London is a city in southwestern Ontario, Canada, along the Quebec City–Windsor Corridor. The city had a population of 422,324 according to the 2021 Canadian census. London is at the confluence of the Thames River and North Thames River, approximately from both Toronto and Detroit; and about from Buffalo, New York. The city of London is politically separate from Middlesex County, though it remains the county seat.
London and the Thames were named after the London and River Thames in 1793 by John Graves Simcoe, who proposed the site for the capital city of Upper Canada. The first European settlement was between 1801 and 1804 by Peter Hagerman. The village was founded in 1826 and incorporated in 1855. Since then, London has grown to be the largest southwestern Ontario municipality and Canada's 11th largest metropolitan area, having annexed many of the smaller communities that surround it.
London is a regional centre of healthcare and education, being home to the University of Western Ontario (which brands itself "Western University"), Fanshawe College, and three major hospitals: Victoria Hospital, University Hospital and St. Joseph's Hospital. The city hosts a number of musical and artistic exhibits and festivals, which contribute to its tourism industry, but its economic activity is centered on education, medical research, manufacturing, financial services, and information technology. London's university and hospitals are among its top ten employers. London lies at the junction of Highways 401 and 402, connecting it to Toronto, Windsor, and Sarnia. These highways also make the Detroit-Windsor, Port Huron-Sarnia, and Niagara Falls border crossings with the United States easily accessible. The city also has railway stations and bus stations and is home to the London International Airport.
The Oneida Nation of the Thames, Chippewas of the Thames First Nation, and Munsee-Delaware Nation reserves are located south-west of the city.
London was part of the Talbot Settlement, named for Colonel Thomas Talbot, the chief administrator of the area, who oversaw the land surveying and built the first government buildings for the administration of the western Ontario peninsular region. Together with the rest of southwestern Ontario, the village benefited from Talbot's provisions not only for building and maintaining roads but also for assignment of access priorities to main routes to productive land. Crown and then received preference in the rest of Ontario.
In 1814, the Battle of Longwoods took place during the War of 1812 in what is now Southwest Middlesex, near London. The retreating British Army were staying at Hungerford Hill when they were attacked by the Kentucky Mounted Riflemen.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 289 In 1827, a settlement was started Bryon when Cyrenius Hall built a gristmill.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 288
In 1832, the new settlement suffered an outbreak of cholera. London proved a centre of strong Tory support during the Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837, notwithstanding a brief rebellion led by Charles Duncombe. Consequently, the British government located its Ontario peninsular garrison there in 1838, increasing its population with soldiers and their dependents, and the business support populations they required. London was incorporated as a town in 1840.
On 13 April 1845, a fire destroyed much of London, which was then largely constructed of wooden buildings. One of the first casualties was the town's only fire engine. The fire burned nearly of land, destroying 150 buildings, before it burned itself out later that day. One fifth of London was destroyed in the province's first million-dollar fire.
The population in 1846 was 3,500. Brick buildings included a jail and court house, and large barracks. London had a fire company, a theatre, a large Gothic church, nine other churches or chapels, and two market buildings. The buildings that were destroyed by fire in 1845 were mostly rebuilt by 1846. Connection with other communities was by road, using mainly that ran daily. A weekly newspaper was published and mail was received daily by the post office. Two villages named Petersville and Kensington once stood where downtown London now is.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 319 Petersville was founded by Samuel Peters in 1853.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 319 Kensington was founded around about 1878.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 320 Petersville and Kensigton were amalgamated on 4 March 1881 to form London West.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 321
On 1 January 1855, London was incorporated as a city (10,000 or more residents). In the 1860s, a sulphur spring was discovered at the forks of the Thames River while industrialists were drilling for Petroleum. The springs became a popular destination for wealthy Ontarians, until the turn of the 20th century when a textiles factory was built at the site, replacing the spa.
