used barber chair for sale toronto

used barber chair for sale toronto

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Used Barber Chair For Sale Toronto

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Salon Massage Beds &Tables All Purpose Salon Chairs Wholesale Salon Furniture Canada Union Salon Furnishing is a leading provider for Salon Furniture in Toronto. We have a huge inventory of Salon Furniture & Equipment’s and we supply Salon Furniture in Canada at wholesale prices. We stock exclusive range of Shampoo units, styling stations, styling chairs, barbers chairs, massage beds and other salon furniture. Either you are looking to start a new Salon or want to add furniture to your existing salon we are a one stop salon furniture provider in Toronto. We are well known in the industry for selling high quality products at wholesale prices. We also give one year warranty on every product we sell and provide excellent customer service. You can browse all the categories on the web or can call us to know more about the product range. You can also visit our 8000sqft showroom in Mississauga for complete range of Salon furniture. Most of our salon furniture is made in North America and we can also custom your salon furniture as per your salon ambience.




So get in touch with one of our product specialist to discuss about your salon furniture requirement in Toronto, Mississauga, Brampton & other GTA. > multi-item in Toronto (GTA) Get an alert with the newest ads for multi-item in Toronto (GTA).Compare Wholesale Salon Supplies Kids Styling Barber Chairs With Car Model For kids salon furniture Guangzhou HuaNanQing Household Co., Ltd. US $120-198 5 Pieces Transaction LevelThe requested URL /productlist.php?category_id=3 was not found on this server. The Golden Mile is a commercial district in the Scarborough district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Situated along Eglinton Avenue East, east of Victoria Park Avenue, it was one of Canada's first model industrial parks. The original Golden Mile of Industry ran along Eglinton from Pharmacy Avenue east to Birchmount Road. The area was farmland prior to World War II with settlement by Scottish immigrants beginning in the 1820s (notably by the likes of the McCowans and Thompsons) and prior to settlements by Europeans in the late 18th century was mostly covered by forests.




In the 1940s, 250 acres (100 ha) was acquired by the federal government to build munitions plants for Canada's involvement in World War II. In 1941 General Engineering Company of Ontario (GECO) a massive munitions plant was constructed covering the area northwest of Eglinton and Warden. The facility was located in the area, which was then far from the city, to protect against accidental detonations. At its peak 5,300 people worked at the plant and 256,567,485 munitions were produced over the course of the war.[1] Following the war, the area and 14 buildings was purchased from the federal government by the Township of Scarborough. The township built municipal offices and a library[2] along Eglinton and sold the rest to private industry to develop the area as "The Golden Mile", patterned after the Golden Mile in London, England. In the 1950s and 1960s, numerous factories producing mostly consumer goods operated along the Golden Mile. Further west, retail uses developed, including the Golden Mile Plaza and the Eglinton Square Shopping Centre.




Surrounding the industrial area, suburban residential development infilled former agricultural or industrial uses. Today, little or no industrial uses exist on Eglinton Avenue, while some industrial uses remain off Eglinton on side streets. On Eglinton, both sides of the street have been redeveloped into "big box" retail uses. In 2014, the City of Toronto and Metrolinx conducted a preplanning exercise called Eglinton Connects to create walkable, mixed-use developments along the Eglinton Crosstown LRT. One area for such development is the Golden Mile site between Victoria Park Avenue and Pharmacy Avenue, which will be served by two LRT stops. City planning officials said that, although there is weak demand for new condos in central Scarborough, the LRT is stimulating demand for development. Golden Mile Plaza was added west of the industrial "mile" in 1954 and was visited in 1959 [4] by Queen Elizabeth II marking the further transformation of the area into a series of strip malls.




The original strip mall on the north of Eglinton Avenue was anchored by a Famous Players movie theatre located at Pharmacy Avenue and Eglinton. The west section of the strip was severely damaged by a fire in 1986, which hastened the beginning of the transformation of the area into one of Toronto's largest concentrations of power centres and big box stores. The plaza was replaced with the Golden Mile Mall at the same location. The mall is anchored by a No Frills grocery store and a small number of other stores, at first including a Fabricland and a Zellers. These closed in the 2000s. Toronto Employment and Social Services, popular retailer Joe Fresh, Fit 4 Less, and a dollar store opened new premises at the Golden Mile Mall in 2010 taking up the space that Zellers and Fabricland had occupied. In 2017, the property owner Choice Properties REIT announced a redevelopment of the 19-acre site into a mixed-use, transit-oriented development. It will include a mix of buildings of various heights and a new Loblaws supermarket.




