Finch Corridor - vanishing point
It recently came to my attention that Panoramio, the site which hosts all my Urban Wilderness photos, and from which I link to this thread, is not long for this world. A little over a month ago it was announced that, at some still indeterminate time in the future, Panoramio will gradually be subsumed into something called Google Maps Views. Although there are plans to have existing Panoramio accounts/pics "migrate" over to the new site, details as to how, and how well this will be done are rather sketchy. At very least, it's probably safe to assume that all the current image hotlinks in this thread will eventually become non-functional, leaving only the text. As I doubt I'll ever find the time to go back and relink some 10,000 images over all my previous posts, it would seem the race is now on to finish documenting everything in the city I've been meaning to get to before this all disappears into the virtual ether...
So let's check another one off the list, and finish off the Finch Hydro Corridor by starting at Keele Street, where construction on the Y-U-S subway extention is well underway, and heading further west to the Black Creek:
From Black Creek I head through the Jane & Finch area to Highway 400:
Just west of Highway 400 sits the Finch Transmission Station, after which the corridor takes an abrupt bend southwest towards the Humber River and Etobicoke:
Continuing southwest from the Humber to Rexdale Boulevard:
We're entering into some highly industrialized areas now, past the Brampton railway subdivision and on to Highway 409:
Beyond Highway 409 to where the Finch Hydro Corridor and Etobicoke Hydro Corridor cross paths at the massive Richview Transmission Station:
From one type of interchange to another, I complete my tour of northwest-end expressways heading across Highway 27 to the confluence of the 401 and 427:
Winding things up west of Renforth Drive, at Centennial Park and the Centennial Park Golf Centre:
The Toronto portion of the Finch Corridor ends here, with the rest of the city, at the Etobicoke Creek. But the remainder of the line continues on through Mississauga (presumably now under a different name) and beyond - wires strung to the horizon, vanishing somewhere off in the far distance. And so, I too may continue on where I've ended here today - picking up on my "Missing Links" series of riparian golf course segments, now that winter is on its way back...