Records from 1869 indicate a population of about 18,000 served by three newspapers, churches of all major denominations and offices of all the major banks. Industries included several tanneries, oil refineries and foundries, four flour mills, the Labatt Brewing Company and the Carling brewery in addition to other manufacturing companies such as EMCO Wheaton. Both the Great Western and Grand Trunk railways had stops here. Several insurance companies also had offices in the city. The Crystal Palace Barracks, an octagonal brick building with eight doors and forty-eight windows built in 1861, was used for events such the Provincial Agricultural Fair of Canada West held in London that year. It was visited by Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, Governor-General John Young, 1st Baron Lisgar and Prime Minister John A. Macdonald.
Long before the Royal Military College of Canada was established in 1876, there were proposals for military colleges in Canada. Staffed by British Regulars, adult male students underwent three-month-long military courses from 1865 at the School of Military Instruction in London. Established by Militia General Order in 1865, the school enabled Officers of Militia or Candidates for Commission or promotion in the Militia to learn Military duties, drill and discipline, to command a Company at Battalion Drill, to Drill a Company at Company Drill, the internal economy of a Company and the duties of a Company's Officer. The school was not retained at Confederation, in 1867.Richard Preston 'Canada's RMC: A History of the Royal Military College of Canada' published by the RMC Club by U of Toronto Press. In 1875, London's first iron bridge, the Blackfriars Street Bridge, was constructed. It replaced a succession of flood-failed wooden structures that had provided the city's only northern road crossing of the river. A rare example of a wrought iron bowstring arch through truss bridge, the Blackfriars remains open to pedestrian and bicycle traffic, though it was temporarily closed indefinitely to vehicular traffic due to various structural problems and was once again reopened to vehicular traffic 1 December 2018. The Blackfriars, amidst the river-distance between the Carling Brewery and the historic Labatt Park (including a major mill), linked London with its western suburb of Petersville, named for Squire Peters of Grosvenor Lodge. That community joined with the southern subdivision of Kensington in 1874, formally incorporating as the municipality of Petersville. Although it changed its name in 1880 to the more inclusive "London West", it remained a separate municipality until ratepayers voted for amalgamation with London in 1897, largely due to repeated flooding. The most serious flood was in July 1883, which resulted in serious loss of life and property devaluation. This area retains much original and attractively maintained 19th-century tradespeople's and workers' housing, including Georgian cottages as well as larger houses, and a distinct sense of place. In 1897, London West was annexed to London.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 322
London's eastern suburb, London East, was (and remains) an industrial centre, which also incorporated in 1874. It was founded as Lilley's Corners by Charles Lilley in 1854.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 312 Oil was discovered in the Petrolia area and Lilley's Corners was chosen as the refining site because it was close to the railroad.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 315 The Ontario Car Works, the Great Western Gasworks and the London Street Railroad all had their headquarters in Lilley's Corners.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 315 In 1872, Lilley's Corners became a village.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 315 It was annexed to London in 1885.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 312 Attaining the status of town in 1881, it continued as a separate municipality until concerns over expensive waterworks and other fiscal problems led to amalgamation in 1885. The southern suburb of London, including Wortley Village, was collectively known as "London South". Never incorporated, the South was annexed to the city in 1890, although Wortley Village still retains a distinct sense of place. The area started to be settled in the 1860s.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 316 In 1880, Polk's Directory called London South "a charming suburb of the City of London.".Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 316 By contrast, the settlement at Broughdale on the city's north end had a clear identity, adjoined the university, and was not annexed until 1961. Broughdale was named after Reverend Charles C. Brough, the Anglican Archdeacon of London who settled there in 1854.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 283 Broughdale started to grow when it was connected to the London Street Railroad in 1901, leading to a real estate bubble.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 285 A post office was opened in Broughdale on 1 July 1904 with Charles Watlers as postmaster.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 286 Broughdale was initially named Brough, but was renamed Broughdale in 1906 because it sounded better.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 286 In 1924, the University of Western Ontario was founded in the former Broughdale.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 286 After the founding of the university, Broughdale became more like a city and less like a village.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 286 Broughdale was incorporated as a village in 1930.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 286 In 1961, Broughdale was annexed to London.Grainger, Jennifer Vanished Villages of Middlesex, Toronto: Natural Heritage, 2002 p. 287
Ivor F. Goodson and Ian R. Dowbiggin have explored the battle over vocational education in London, Ontario, in the 1900–1930 era. The London Technical and Commercial High School came under heavy attack from the city's social and business elite, which saw the school as a threat to the budget of the city's only academic high school, London Collegiate Institute.Ivor F. Goodson and Ian R. Dowbiggin, "Vocational education and school reform: the case of the London (Canada) Technical School, 1900-1930" History of Education Review (1991) 20#1: 39–60.
