Hannibal was filmed in Toronto & Mississauga in Canada.
Locations
The Rundle House
Real
In movie
2350 Doulton Drive
Real
In movie
The Dalziel (Black Creek Pioneer Village)
Real
In movie
The Michener Institute
Real
In movie
Bluffer's Park Beach (Bluffer's Park)
Real
In movie
Victoria College (U of T)
Real
In movie
No Frills
Real
In movie
Toronto Central YMCA
Real
In movie
Novotel Toronto Centre
Real
In movie
Humanities Wing (U of T Scarborough)
Scene was shot The eastern wing of the Andrews Building was constructed in 1964 by architect John Andrews as the first new structure for the freshly founded Scarborough College. The brutalist structure is designed with a long hallway running down the center surrounded by balconies designed to resemble a city street.
Real
In movie
Old Mill Toronto
Real
In movie
Royal Ontario Museum
Scene was shot The current Royal Ontario Museum a combination of several structures constructed across the 20th century. The original building is a Italianate & Neo-Romanesque structure designed by architects Frank Darling and John A. Pearson in 1914. It was expanded in 1933 with the eastern wing containing its elaborate art deco rotunda designed by Alfred H. Chapman and James Oxley. The curatorial centre was added in 1984 designed in the modernist style by Gene Kinoshita. The most recent expansion is the deconstructionist "Crystal" designed by Daniel Libeskind which opened in 2007 and includes the new lobby and three-story atrium.
Real
In movie
Valley Halla Estate
Scene was shot Constructed in 1936 for the inventor Robert Jackson, this isolated estate in the Rouge Valley is now owned and maintained by the nearby Toronto Zoo and use for events and filming.
Real
In movie
Roy Thomson Hall
Scene was shot Roy Thomson Hall is a 2,630 seat concert hall constructed in 1982. It features a circular glass structure designed by the architect Arthur Erickson with Mathers and Haldenby.
Real
In movie
Art Gallery of Ontario
Scene was shot The massive Art Gallery of Ontario began its life as a Georgian manor home known as The Grange which was built in 1817. The home was bequeathed to the museum upon the owners death in 1911 and greatly expanded upon over the century in more than a half a dozen different expansions. The most recent expansion occurred on the supervision of architect Frank Gehry and included the new glass entrance on the north side of the building and a titanium and glass structure over Walker Court with a distinctive protruding staircase.
Real
In movie
St. Michael's College Quad (U of T)
Scene was shot St. Michael's College quad was constructed on the Clover Hill estate and is surrounded by Teefy Hall dating back to 1936, Carr Hall dating back to 1954, as well as the Maritain and McCorkell houses dating back to the old Victorian-era estate. At the center of the quad is an abstract stainless steel sculpture called "Michael" representing the eponymous saint created by artist Anne Allardyce to celebrate the 125th anniversary of the founding of the college in 1978.
Real
In movie
Knox College (U of T)
Scene was shot Knox College was founded in 1844 as a postgraduate theological college associated with the Presbyterian Church of Canada. It moved in to its current neo-gothic building 1915.
Real
In movie
David Dunlap Observatory
Scene was shot David Dunlap Observatory was constructed by the University of Toronto in 1935 and operated by them until 2008 when it was sold to the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada and then resold in 2018 to the City of Richmond Hill for historical preservation. The main observatory consists of a 74-inch telescope, the second largest in North America at the time of its installation. Atop the nearby administration build are three additional domes that have housed various telescopes over the years. Light pollution from the growing development around the site and the relatively small size of the telescope eventually reduced its scientific usefulness.
Real
In movie
Science Wing (U of T Scarborough)
Scene was shot The first new building constructed on the campus after its founding in 1963, the Science Wing (original the Andrews Building) was design by John Andrews in the brutalist style and completed in 1964. The building, along with the adjacent Humanities Wing/locations/3sj, were constructed with long open hallways down the center with overlooking balconies designed to look like city streets.
Real
In movie
Ching Lane (north of Adelaide, west of Victoria)
Scene was shot The short Ching Lane in downtown Toronto is named after Sam Ching, the first Chinese business owner in Toronto who opened Sam Ching & Co. Chinese Laundry in 1878.
Real
In movie
Casa Loma
Scene was shot A gothic revival mansion constructed in 1914 for Sir Henry Mill Pellatt for a princely sum of $3.5 million. After passing through a number of owners, the city seized the property in 1933 and it was soon leased by the Kiwanis Club for 74 years. The mansion is currently available for tours.