Kingston (Ontario)
Understand
Kingston is the home of two universities (Queen's University and Royal Military College) and one community college (St. Lawrence College). Along with tourism, these educational institutes and the students they attract provide much to the city's local economy. Kingston is also the home to a number of prisons.
Kingston is nicknamed the "Limestone City" because of the many heritage buildings constructed using local limestone.
History
The group that first occupied the area before the arrival of the French was probably the Wyandot people (Hurons), who were later displaced by Iroquoian groups.At the time the French arrived in the Kingston area, Five Nations Iroquois (Haudenosaunee) had settled along the north shore of Lake Ontario. Although the area around the south end of the Cataraqui River was often visited by Iroquois and other groups, Iroquois settlement at this location only began after the French established their outpost. By 1700, the north shore Iroquois had moved south, and the area once occupied by the Iroquois (which includes Kingston) became occupied by the Mississaugas who had moved south from the Lake Huron and Lake Simcoe regions.
Growing European exploration in the 17th century and the desire for the Europeans to establish a presence close to local Aboriginal occupants to control trade led to the founding of a French trading post and military fort at a site known as "Cataraqui" (generally pronounced "kah-tah-ROCK-way") in 1673. This outpost, called Fort Cataraqui, and later Fort Frontenac, became a focus for settlement. Cataraqui was renamed Kingston after the British took possession of the fort and Loyalists began settling the region in the 1780s.
In 1783, the British governor of the Province of Quebec established a settlement for displaced British colonists, or "Loyalists", who were fleeing north because of the American Revolutionary War. The British Crown entered into an agreement with the Mississaugas in October 1783 to purchase land east of the Bay of Quinte.
During the War of 1812, Kingston (with a population of 2250) was a major military centre. It was the base for the Lake Ontario division of the Great Lakes British naval fleet, whose aim was to control Lake Ontario. Fort Henry was built on Point Henry in 1813. The present limestone citadel, constructed between 1832 and 1836, was intended to defend the Rideau Canal at the Lake Ontario end, the harbour and the naval dockyard.
Kingston became an important port for commodities shipped along the lake from the west. Wheat, flour, meat, and potash were unloaded and stored at Kingston to await transfer to vessels that could navigate the risky St. Lawrence.
Queen's University, originally Queen's College, one of the first liberal arts universities, first held classes in March 1842; established by the Presbyterian Church, it later became a national institution. The Royal Military College of Canada (RMC) was founded in 1876.
Kingston Penitentiary, Canada's first large federal penitentiary, was established in 1835 and operated until 2013. Several more prisons were established later in the greater Kingston area.
Kingston was chosen as the first capital of the united Canadas and it served in that role from 1841 to 1844. The city was considered too small and lacking in amenities, however, and its location near the border made it vulnerable to American attack. Subsequently, Kingston's growth slowed considerably and its national importance declined.
Get in
By car
Driving into the Kingston area is usually done on Highway 401, although this highway does not go downtown.Times from major cities are:
- Ottawa, 2 hours to the northeast via Ontario Highway 416 to 401 exit 721
- Montreal, 3 hours to the east on Ontario Highway 401 (Québec Autoroute 20)
- Toronto, 3 hours to the west on Highway 401
- Syracuse, 2½ hours to the south on Interstate 81
The 401 is easily reachable from Interstate 81 (Watertown, Syracuse, Binghamton) at exit 661.
Kingston may be reached in an hour or less from:
- Napanee and Belleville to the west on former Highway 2 or the 401
- Prince Edward County to the southwest on Highway 33 (the Loyalist Parkway)
- Smiths Falls to the northeast on Highway 15
- Sharbot Lake and the southern branch of the Trans-Canada Highway via former Highway 38
- The Thousand Islands. A year-round ferry to Wolfe Island and a group of seasonal tour boats leave directly from downtown Kingston.