The Banting House, a National Historic Site of Canada, is where Frederick Banting developed the ideas that led to the discovery of insulin. Banting lived and practiced in London for ten months, from July 1920 to May 1921. London is also the site of the Flame of Hope, which is intended to burn until a cure for diabetes is discovered.
London's role as a military centre continued into the 20th century during the two World Wars, serving as the administrative centre for the Western Ontario district. In 1905, the London Armoury was built and housed the First Hussars until 1975. A private investor purchased the historic site and built a new hotel (Delta London Armouries, 1996) in its place, preserving the shell of the historic building. In the 1950s, two reserve battalions amalgamated and became London and Oxford Rifles (3rd Battalion), The Royal Canadian Regiment. This unit continues to serve today as 4th Battalion, The Royal Canadian Regiment. The Regimental Headquarters of The Royal Canadian Regiment remains in London at Wolseley Barracks on Oxford Street. The barracks are home to the First Hussars militia regiment as well.
On 1 January 1993, London annexed nearly the entire township of Westminster, a large, primarily rural municipality directly south of the city, including the police village of Lambeth. With this massive annexation, which also included part of London township, London almost doubled in area again, adding several thousand more residents. In the present day, London stretches south to the boundary with Elgin County, north and east to Fanshawe Lake, north and west to the township of Middlesex Centre (the nearest developed areas of it being Arva to the north and Komoka to the west) and east to Nilestown and Dorchester.
The 1993 annexation, made London one of the largest urban municipalities in Ontario. Intense commercial and residential development is presently occurring in the southwest and northwest areas of the city. Opponents of this development cite urban sprawl, destruction of rare Carolinian zone forest and farm lands, replacement of distinctive regions by generic malls, and standard transportation and pollution concerns as major issues facing London. The City of London is currently the eleventh-largest urban area in Canada, eleventh-largest census metropolitan area in Canada, and the sixth-largest city in Ontario.
Two years later, on 12 July 1883, the first of the two most devastating floods in London's history killed 17 people. The second major flood, on 26 April 1937, destroyed more than a thousand houses across London, and caused over $50 million in damages, particularly in West London.
On 3 January 1898, the floor of the assembly hall at London City Hall collapsed, killing 23 people and leaving more than 70 injured. Testimony at a coroner's inquest described the wooden beam under the floor as unsound, with knots and other defects reducing its strength by one fifth to one third.
After repeated floods, the Upper Thames River Conservation Authority in 1953 built Fanshawe Dam on the North Thames to control the downstream rivers. Financing for this project came from the federal, provincial, and municipal governments. Other include a 1984 tornado that led to damage on several streets in the White Oaks area of South London.
On 11 December 2020, a partially-constructed apartment building just off of Wonderland Road in southwest London collapsed, killing two people and injuring at least four others. In January 2024, both Oxford County companies involved in the building's construction were fined $400,000, with The Ministry of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development declaring the companies had failed to "provide proper information, instruction and supervision, specifically on the use of proper concrete measuring techniques on the project."
Because of its location in the continent, London experiences large seasonal contrast, tempered to a point by the surrounding Great Lakes. The proximity of the lakes also ensure abundant cloud cover, particularly in late Fall and Winter. The summers are usually warm to hot and humid, with a July average of , and temperatures above occur on average 11 days per year. In 2016, however, temperatures rose above this temperature on more than 35 days, and in 2018, four heatwaves led to a peak humidex of . The city is affected by frequent thunderstorms due to hot, humid summer weather, as well as the Convergence zone originating from Lake Huron and Lake Erie. The same convergence zone is responsible for spawning funnel clouds and the occasional tornado. Spring and autumn in between are not long, and winters are cold but with frequent thaws.
