Warehouse 13 was filmed in Toronto, Hamilton, Whitchurch-Stouffville, Mississauga, Niagara Falls, & Oshawa in Canada.
Spirits Halloween
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Formerly the Ontario Specialty Co.
Toronto
Stouffville Clock Tower
In movie
Real
Campbell Lofts
In movie
Real
Mississauga City Hall
In movie
Real
Novotel Toronto Centre
In movie
Real
Unwin Avenue (between Regatta & Marina)
In movie
Real
Adelaide Street West & Widmer Street
In movie
Real
George Brown House
In movie
Real
Revival 629
In movie
Real
Amsterdam Bridge
In movie
Real
Rankine Generating Station
In movie
Real
Sheppard Street
In movie
Real
Cheltenham General Store
In movie
Real
Bangkok Spoon Deluxe
In movie
Real
Le Sélect Bistro
In movie
Real
Atai Bistro
In movie
Real
Lakeshore valu-mart
In movie
Real
St. Joseph Street & St. Nicholas Street
In movie
Real
276 King Street West
In movie
Real
Roblin's Mill (Black Creek Pioneer Village)
In movie
Real
Gilson/Maritain House (U of T)
In movie
Real
Acadia Art & Rare Books
In movie
Real
Guild Park and Gardens
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Guild Park and Gardens is a public park created in 1978 on the grounds surrounding what is currently known as the Guild Inn. The inn was constructed in 1914 in the Arts and Crafts-style and known then as Ranelagh Park. In 1932 the new owners transformed the mansion and grounds into an artists colony known as The Guild of All Arts. The grounds of the park contain pieces of over 60 buildings that were demolished or remodeled around Toronto, as well as a log cabin dating back to the 1800s.
Scarborough
Hy's Steakhouse & Cocktail Bar
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Originally the downtown branch of the Desjardins Credit Union before a merge turned it into the Meridian Credit Union. The branch was shuttered in 2016 and stood vacant for several years before finally being remodeled in 2019 into a Hy's Steakhouse.
Toronto
AfroLatino Dance Company
In movie
Real
Elgin and Winter Garden Theatre Centre
In movie
Real
Scene was shot The Elgin and Winter Garden theatres are the last surviving stacked Edwardian theatres in the world. The theatres opened in 1913 as the flagship venue of Marcus Loew's theatre chain and were designed by Thomas W. Lamb. The ground-level Elgin Theatre is decorated in gold and marble with a domed roof while seven storeys above is the Winter Garden Theatre covered in plant murals, garden trellises, and columns designed like tree trunks. The upper theatre was closed in 1928 as the lower theatre was converted to show talkies, and the upper theatre remained closed until the building was acquired by the Ontario Heritage Foundation in 1981.
Toronto
Wycliffe College (U of T)
In movie
Real
Toronto Power Generating Station
In movie
Real
Richmond-Adelaide Centre
In movie
Real
Former North South Service Center
In movie
Real
Richmond Street West & Yonge Street
In movie
Real
Orbitor Drive & Matheson Boulevard East
In movie
Real
Amco Petroleum
In movie
Real
Richmond Street West (between Bathurst & Portland)
In movie
Real
Alley (north of College, east of St. George)
In movie
Real
Ted's Restaurant
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Dating all the way back to 1954, Ted’s Restaurant preserves the 50s-style decor that it had when it opened. The restaurant was created by Ted Petkoff who sold it off in the late 60s on the promise that it would retain its classic diner style.
Scarborough
Convocation Hall (U of T)
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Convocation Hall was designed by architects Darling and Pearson in the Edwardian Baroque style and opened in 1907 to host the university's annual convocation ceremonies and other events. It features a large, domed rotunda can seat around 1700 people.
Toronto
Former Trinity Studios
In movie
Real
Melinda Street & Jordan Street
In movie
Real
The Esplanade & Church Street
In movie
Real
Paramount Fine Foods Centre
In movie
Real
Privé Hair Gallery
In movie
Real
19 Church Street North
In movie
Real
489 Parliament Street
In movie
Real
Shangri-La Hotel Toronto
In movie
Real
Red Canoe
In movie
Real
Front Street West (between Bay & Yonge)
In movie
Real
Old Unionville Church
In movie
Real
Scene was shot The Old Unionville Church was constructed in 1879 as the Unionville Congregational Church. It was designed by architect E. J. Lennox, the architect behind Casa Loma, in the Queen Anne style. It has gone through many uses over the years and currently operates as offices and a retail store.
Toronto
55 University
In movie
Real
Geomans Appliances Markham
In movie
Real
21 Don Roadway
In movie
Real
Scene was shot The former home to a Lever Brothers factory dating back to 1892, this facility shut down and changed hands several times in the late 2000s and is now at the center of the large office and retail redevelopment.