- Gananoque, Leeds and the 1000 Islands, Brockville to the east on former Highway 2 or the 401
By bus
Megabus (Coach Canada) serves Toronto-Kingston-Montréal several times daily and has service from Pearson International Airport. Greyhound buses visit Ottawa daily. Buses usually take longer from each city and will drop you off on John Counter Boulevard (a converted trucking company warehouse in an industrial park) at the north side of town. Travellers can get downtown by taxi, or by local transit (a taxi and bus stand can be found on the bus station property, across from the Tim Horton's). By bus, the #2 Division Street travels to the downtown core every half-hour (every hour evenings and weekends); the routes serving the train station (#7, #16, #18) also all stop at the bus station.By train
Kingston is served by train (Via Rail Canada). Travel times from nearby locations are:- Ottawa: 2 hours
- Dorval (Montréal-Trudeau): 2½ hours
- Montréal: 2¾ hours
- Toronto: 2¼-2¾ hours
The station is on John Counter Boulevard at what was the western edge of town; a metered taxi to downtown runs about $15. By bus, the #18 Train Station Circuit meets most scheduled train arrivals leading downtown; the #16 Kingston Centre bus runs every half-hour (every hour evenings and weekends) to the Kingston Shopping Centre. The #7 bus to the Cataraqui mall, and the #4 local bus on Princess Street pass near, but does not enter, the station. A walk to either is possible but it's a rather hostile pedestrian environment on the way.
By plane
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Norman Rogers Municipal Airport
phone: +1 613-389-6404address: Front RdAt the western edge of Kingston near Lemoine Point conservation area. Nominally an international airport with a 5000-foot runway, if you bring your own aircraft. Otherwise, scheduled Air Canada service is to Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga () only. Due to cost, this is usually only worthwhile if connecting onward to a longer flight. There is no public transit, no restaurant, no airport hotel or other amenities in the immediate area; the on-site dining choices are a pair of vending machines. There is one car-hire agency and a taxi.
The closest major international airports are all two to three hours distant by road:
- Ottawa Uplands (YOW, 175 km/110 mi) is closest by road.
- Montréal-Dorval (YUL, 275 km) has an easy shuttlebus connection to VIA's passenger rail service.
- Toronto Pearson International Airport (YYZ, 275 km) has direct scheduled bus (Megabus) and air connections to Kingston.
- Syracuse NY USA (SYR, 215 km/130 mi) has a seven-seat shuttle van (+1-800-731-6335), but at more than $200 (one way) its cost wipes out anything US travellers might have saved by flying domestic. Tiny Dexter NY (ART) has the same cross-border transportation issues.
By boat
Kingston has a number of marinas to accommodate boaters in boats of all sizes. These include
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phone: +1 613-634-1304address: 4000 Bath Road, Collins Bay
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phone: +1 613-389-4455address: 1270 Coverdale Drive
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phone: +1 613-542-2134address: 209 Ontario St
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phone: +1 613-549-7747address: 349 Wellington St
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phone: +1 613-548-3052address: 1 Maitland St
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phone: +1 613-544-4776address: 53 Yonge St
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phone: +1 613-548-1239address: 1753 Highway #2, Barriefield K7L 4V1
By ferry
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phone: +1 613-548-7227address: 295 Ontario StreetThis free ferry makes the 20-minute crossing from downtown Kingston to one of two docks on Wolfe Island year-round. The 55-car ferry also takes pedestrians. Departs every hour or so in each direction. Check web site and call operator for large groups, or large vehicles.
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phone: +1 613-385-2402, +1 315-783-0638address: 2262 Highway 95, Wolfe IslandRuns hourly from end of Ontario Highway 95 on Wolfe Island to downtown Cape Vincent, New York, about 10 minutes. Privately owned.
Get around
The most interesting area in Kingston for out-of-town visitors is near the downtown core of the city, which includes Queen's University and the waterfront. As such, the best areas of the city are better seen on foot or by bicycle.
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phone: +1 613-546-0000Public transport is reliable and clean but runs at most once every 15 minutes or half hour. An express service with limited stops runs on three heavily-travelled routes.
Taxi fares from the bus and train stations are approximately $10-15 depending on the number of passengers per car and luggage stowage. All cabs are licensed and metered; major operators include Amey's (+1 613-546-1111) and Modern (+1 613-546-2222).
It is also possible to rent bicycles and sailboats in Kingston. (Additional providers are in Gananoque and the Thousand Islands.)
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phone: +1 613-549-4277address: 23 Ontario StDowntown Kingston, sailing lessons ($95/2hrs) and bicycle rentals ($25/day).