Annual precipitation averages . Its winter snowfall totals are heavy, averaging about per year, although the localized nature of snow squalls means the total can vary widely from year to year as do accumulations over different areas of the city. Some of the snow accumulation comes from lake effect snow and snow squalls originating from Lake Huron, some to the northwest, which occurs when strong, cold winds blow from that direction. From 5 December 2010, to 9 December 2010, London experienced record snowfall when up to of snow fell in parts of the city. Schools and businesses were closed for three days and bus service was cancelled after the second day of snow.
The highest temperature ever recorded in London was on 6 August 1918.
The lowest temperature ever recorded was on 9 February 1934.
At the census metropolitan area (CMA) level in the 2021 census, the London CMA had a population of living in of its total private dwellings, a change of from its 2016 population of . With a land area of , it had a population density of in 2021.
In 1925, Supertest Petroleum was founded in London. It was acquired in 1971 by BP Canada.
In the late 19th century, London became a major centre for the trust and loan industry. Companies founded in London included:Armstrong, 122.
One of London's most iconic companies was London Life, which was founded in 1874. In 1997, the Power Corporation of Canada acquired control of London Life, and in 2020, London Life and Great-West Life merged into Canada Life. Other London insurance companies include Northern Life (1894–1986) and the London-Canada Insurance Company (1859–1987).
The confectionary company O-Pee-Chee was founded in London in 1911.
There are many large Real Estate Development firms based in London which are active across Southwestern Ontario. These include Sifton Properties, Drewlo Holdings, Old Oak Properties, Tricar Developments, York Developments, Farhi Holdings and Westdell Developments. Combined, they own or operate over 300 million square feet of commercial and Real estate.
On 11 December 2009, Minister of State Gary Goodyear announced a new $11-million cargo terminal at the London International Airport.
American country-music icon Johnny Cash proposed to his wife June Carter Cash onstage at the London Gardens—site of the famous 26 April 1965, fifteen-minute Rolling Stones concert—during his 22 February 1968 performance in the city (the hometown of his manager Saul Holiff).
Avant-garde noise-pioneers The Nihilist Spasm Band formed in downtown London in 1965. Between 1966 and 1972, the group held a Monday night residency at the York Hotel in the city's core, which established it as a popular venue for emerging musicians and artists; known as Call the Office, the venue served as a hotbed for punk rock in the late 1970s and 1980s and hosted college rock bands and weekly alternative-music nights until closing indefinitely in 2020.
In 2003, CHRW-FM developed The London Music Archives, an online music database that chronicled every album recorded in London between 1966 and 2006, and in 2019 the CBC released a documentary entitled "London Calling" which outlined "The Secret Musical History of London Ontario" (including its importance for the massively popular electronic music duo Richie Hawtin and John Acquaviva). London also had (and still has, in an unofficial capacity) a professional symphony orchestra – Orchestra London – which was founded in 1937; although the organization filed for bankruptcy in 2015, members of the orchestra continue to play self-produced concerts under the moniker London Symphonia. In addition, the city is home to the London Community Orchestra, the London Youth Symphony, and the Amabile Choirs of London, Canada.
The Juno Awards of 2019 were hosted in London in March 2019, hosted by singer-songwriter Sarah McLachlan. In 2021, London was named Canada's first City of Music, by UNESCO. The labor union representing entertainment venue workers in London is IATSE Local 105.
In addition to Museum London and The Forest City Gallery, London is also home to a number of other galleries and art spaces, including the McIntosh Gallery at Western University, TAP Centre for Creativity, and various smaller galleries such as the Thielsen Gallery, the Westland Gallery, the Michael Gibson Gallery, the Jonathon Bancroft-Snell Gallery, The Art Exchange, Strand Fine Art and others. London also hosts an annual Nuit Blanche every June.
