele through the Junction, Dundas parallels the
CP Rail line through the mixed industrial-residential district. At Scarlett Road, the route veers southwest toward a high crossing over the
Humber River valley, through the former village of
Lambton Mills. Beyond the river, Dundas serves as the northern boundary of the
Kingsway residential district. Passing the historic St. George's Church-on-the-Hill, Dundas again heads southwest toward the former village of
Islington. This route traverses the west end of the city, avoiding obstacles that were expensive to negotiate in the 18th century, such as
Grenadier Pond in what is now
High Park and the highest point of the Humber Valley (Bloor Street to the south requires a high bridge to cross the river at that point). Dundas intersects for a second time with Bloor Street at
Kipling Avenue in Etobicoke. In 1961, the intersection was rebuilt into a highway-type interchange, with an overpass over Kipling. The City of Toronto demolished the interchange and replaced it with a new at-grade intersection. A new routing of Dundas Street to the south of the former interchange was opened in February 2019, connecting via Dunbloor Road (which was rechristened to be a part of Dundas for continuity) to the section east of Kipling. From Kipling, Dundas is a six-lane arterial road, and began to follow the former
Highway 5 (which ran along the more direct Bloor east of that point). West of
Cloverdale Mall, Dundas Street meets
Highway 427 at a
parclo interchange. Upon crossing the Toronto boundary at
Etobicoke Creek, the street enters
Mississauga, in the
Peel Region and follows a southwestern heading. It then enters
Halton Region and passes through
Oakville and
Burlington, and then
Waterdown (a part of
Hamilton). It leaves the former Highway 5 alignment (which continues west as a still-provincially maintained highway through rural
Brant County) west of
Highway 6 in Waterdown, and resumes to the south in its namesake former town
Dundas (today also part of Hamilton) and follows the former
Highway 99 (now
Hamilton Road 99) and assumes its alternate name, Governors Road, after crossing Main Street (the original
Highway 8). It follows the entire length of former Hwy. 99 west to Osborne Corners where it follows former Highway 5 again to
Paris, where it joined former
Highway 2 and picks up the name Dundas again. Through most of Paris, Highway 2 bypasses it as it becomes a broken residential street, but rejoins it to follow King Edward Street. The name again resumes west of Paris as the street proceeds west along the former highway through
Woodstock en route to
London. In London, the street ends just east of the confluence of the
Thames River before it crosses the Kensington Bridge to west London. Originally, this section was called "Dundas Street West" with the eastern portion being "Dundas Street East". However, since construction in the mid-1980s, the entire western portion has been called "Riverside Drive". Some Londoners still refer to the non-renamed portion "Dundas Street East" though it no longer bears an "East" designation. Riverside Drive ends further west at junction with Boler Road and Sanatorium Road.
Dundas Street Bridge A three-hinged ribbed steel arch bridge was built from 1910 to 1911 to span the Don River valley and railway tracks (now used by the
Don Valley Parkway) below. The bridge was a set of four Warren pony truss spans connected by a shorter riveted Warren deck truss spans to the east and west. The bridge has been altered with the removal of ornamental railings with concrete barrier topped with ornamental railing, removal of steel girders with larger abutments to allow for wider road deck was completed in 2007. == Neighbourhoods ==