Various dive charters run from Kingston (or its suburbs) into the islands:
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phone: +1 613-532-6548 or +1 613-766-6184address: 4034 Bath Road, Collins Bay
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phone: +1 613-547-3483address: 61 Yonge Street, Portsmouth
See
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phone: +1 613-542-7388address: 1 Fort Henry Drive at Highway 2, BarriefieldHistorical military structures. 1850s stone fortress with cannons defends access to the Rideau Canal from US attacks; the fort is guarded by Fort Henry Guard in British uniforms and regalia of the era. Live military drills. Additional cost for parking and sunset ceremony. Seasonal (May–September). Visit time: 3 hours max.
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phone: +1 613-541-4675 (museum)address: Highway 2, BarriefieldModern military structures. Full of soldiers, including the Joint Signals Regiment (JSR), 21 Electronic Warfare Regiment, and their Military Communications and Electronics Museum (95 Craftsman Blvd. at Highway #2)
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phone: +1 613-541-6000address: 13 General Crerar Cres, Barriefield K7K 7B4Historical structures and wide avenues filled with soldiers and students. One of two universities in the region, RMC exists to train military officers. Visit time: 1 hour max.
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Bellevue House National Historic Site of Canada
phone: +1 613-545-8666address: 35 Centre StA finely-maintained Italianate villa with lush gardens which served briefly as the home of first Canadian prime minister Sir John A. MacDonald. House and grounds restored to the 1840s with guided tours by interpreters costumed in clothing of the era. (During the 2018 season, interpretive programming and guided tours of the heritage grounds and heirloom orchard will continue but the interior of the house will be closed for maintenance; there will be no admission fee.) A Parks Canada national historic site. Visit time: 1-2 hours. Cataraqui River and LaSalle Causeway BridgeWater and steel. 1915 two-lane Strauss trunnion bascule lift bridge carries Highway 2 across the southern endpoint of the Rideau Canal waterway directly to the foot of downtown Kingston. Fine scenic view of the downtown when approaching from Fort Henry Hill. Visit time: 15 min max.
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phone: +1 613-283-5170Completed in 1851 as a defensive route bypassing the St Lawrence, the original stone locks and wooden gates are still manually operated by Parks Canada for small pleasure craft. Kingston Mills locks , the first four of a long series extending to Parliament Hill in Ottawa, are reachable by small watercraft or by car on Kingston Mills Road, which runs between Battersea Rd (401 exit 619/Montreal St) and Hwy 15 (401 exit 623). Visit time: 45 min max.
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phone: +1 613-542-8677 (merchants association)Commercial main street with historic buildings and small, local independent boutiques. Food and shopping within easy walking distance of Queen's University and downtown hotels.
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St. Mary's Roman Catholic Cathedral
phone: +1 613-546-5521address: 279 Johnson StBig, very tall Roman Catholic church in which the bells ring loudly. Visit time: 30 min max. -
St. George's Anglican Cathedral
phone: +1 613-548-4617address: 270 King St. E.Big, very elaborate old Protestant church of architectural and historical interest. Visit time: 30 min max. -
Murney Tower National Historic Site of Canada
phone: +1 613-544-9925address: King Street West at Barrie StOne of four Martello towers constructed in 1846 to defend Kingston's waterfront. Bloomfield cannon, carronades and domestic artefacts adorn what is now a Kingston Historical Society museum. Visit time: 45 min. -
Princess of Wales Own Regiment
address: 100 Montréal StActive Primary Reserve infantry regiment of the Canadian Forces (one battalion). The historic limestone armoury contains a small one-room military museum with weapons, equipment, insignia, uniforms, swords and medals from the 14th Battalion of Rifles (formed 16 Jan 1863) and from both world wars. -
address: 560 King St. W.One of Kingston's most famous institutions. One time home of notables such as Clifford Olsen and Paul Bernardo, people would kill (and have killed) to get in for well over a century. The Penitentiary Museum in the old warden's house (555 King W, +1 613-530-3122, May-Oct: daily 10AM-4PM; Nov-Apr: M-F 9AM-4PM, by donation) is open to visitors, as is the Olympic Harbour marina (adjacent to the jail) which served as home of the sailing events for the 1976 Summer Olympic Games. A guided tour of the jail is available seasonally (mid-June to end-Oct, $35/person); this is separate from the museum tour. Visit time: 2 years to life. If 'just visiting', allow a little over an hour to tour the museum and ninety minutes to tour the prison.