London has nine major parks and gardens throughout the city, many of which run along the Thames River and are interconnected by a series of pedestrian and bike paths, known as the Thames Valley Parkway. This path system is in length, and connects to an additional of bike and hiking trails throughout the city. The city's largest park, Springbank Park, is and contains of trails. It is also home to Storybook Gardens, a family attraction open year-round.
The city includes many pedestrian walkways throughout its neighbourhoods. Newer settled areas in the northwest end of the city include long pathways between housing developments and tall grass bordering Snake Creek, a thin waterway connected to the Thames River. These walkways connect the neighbourhoods of Fox Hollow, White Hills, Sherwood Forest and the western portion of Masonville, also running through parts of Medway Valley Heritage Forest.
Football teams include the London Beefeaters (Ontario Football Conference).
London's basketball team, the London Lightning plays at Canada Life Place. Originally members of the National Basketball League of Canada until the league folded in 2023, they are now members of the Basketball Super League. As members of the NBLC, the London Lightning became six time NBL Canada champions.
There are also a number of former sports teams that have moved or folded. London's four former baseball teams are the London Monarchs (Canadian Baseball League), the London Werewolves (Frontier League), the London Tecumsehs (International Association) and the London Tigers (AA Eastern League). Other former sports teams include the London Lasers (Canadian Soccer League)
In March 2013, London hosted the 2013 World Figure Skating Championships. The University of Western Ontario's teams play under the name Mustangs. The university's football team plays at TD Stadium. Western's Rowing Team rows out of a boathouse at Fanshawe Lake. Fanshawe College teams play under the name Falcons. The Women's Cross Country team has won 3 consecutive Canadian Collegiate Athletic Association (CCAA) National Championships. In 2010, the program cemented itself as the first CCAA program to win both Men's and Women's National team titles, as well as CCAA Coach of the Year.
The Western Fair Raceway, about 85 acres harness racing track and simulcast centre, operates year-round. The grounds include a coin slot casino, a former IMAX theatre, and Sports and Agri-complex. Labatt Memorial Park the world's oldest continuously used baseball grounds was established as Tecumseh Park in 1877; it was renamed in 1937, because the London field has been flooded and rebuilt twice (1883 and 1937), including a re-orientation of the bases (after the 1883 flood). The Forest City Velodrome, at the former London Ice House, is the only indoor cycling track in Ontario and the third to be built in North America, opened in 2005. London is also home to World Seikido, the governing body of a martial art called Seikido which was developed in London in 1987.
London was the first city in Canada (in May 2017) to decide to move a ranked choice ballot for municipal elections starting in 2018. Voters mark their ballots in order of preference, ranking their top three favourite candidates. An individual must reach 50 per cent of the total to be declared elected; in each round of counting where a candidate has not yet reached that target, the person with the fewest votes is dropped from the ballot and their second or third choice preferences reallocated to the remaining candidates, with this process repeating until a candidate has reached 50 per cent. "London, Ont., votes to become 1st Canadian city to use ranked ballots" . CBC News Windsor, 2 May 2017.
In 2001, the City of London first published their Facilities Accessibility Design Standards (FADS) which was one of the first North American municipal accessibility requirements to include Universal Design. It has since been adopted by over 50 municipalities in Canada and the United States.
The city includes four provincial ridings. In the provincial government, London is represented by New Democrats Terence Kernaghan (London North Centre), Teresa Armstrong (London—Fanshawe) and Peggy Sattler (London West), and Progressive Conservative Rob Flack (Elgin—Middlesex—London).
The city has been home to several high-profile incidents over the years such as the Ontario Biker War and the London Conflict, it was also the location where most of the trial for the Shedden Massacre took place.
