Future OL Queen Station - hero image

Ontario Line

A new 15.6-km subway line in Toronto that will run from Exhibition Place, through downtown, all the way to the Eglinton Crosstown LRT at Don Mills Road.

Moss Park Station

The Ontario Line station at Moss Park will connect a dense and fast-growing area of the city to the subway network. An estimated 7,300 people are expected to use Moss Park Station during the busiest travel hour.

COMPLETED

Piling (installing solid foundations to support excavation)

CURRENT WORK

Excavation to allow for major station construction

A new Ontario Line connection in this community will help relieve congestion on popular surface routes, like the 75 Sherbourne bus and 501 Queen streetcar, with almost 1,500 customers transferring to and from the Ontario Line every day during the busiest travel hour.

The station will be within a short 10-minute walk for more than 23,600 residents, in an area of the city where 4,100 households don’t currently own a car.

Station area map

olta downtown segment maps mx engage moss park 20220201 final...

Map showing Moss Park Station location. View a more detailed project footprint in the Environmental Impact Assessment Report here.

Renderings

Ontario Line subway project breaks ground at Exhibition Station – see the new renderings released

Future Ontario Line station building at Moss Park, looking west. Future park landscaping to be determined in consultation with City of Toronto and community partners.

Moss Park interior rendering

Future Ontario Line Moss Park Station interior.

Key facts

  • 23,600 people within walking distance to station
  • 7,300 customers will use the station during the busiest travel hour (2,500 getting on and 4,800 getting off the Ontario Line)
  • 1,500 surface transfers during the busiest travel hour
  • 23,200 jobs in the area

*Forecast for the year 2041

Land Acknowledgement

Metrolinx acknowledges that we connect communities by building and operating transit within the traditional lands of the Anishinaabe, the Haudenosaunee and the Huron-Wendat peoples, for whom these lands continue to have great importance.
Treaties between First Nations and governments cover these lands, and the promises contained in these Treaties remain relevant to this day.
Metrolinx and its employees are committed to understanding the history of these lands and the continued impacts of colonization and take responsibility for actions to advance reconciliation.
Metrolinx will continue to seek the knowledge, expertise and experience of Indigenous partners and commits to doing business in a manner that is built on a foundation of trust, respect, and collaboration.