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phone: +1 613-533-6000address: University Ave at Union StAnother of Kingston's most famous institutions. Many limestone buildings with ivy and students. Queen's has two art galleries: the student run Union Gallery in Stauffer Library, and the Agnes Etherington Art Centre.
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address: 45 Union StFor kids who are interested in how buildings are made, the Integrated Learning Centre, or Beamish-Munro Hall may be worth a visit. This building is the new centre of Applied Science (Engineering) at Queens. This 'live building' was designed to allow people to see how the building works and interact with it.
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phone: +1 613-533-6767address: Miller Hall, 36 Union St W.This is a fairly small museum, but is still interesting. Call ahead for tours.
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Museum of Health Care at Kingston
phone: +1 613-548-2419address: 32 George StA tiny museum with exhibits (and quite a lot of artefacts) related to the history of medicine. It co-sponsors a walking tour on the history of Kingston General Hospital for $5, but the museum is free (donations accepted). Usually not busy, since it's small and hard to find. Visit time: Two hours or less, including the tour.
Marine Museum of the Great Lakes
Frontenac County Schools Museum
Do
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phone: +1 613-549-5544address: Brock & Ontario StreetsThree boats (Island Queen, Island Belle, Island Star) leave Kingston downstream on the St. Lawrence River to circle the Thousand Islands. A round-trip is 1½, 2 or 3 hours; selected runs offer sunset cruises, dinner or dancing.
- A K-Pass (issued for 1, 2 or 3 days, $78-162/adult, $48-120/child) bundles one of the Kingston 1000 Islands Cruises with Kingston Trolley Tours, Fort Henry, Bellevue House, the Pump House Steam Museum and Marine Museum of the Great Lakes, Murney Tower, the MacLachlan Woodworking Museum, a three-hour bicycle rental from Ahoy Rentals and admission to Morrisburg's Upper Canada Village.
- Additional tour options for the Thousand Islands are available in Gananoque (about 32 km east of Kingston). Visitors looking primarily to tour Boldt Castle (which is near Wellesley Island and Alexandria Bay on the US side) may be best served by tours departing from that area. There is also a river tour in Brockville.
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phone: +1 613-548-4453address: 209 Ontario StLocal tour bus operated May–October by Kingston's Chamber of Commerce, designed to resemble a locomotive car which departs from the former Kingston & Pembroke Railway inner station. Stops at Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Bellevue House, Fort Henry & Penitentiary Museum.
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phone: +1 613-549-6366address: 200 Ontario St90-minute guided walking tours of Kingston (from Prince George Hotel), Fort Henry (from fort main gate) and Gananoque (from visitor centre, 10 King East, Gan) complete with ghost stories. The same company operates tours in Ottawa and Toronto.
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Personally Guided Tours of Historic Kingston
phone: +1 613-389-3465Step-on guide services for visiting bus tours. A retired couple of mature guides show you the sights in Canada's first capital city. WaterfrontKingston has a lively waterfront that, depending on the day, may afford opportunities to partake. Richardson Beach extends the full length of the Queen's University campus, Kingston General Hospital and City Park, and sports two large, permanent sculptures: "Time" and "Pollution".
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phone: +1 613-530-2050address: 218 Princess StBuilt in 1901-02, and home of the Kingston Symphony since 1964,. The main theatre seats 776 people for live theatre and musical performances.
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phone: +1 613-542-6080address: 120 Princess St. (2nd floor)Independent downtown movie house with two screens showing a variety of art-house, foreign, alternative, and classic cinema.
- Skating (in winter): operating dates are dependent on the weather.
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Market Square
address: behind City Hall, 216 Ontario StThe outdoor skating rink in Market Square is refrigerated, and the surface is conditioned by a Zamboni every couple of hours, so the surface is more regular than other outdoor rinks in the area. Hockey sticks are not allowed on this rink. -
City Park
address: Bagot StAlthough the surface isn't as regularly conditioned as Market Square, this the place to go if you want to play hockey, since hockey isn't allowed on the Market Square rink. -
Victoria Park
address: Brock StFacilities similar to "City Park", including a rink with boards for hockey, and an open rink for skating amidst the trees.
- Kingston is considered to have some of the best freshwater sailing in the world, and hosted the sailing events for the 1976 Montreal Olympics.
- Wind-surfing and kite-boarding are also popular.