Research by Michael Andrew Arntfield, a police officer turned criminology professor, has determined that on a per-capita basis, London had more active serial killers than any locale in the world from 1959 to 1984.Michael Arntfield (2018). Murder City: The Untold Story of Canada's Serial Killer Capital, 1959-1984. FriesenPress Arntfield determined there were at least six serial killers active in London during this era. Some went unidentified, but known killers in London included Russell Maurice Johnson, Gerald Thomas Archer, and Christian Magee.Jared Lindzon What turned one city in Canada into the 'serial killer capital' of the world? , TheGuardian.com, 19 August 2015; accessed 10 Aug 2018
On 6 June 2021, the London, Ontario truck attack took place in the North West of the city. Four members of a Canadian Muslim family, two women aged 74 and 44, a 46-year-old man and a 15-year-old girl were all killed by a pickup truck, which jumped the curb and ran them over. The sole survivor was a 9-year-old boy. According to the London Police Service, they were deliberately targeted in anti-Islamic hate crime. Later on the same day, 20-year-old Nathaniel Veltman was arrested in the parking lot of a nearby mall. He was charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder.
In September 2023, the trial for the accused began in Windsor, ON. This was the first time Canadian jurors heard legal arguments for terrorism related to white supremacy. Shortly after the attack, the accused told police, "I admit it was terrorism...I was a ticking bomb, ready to go off." He also admitted that his hate towards minority groups began with looking for information online about Donald Trump's election for U.S. president.
In February 2024 Veltman was sentenced to five life sentences with no possibility of parole for 25 years.
London is home to heritage properties representing a variety of architectural styles, including Queen Anne, Art Deco, Modern movement, and Brutalist.
Londoners have become protective of the trees in the city, protesting "unnecessary" removal of trees. The City Council and tourist industry have created projects to replant trees throughout the city. As well, they have begun to erect metal trees of various colours in the downtown area, causing some controversy.
Wellington Road between Commissioners Road East and Southdale Road E is London's busiest section of roadway, with more than 46,000 vehicles using the span on an average day London does not have any freeways passing directly through the city. City council rejected early plans for the construction of a freeway, and instead accepted the Veterans Memorial Parkway to serve the east end. Some Londoners have expressed concern the absence of a local freeway may hinder London's economic and population growth, while others have voiced concern such a freeway would destroy environmentally sensitive areas and contribute to London's suburban sprawl. Road capacity improvements have been made to Veterans Memorial Parkway (formerly named Airport Road and Highway 100) in the industrialized east end. However, the Parkway has received criticism for not being built as a proper highway; a study conducted in 2007 suggested upgrading it by replacing the intersections with interchanges.
London's Public transport system is run by the London Transit, which has 44 bus routes throughout the city. Although the city has lost ridership over the last few years, the commission is making concerted efforts to enhance services by implementing a five-year improvement plan. In 2015, an additional 17,000 hours of bus service was added throughout the city. In 2016, 11 new operators, 5 new buses, and another 17,000 hours of bus service were added to the network. London has started construction of a bus rapid transit network. Construction of this network was initially anticipated to begin in 2019, but after delays, changes to the design, construction started on the first BRT project, the Downtown Loop, in spring 2021 and will continue in phases until 2030. The project received Canadian dollar170 million in funding from the Ontario government on 15 January 2018.
London is also a destination for inter-city bus travellers. In 2009, London was the seventh-busiest Greyhound Canada terminal in terms of passengers. Greyhound Canada no longer operates, but other operators have entered the market, including Megabus and FlixBus that provide service throughout southwestern Ontario.
London International Airport (YXU) is the 12th busiest passenger airport in Canada and the 11th busiest airport in Canada by take-offs and landings. It is served by airlines including Air Canada Express, and WestJet, and provides direct flights to both domestic and international destinations, including Toronto, Orlando, Ottawa, Winnipeg, Calgary, Cancún, Vancouver, Varadero, Punta Cana, Montego Bay, Santa Clara, and Holguin.
The city of London has assessed the entire length of the Veterans Memorial Parkway, identifying areas where interchanges can be constructed, grade separations can occur, and where can be placed. Upon completion, the Veterans Memorial Parkway would no longer be an expressway, but a freeway, for the majority of its length.