Toronto
Signature Flight Support (YYZ)
In movie
Real
Alley (north of St. Clair, west of Westmount)
In movie
Real
East Thirty-Six
In movie
Real
Alley (north of College, west of Spadina)
In movie
Real
3 Bennington Heights Drive
In movie
Real
Canadian National Railway Police Building
In movie
Real
Scene was shot This building was constructed in 1923 to server as the headquarters for the CNR police. The building was originally positioned alongside a freight yard, but this tracks were removed in 1970 leaving a good distances from the railway. The only other building on Cherry Street alongside the Canary Restaurant building that weren't demolished to make way for new development.
Toronto
High Park Music
In movie
Real
Art Gallery of Ontario
In movie
Real
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.
Toronto
Gerhard Supply
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Former location of Hairy Tarantula West.
Toronto
Britannia Avenue & Ottawa Street North
In movie
Real
King Street West & Ogilvie Street
In movie
Real
Ernst & Young Tower
In movie
Real
Frederick Horsman Varley Art Gallery
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Named after Group of Seven artist Frederick Varley, the Unionville art gallery was constructed in 1997.
Toronto
The Omni King Edward Hotel
In movie
Real
Scene was shot The King Edward Hotel was one of the first luxury hotels constructed in Toronto when it opened in 1903. It was designed by architects Henry Ives Cobb and E.J. Lennox and original featured 400 rooms, later expanding in 1922 to add an 18-storey tower with an additional 530 rooms and including the fashionable Crystal Ballroom at its top. After being closed for 38 years, the Crystal Ballroom was finally restored and opened in 2017.
Toronto
Cherry Street Strauss Trunnion Bascule Bridge
In movie
Real
Scene was shot The Cherry Street South Bridge is a steel bascule drawbridge constructed by Joseph Strauss and the Dominion Bridge Company in 1930 to cross the Ship Channel in Toronto's Port Lands.
Toronto
Main Street Unionville (between Carlton & Fred Varley)
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Unionville's historic Main Street is a popular tourist destination for its preserved small town feel amongst all of the surrounding development, preserving many features dating back to the village's founding in 1794.
Toronto
Allan Gardens
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Allan Gardens began its life as gardens and a conservatory established by the Toronto Horticultural Society in 1860 and transferred fully to the city on 1888. The park houses a conservatory known as the Palm House consisting of six green houses built in 1910 after the older Horticultural Pavilion was destroyed in a fire.
Toronto
Royal Ontario Museum
In movie
Real
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.
Toronto
Knox College (U of T)
In movie
Real
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.
Toronto
The Lakeview Restaurant
In movie
Real
Scene was shot The Lakeview is an old-school diner which opened in 1932 which maintains its classic look making it a popular filming location.
Toronto
Fairmont Royal York
In movie
Real
Scene was shot A large historic hotel in downtown Toronto which opened in 1929 as part of the Canadian Pacific Railway's network of grand hotels across the country. The hotel current sports 1365 rooms, a number of meeting rooms, a bar, and a small shopping area in the basement.
Toronto
Crosby Memorial Community Centre
In movie
Real
Metro Hall
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Metro Hall is a 27-story office building constructed in 1992 housing the City of Toronto municipal offices. The main floor of the building houses the council chambers which were only used until 1998 when the various level of city governments were merged and moved to City Hall.
Toronto
University College (U of T)
In movie
Real
Scene was shot The University College building opened in 1859 to house the secular counterpart to Trinity College and St. Michael's College at the University of Toronto. The building was designed by architects Frederic Cumberland and William Storm in the Romanesque Revival-style with a variety of other styles mixed in.
Toronto
Springhill Manor
In movie
Real
Toronto Union Station
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Toronto's Union Station is the largest train station in Canada and is the third train station to bear that name. Construction on the station began in 1914 just to the east of the old station, but while the building was completed in 1920, trains didn't start running through it until 1927 due to a dispute over the tracks. The building was recognized as a National Historic Site of Canada in 1975 and inducted into the Railway Hall of Fame in 1999. The station currently operates Via Rail, Amtrak, and GO Transit trains, as well as the dedicated Union Pearson Express to the airport and subway trains through the station under Front Street.
Toronto
Gristmill Lane
In movie
Real
Scene was shot One of the main streets running through Toronto's Distillery District, this brick-paved street was converted to be pedestrian-only in 2001 when the district was converted into a residential and commercial area after its long history as part of the Gooderham and Worts Distillery.
Toronto
Birkbeck Building
In movie
Real
David Dunlap Observatory
In movie
Real
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.
Richmond Hill
6297 Main Street
In movie
Real
Parkwood Estate & Gardens
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Built in 1917, the Parkwood Estate was the former home of the founder of GM of Canada, Samuel McLaughlin. The McLaughlin family moved out in ‘72 and the estate became a history site in ‘89 and is now a museum.
Oshawa
Casa Loma
In movie
Real
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.
Toronto