- Scuba diving: Kingston has among the most and best fresh water wrecks in the world.
Outside the city
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Little Cataraqui Creek Conservation Area
phone: +1 613-546-4228address: North of Highway 401 and Division StHiking, canoeing or kayaking in summer; snowshoeing, cross country skiing, or skating on the pond in winter. Rentals and lessons. Wolfe IslandA free hourly ferry from Kingston to Wolfe Island provides a scenic view of the Kingston waterfront. Cycling on Wolfe Island is much less hectic than in Kingston proper. George Pyke's Strawberry farm is a good destination (~25 km round trip from ferry) in late June, and can easily make for a day long trip. Contra dancing happens regularly throughout the year either at Wolfe Island Town Hall, or some Kingston location.
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phone: +1 613-548-3378address: 3208 Hughes RdPick your own strawberries, raspberries, peas and beans. Fall corn maze and pumpkin patch. Picnic, nature walk, children's playground in a beautiful country setting.
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phone: +1 613-376-3489address: 1090 Salmon Lake Road, Sydenham30 minutes north by car, opportunities for walking and picnicking, fishing, canoeing, wildlife viewing, boating, swimming and cycling. Winter activities.
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phone: +1 613-546-1690address: 2645 Washburn Rd. (at Hwy 15)Orchard near Rideau Canal (Lower Brewers Mills), pick-your-own apples from August to October, pumpkins. On-site bakery with apple pie, cider, jam/jelly.
- Pick your own strawberries (usually around the Canada Day (July 1) weekend) and apples (late summer/fall) in season in Adolphustown and Prince Edward County, less than an hour to the west.
Events
The city hosts events in summer and fall such as the Jazz Festival and Blues Festival.Buskers' RendezvousBuskers from around the world take over the streets of Kingston for one weekend in early July. Downtown.
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phone: +1 613-549-REELAnnual LGBT film festival, late January. Kingston also hosts an LGBT Pride parade in mid-June; "out/in kingston" has local gay event listings.
Skeleton Park Arts FestivalLate June (summer solstice). A free, community-focused arts + music festival.
Buy
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phone: +1 613-548-7721address: 61 Brock Street K7L 1R8A family-owned 1865 "old world" shop specialising in fine English and European sweets, sauces, preserves, and cheeses. Cooke's roasts their own coffee daily (approximately $9/pound) and prepares premium-quality gift baskets.
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address: Market StreetFarmer's public market, busiest in summer. Founded 1801 as oldest continuously-operating market in Ontario. Fresh local produce, baked and preserved goods, local art and clothing. Buy your maple syrup here, since it will be much cheaper than at the tourist traps and you'll get to talk to the person who tapped it. An antique market is in this same location on Sundays during the summer.
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phone: +1 613-546-9799address: 156 Princess StOne of the last local independent new book vendors, good selection of books about Kingston or by local authors, postcards, calendars.
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Cornerstone Contemporaray Canadian Craft and Inuit Art
phone: +1 613 546-7967address: 255 Ontario StNunavut native carvings, prints, wall hangings and dolls with government of Canada label of authenticity and card with the artist’s name and community.
Eat
Budget
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phone: +1 613-549-5464address: 505 Princess StMiddle Eastern cuisine that is relatively cheap, filling and tasty.
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phone: +1 613-542-4258address: 304 Bagot StExcellent and cheap Thai menu. Every entrée comes with a free dessert of tapioca pudding. It's an Asian version though so be prepared! Expect the dishes to have a slight Chinese influence, in line with the decorations.
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Golden Rooster Delicatessen
phone: +1 613-542-5676address: 111 Princess St, Kingston K7L 1A8A very popular deli. They can be particularly busy during lunch time on weekdays, but take a number and get in line because it's worth the wait! They offer many Danish and Dutch options and have an extensive cheese and meat selection. -
Mekong
phone: +1 613-549-5902address: 394 Princess StExcellent Vietnamese food, cheap and fast; particularly known for its avocado shakes. -
Wok In
phone: +1 613-549-5369address: 30 Montreal StA tiny storefront serving excellent quality, well-priced Thai and Cambodian food. It is run by a husband and wife and is usually busy. The #1 is a favourite on the menu and a good bet to try. -
Saigon Delights
phone: +1 613-546-3690address: 272 Bagot StVietnamese restaurant with two locations (the other is on Division near Queen) known for its pho and bún. -
phone: +1 613-544-1966address: 76 Princess StA great Irish downtown pub. The upstairs portion in Kirkpatricks, downstairs is the Toucan. Nightly specials, live music on Mondays after 10PM, cold beer on tap. Try the nachos with layered cheese (1/2 price on Wednesdays), the wings, or the sweet potato fries. Cash or credit only, but they do have an ATM.