There are also more than twenty private schools in the city.
The city is home to two Higher education institutions: the University of Western Ontario (UWO) and Fanshawe College, a college of applied arts and technology. UWO, founded in 1878, has about 3,500 full-time faculty and staff members and almost 30,000 undergraduate and Graduate School students. The Richard Ivey School of Business, part of UWO, was formed in 1922. UWO has two affiliated colleges: Huron University College, founded in 1863 (also the founding college of UWO) and King's University College, founded in 1954. As well as one former affiliated college; Brescia University College, founded in 1919 (Canada's only university-level women's college). All three are liberal arts colleges with religious affiliations: Huron with the Anglican Church of Canada and King's and Brescia with the Roman Catholic Church.
Fanshawe College has an enrollment of approximately 15,000 students, including 3,500 apprentices and over 500 international students from more than 30 countries. It also has almost 40,000 students in part-time continuing education courses.
The Ontario Institute of Audio Recording Technology (OIART), founded in 1983, offers recording studio experience for audio engineering students.
Westervelt College is also in London. This private career college was founded in 1885 and offers several diploma programs.
Parks
Demographics
Ethnicity
+ Panethnicity groups in the City of London (2001−2021)
! rowspan="2" Panethnicity
group
! colspan="2"2021
! colspan="2" 2016
! colspan="2" 2011
! colspan="2" 2006
! colspan="2" 2001 European 285,955 293,190 295,905 295,695 291,920 Middle Eastern 27,245 16,910 12,275 9,920 7,400 South Asian 27,085 11,660 8,010 6,195 4,660 African-Canadian 17,450 11,325 8,760 7,620 7,140 East Asian 16,930 14,320 10,625 8,735 6,455 Latin American 12,575 9,050 9,640 7,730 4,330 11,885 7,920 6,020 5,490 4,465 Indigenous 10,955 9,725 6,845 5,040 4,600 Other/Multiracial 6,180 3,960 2,635 2,260 1,970
Language
Religion
Economy
Medicine
Technology
Petroleum
Finance
In 1899, Huron & Erie purchased Canada Trust, which was founded in Calgary in 1894, and moved it to London. Canada Trust would go on to become one of the country's largest trust companies.
Brewing
Industrials
Culture
Film production
Festivals
Music
Art
Theatre
Literature
Livability
Sports
Current franchises
+ Active sports teams in London
Government and law
City councillors
Hamilton Road, Chelsea Green, Fairmont, River Run, Glen Cairn Pottersburg, Nelson Park, Trafalgar Heights Huron Heights East London Stoneybrook, Northdale, Northerest, Uplands Broughdale, University Heights, Orchard Park, Sherwood Forest White Hills, Medway Heights, Masonville, Hyde Park Oakridge Park, Oakridge Acres, Byron, Lambeth Westmount Cleardale, Southcrest Estates, Berkshire Village, Kensal Park, Manor Park Glendale, Southdale, Lockwood Park, White Oak, Cleardale Downtown London, Midtown, Blackfriars, Piccadilly/Adelaide, SoHo, KeVa, Woodfield, Oxford Park Glen Cairn Woods, Pond Mills, Wilton Grove, Summerside, Glanworth
Provincial ridings
Federal ridings
Law enforcement and crime
Law enforcement
the London Police Service (LPS) is headed by Chief of Police Thai Truong. He is supported by two deputy chiefs: Paul Bastien, in charge of operations, and Trish McIntyre, in charge of administration. The service is governed by a seven-member civilian [[police board]], of which the current board chair is Ali Chabar, General Legal Counsel and Executive Officer with the Thames Valley District School Board c. As of December 2020, the LPS had the fewest police officers per capita in Southwestern Ontario. Its vehicles include light armoured vehicles donated by General Dynamics Land Systems, which the CBC observed in 2019 were rarely used.
Crime
Civic initiatives
Transportation
Road transportation
Public transit
Cycling network
Intercity transport
Plans
Education
See also
Notes
Further reading
External links
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