Seven Lives

Kensington Market & Chinatown


What started as a pop-up taqueria is now a hole-in-the-wall place with lines of people snaking out the door, waiting to order Baja-style fish tacos: light and flaky mahi-mahi with pico de gallo, cabbage and a creamy sauce. Other seafood and veggie combos offered, too. Most diners eat standing or take their meal to nearby Bellevue Sq.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Kensington Market & Chinatown attractions

1. Art Gallery of Ontario

0.44 MILES

The AGO houses collections both excellent and extensive (bring your stamina). Renovations of the facade, designed by the revered Frank Gehry and completed…

2. Graffiti Alley

0.46 MILES

Possibly the most popular place to check out street art in Toronto (and there are many), this back alley has a magnificent collection of colorful murals…

3. 401 Richmond

0.53 MILES

Inside an early-20th-century lithographer's warehouse, restored in 1994, this 18,500-sq-meter New York–style artists collective hums with the creative…

4. Textile Museum of Canada

0.69 MILES

Tucked into a condo tower, this small museum has exhibits drawing on its permanent collection of more than 13,000 items from Latin America, Africa, Europe…

5. Provincial Legislature

0.71 MILES

The seat of Ontario's Provincial Legislature occupies an ornate 1893 sandstone building north of College St. For some homegrown entertainment, head for…

6. City Hall

0.83 MILES

Much-maligned City Hall was Toronto's bold leap into architectural modernity. Its twin clamshell towers, central 'flying saucer,' ramps and mosaics were…

7. Bata Shoe Museum

0.89 MILES

It's important in life to be well shod, a stance the Bata Shoe Museum takes seriously. Impressively designed by Raymond Moriyama to resemble a stylized…

8. Old City Hall

0.94 MILES

Across Bay St from the current City Hall is the 1899 definitive work of Toronto architect EJ Lennox. Now housing courtrooms, the hall has an off-center…