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phone: +1 613-544-9268address: 523 Princess Street, Kingston K7L 1C6Fantastic Cambodian dishes, including various vegetarian options. The red curry chicken is a good starter dish if you've never had Cambodian food before.
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phone: +1 613-549-3465address: 34 Princess StBreakfast, weekend brunch, coffee, burgers, fish and chips, soupes du jour, desserts. Small, crowded Greek/Mediterranean diner and takeaway.
Mid-range
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Cambodiana
phone: +1 613-531-0888address: 161 Brock StUsed to be some of the best Thai/Cambodian food in Southern Ontario before the owners of this establishment sold it to other proprietors. To follow the original owner/chef and his food, go to Pat's Restaurant. -
phone: +1 613-548-8888address: 251 Ontario StTexas-style steakhouse on downtown waterfront.
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White Mountain Homemade Ice Cream
phone: +1 613-545-3474address: 176 Ontario StQuality ice-cream that is a tad pricy, but truly is one of the best home made ice creams you will ever taste. The store provides a large variety of ice cream flavours that are served on store-made waffle cones. Avoid the "large" size cones as they are impossible to finish even halfway. Closed in winter. -
phone: +1 613-549-1812address: 192 Ontario StWooden Heads and Atomica specialize in pizzas made in wood fire brick ovens. The focus of these restaurants are more on the waitresses and less on the food, though the latter is not too bad at either place.
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phone: +1 613-530-2118address: 71 Brock St
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phone: +1 613-544-1376address: 120 Princess StWell known locally for its Korean/Japanese food, one of best places for sushi in Kingston. Excellent lunch bento boxes and blue mountain maki, great atmosphere.
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phone: +1 613-549-4257address: 240 Princess StCozy atmosphere, great for lunch (wraps, sandwiches, gourmet burgers) or dinner (pastas and pizzas). Known for its French onion soup, gigantic wraps, and homemade pesto. The service is always friendly. Go early as this restaurant does not take reservations.
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phone: +1 613-531-0800address: 331 King St. E.A lounge known for its food as much as its martini list. Its specialities are its salads, sandwiches, and sweet potato fries. It has a full tapas menu, which is 40% off on Sunday and Monday evenings with the purchase of a drink (does not have to be alcoholic). On those nights, groups of 4-6 can eat for $6-7/person + drinks. Enjoy some chill DJ music on Friday nights after 11PM.
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phone: +1 613-544-3948address: 184 Princess StA more upscale restaurant where you will find mixed greens rather than iceberg lettuce. Reasonably priced, tends to have some creative options on the daily specials menu, also offers catering. An excellent place for weekend brunch.
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phone: +1 613-507-3663address: 93 Princess StA licensed gourmet burger joint. The meat is sustainably raised and a number of veg options are also available. A selection of microbrews and off the beaten path wines are served, as are shakes and beer floats.
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phone: +1 613-344-0450address: 455 Princess StThai, Asian fusion. Proprietor established (then sold) Phnom Pehn, Wok-In and Cambodiana in the same city.
Higher
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phone: +1 613-549-7673address: 68R Princess StHidden inside the same block as Chien Noir. It has a reputation for serving good food. Quality of service is dependent on the extravagance of one's meal, as well as whether wine or water is ordered as one's primary drink.
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phone: +1 613-544-7790address: 44 Princess StGood for a quick bistro style lunch. Sells the best Italian and French style breads in Kingston. The bakery to Chez Piggy. Has an all day breakfast on weekends. Also has a take-out area selling sandwiches, salads, pre-cooked dinners, and pastries.
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phone: +1 613-549-5635address: 69 Brock StGood French cuisine. Reserve since seating is limited.
Splurge
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phone: +1 613-542-0870address: 35 Brock StServes excellent quality Italian food, and has consistently good service. The wine list is also quite good.
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phone: +1 613-549-5759address: 2 Cataraqui StOffers delicious contemporary cuisine, and has a great wine list
Drink
Coffee
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Coffee and Company
phone: +1 613-547-9211address: 53 Princess StEspresso, coffees, and good teas prepared from loose leaves. A common student study hangout downtown. -
Starbucks
address: Princess at WellingtonA common student study hangout. -
Sipps Coffee & Dessert Bar
phone: +1 613-542-8868address: 33 Brock StCoffee shop facing Market Square. A great place to wind down in the evening with a dessert or latté, it is worth a trip just for the décor (look up, the ceiling is decorated with a design stamped into aluminum). Prices are not cheap; while coffee is under $4, a slice of cake runs about $8. Try a hot chocolate, made with Ghirardelli chocolate.
Alcohol
There is a relatively healthy pub scene in Kingston with many high quality establishments. Many bars and pubs cater to Kingston's strong university & college student population. All pubs in Kingston are non-smoking.-
phone: +1 613-542-4978address: 34 Clarence StClarence St. near the intersection of Ontario St. As implied by its name, this pub brews its own beer and offers many seasonal beers. Notable brews from KBC include White Tail, Dragon's Breath, and the pub's own apple cider. KBC also offers beers from other companies, including Guinness, and other well known brands. They have a monthly "Brewer's Whim" which is usually a Canadian microbrew.
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phone: +1 613-544-7474address: 200 Ontario StTir Nan'Og and Old Speckled Hen are two joint pubs located in the Prince George Hotel which differ in décor and specialize in beers and whiskies from Ireland and Britain respectively.
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King's Town Beer Company (KTBC)
phone: +1 613-417-0375address: 3-675 Arlington Park PlaceTap room, tasting bar and bottle shop in west-end suburb. Craft brewing and beer suited to craft session beer drinkers.
Sleep
There are also some franchise chains (food, fuel, lodging) near the freeway (401 exit 617, Division St.) which serve highway travellers; if it's near the 401, it's not near the main attractions (museums, universities, the downtown waterfront, tour boats, ferries or points of historic interest) as 401 is a bypass road.
Downtown
The area near the downtown waterfront is the most favourable location (as many but not all activities are within walking distance) but also the most expensive. Accommodations range from large chain hotels with full facilities to smaller historic properties, such as the Hotel Belvedère, to a niche market of small but upscale bed-and-breakfast style inns. There is plenty of good accommodation to be had in the downtown and waterfront area if one is willing to pay top dollar.-
Holiday Inn Kingston Waterfront
phone: +1 613-549-8400address: 2 Princess St197 rooms (all non-smoking), room service, wifi, parking ($14/night), indoor pool, whirlpool, sauna, fitness centre, DOX Restaurant and Lounge, laundry, business centre. -
phone: +1 613-549-8100address: 1 Johnson StRenovated 2013, former Ramada/Radisson.
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phone: +1 613-531-9884address: 73 Sydenham St SHistoric 1888 Queen Anne/Victorian style bed-and-breakfast inn with antique furnishings, fireplaces and stained glass windows.
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phone: +1 613-549-5534address: 24 Sydenham St. SouthA bed-and-breakfast with 21 rooms, in the Sydenham district close to the waterfront.
West of downtown
Kingston's train station is at the northwestern edge of the city far from the centre (the tracks were the pre-1998 town line); a few hotels serve this area:-
Fireside Inn & Conference Centre (Best Western)
phone: +1 613-549-2211address: 1217 Princess StIn-room fireplaces, meeting facilities for 6-70 people, whirlpool suites at C$250-350/night, 37" flatscreen TV, outdoor pool and patio. Bistro and restaurant on-site. -
phone: +1 613-546-4411address: 1187 Princess StThriftlodge hotel over ground-floor retail plaza, 74 rooms and suites, conference facilities for 20-200 people.
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phone: +1 613-548-3605address: 1550 Princess StConvention centre, extensive athletic and recreational facilities, indoor water park. JM's Restaurant and Lounge on-site. Near train station.
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phone: +1 613 549-5550address: 1454 Princess StUnder $120/night for clean, modern accommodations but with no restaurant, no pool, no amenities on-site. This two-storey hotel was built at the end of the 1970s as part of Journey's End, one of the first economy limited service hotel chains, but is now independent.
It is possible to rent short-term residence/dormitory accommodation at Queen's University and St. Lawrence College during the summer; these are unavailable during the main fall/winter academic term as the students return. The university may be able to provide conference facilities for large groups.
West of the city
West of Sydenham Road, the selection is dominated by low-priced (or at least under-$100) suburban motels on the old Highway 2 (now Princess Street), with many small independent operators. Most small, independent roadside motels in this area pre-date the freeway and the economy limited-service hotel chains, but the majority are reasonably-well maintained (with a few unfortunate exceptions) at moderate prices.-
phone: +1 613-546-4233address: 2360 Princess StSuburban Travelodge with indoor pool, Jacuzzi, sauna, Cavelier Room restaurant, Pierre's Lounge and Café La Salle. 67 hôtel and 38 motel-style rooms. Meeting and banquet facilities for 50-120 people.
There are no hotels/motels or other services around the airport.
Near the 401 highway
The 401 is a bypass road; it is not near any of the major attractions, except perhaps the Rideau Canal locks at Kingston Mills (401 exit 619 or 623, then northbound, turn onto Kingston Mills Rd.)In the west, there is one small motel (Wilton Road Motel) on exit 599, Wilton Road Odessa, midway between Highways 2 and 401. As one enters Kingston, the roads diverge; old Highway 2 goes downtown, Highway 401 keeps well to the north to bypass the city:
- There are two limited-service hotels (a Motel 6 and a Quality Inn) near the factory park on exit 611, Hwy 38/Gardiners Road; there is no hotel on exit 613 or 615
- A few moderately-priced chains (Courtyard by Marriott, Holiday Inn Express, Days Inn, Comfort Inn, FirstCanada Inns) sit among the fast-food emporiums, highway services and outlet stores at Division & 401 (exit 617). These primarily serve motorway traffic.
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address: 55 Warne Crescent
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Holiday Inn Express & Suites Kingston
phone: +1 613 546-3662address: 11 Benson StreetComfortable, modern hotel by the Division Street exit from the 401. Spacious rooms with good mattresses, bathtub, refrigerator, microwave, and coffee/tea machine. Rate includes wireless Internet and breakfast. 10–15 minutes’ drive from the city centre and university (buses also available). - There is a pair of independent motels on exit 623 (Highway 15); there is no lodging (just a truck stop) on exit 632.
Highways 2 and 401 reconverge in Gananoque (exit 648) in the east.
East of the city
As most of the attractions (except for Old Fort Henry and the military base) are on the west side of the Cataraqui River, the east end has relatively little to offer in travel accommodation. There are a few low-end motels on old Highway 2 near the base and a couple of independent motels at the Hwy 15/401 crossroads.There are additional options across the county line into Gananoque, a population-5500 town where properties ranging from small B&Bs to hotel/motel chains serve visitors to the Thousand Islands region. Leeds and the Thousand Islands has a number of campgrounds available during the warmer months.
For those cruising on small craft, sleeping on a boat docked at one of the 1000 Islands National Park islands may also be an option.
Connect
- Wi-fi and public access computers are available at all Kingston Frontenac Public Library branches. The hotspots are shut down when the library branch is closed. The Central branch (130 Johnson St, +1 613-549-8888) is closed for renovations until November 2018, with a temporary storefront open at Queen and Wellington Streets; another alternative is to try a suburban branch like Calvin Park (88 Wright Cres) or Bayridge (935 Gardiners Road, near the mall). West of the city, there's a county library branch in the recreation centre in Amherstview (322 Amherst Drive, +1 613-389-6006).
- Open wi-fi is available throughout the Cataraqui mall (945 Gardiners Road) in the west end. Coffee shops and fast-food chains (Tim Horton's, Wendy's, Harvey's, McDonald's) operate Wi-Fi hotspots in many locations.
- Postal service is available from the main post office (120 Clarence St, downtown) until 5:30PM weekdays. Some drugstores operate retail postal outlets with extended hours. The UPS Store (427 Princess St downtown, 829 Norwest Road in the west end) provides commercial parcel receiving services and photocopies.
- The four main domestic mobile telephone companies (Bell, Telus, Rogers, Freedom Mobile) are readily available. Kingston is not close enough to the border to directly receive US-domestic cellular signals (Sprint, Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile) as it's separated from the US mainland by Wolfe Island.