The development will create new streets surrounding nine city blocks and include a public park and a public square. The first phase will entail the construction of the new supermarket, the demolition of the existing mall, and the construction of new streets through the project. List of tenants at Golden Mile Plaza original 1954 Bank of Nova Scotia Yolles & Burroughs furniture Current tenants of Golden Mile Mall Your Dollar Store With More Joe's House of Wood Golden Mile Shoe Repair Primacy Walk In Clinic The City of Toronto Social Services JESUS IS LORD CHURCH This list includes former and current businesses located in the area: Several provincial government offices are located in the Golden Mile. ^ The General Engineering Company of OntarioThe best salvage and reclaimed furniture in Toronto give battered, time-worn items new life. That's not to say they're restored to their former glory - when it comes to barn wood or century-old baseboards, these shops are careful to leave that glorious, beaten-in patina perfectly intact.




Here is the best salvage and reclaimed furniture in Toronto.The Best Furniture Stores in TorontoThe Best Vintage Furniture Stores in TorontoThe Best Antique Stores in Toronto Years after opening in the Junction, Smash is still the city's favourite destination for salvage items, thanks to a pitch-perfect mix of reclaimed industrial furniture and irreverent design finds like "men at work" signs, vintage mugshot posters and light-up electric Jesuses. Reclaimed doors are just an entry point to this shop in the Castlefield Design District. (See what I did there?) Hardware is also a specialty, with all manner of knobs, handles, pulls and brackets available - in addition to a smattering of vintage oddities like taxidermied animal heads and espresso machines. Post & Beam Reclamation In the market for some nicely-battered hardwood fragments? Perhaps a galvanized-steel washbasin or an embroidered map of the United States? You'll find it all at this shop in the Junction, where vintage details and fragments of reclaimed architecture rule the day.




After a couple of moves, this vintage design shop has settled in the Castlefield Design District, where they stand out nicely from the decidedly modern competition. On top of reclaimed items like shelving and signing, they also do custom work using salvaged items (think lighting fixtures made of chicken feeders, or tables fashioned from vintage machinery). Love the Design (Summerhill) This Rosedale shop, helmed by artist and designer Christine Flynn, balances modern items like throw cushions and photo prints with salvaged industrial furniture and tables and benches crafted from reclaimed wood. It all adds up to a cozy, homespun feel with a nice dose of Canadiana. Urban Tree Salvage specializes in furniture made from rustic live-edge slabs of wood. If you don't want yours pre-made into a coffee table, you can also pick up some barnboard or log rounds for your next DIY project. If you're looking for a milk crate, some pendant lighting made from old jars, or benches crafted from 150-year-old barn wood, you'll probably find it at Darius Armstrong's tucked-away basement shop in Cabbagetown.




(Note that they keep unusual hours - Armstrong still manages a restaurant during the day to fund his pet project.) This shop in East Chinatown is the perfect place to shop for things you didn't even know you wanted. Mixed in with folk-art tchotchkes from around Canada and all over the globe are industrial and farmhouse-style pieces that will lend your place the perfect rustic touch (without it feeling sterile). Where do trees go when they're struck by lightning? If they're lucky, it's this lumber depot on Dufferin, where felled trees and torn-down barns are transformed by commission into bars, bed frames and tables for the store's residential and commercial clients. At this Junction shop, owner Martin Scott transforms reclaimed wood, salvaged doors, and even old church pews into commanding dining room tables and elegant benches. But even if you're not in the market for a custom piece, the shop, piled high with pieces in various stages of transformation, is a feast for the eyes.




You'll find a few splashy, oddball antiques at this huge Scarborough shop, which sprawls over a whopping four retail spaces - but salvaged hardware items are the real specialty. If your home DIY project needs a doorknob, a hook or a hanger, or your place needs a vintage lighting fixture or an old mantelpiece, head here. Designer Jason Stroud has brought an element of "sleek decay" to restaurant interiors around Toronto, and at his Liberty Village showroom, you can get a piece of that aesthetic for yourself. Along with vintage finds and a few elements of twisted kitsch, you'll find elegant dining furniture built from reclaimed materials. The Barn Board Store Head out to East York to plumb the Barn Board Store's trove of reclaimed barn wood in rich grey, red and brown tones, as well as beams and live-edge slabs. Grab boards to make your own project at home, or get the staff to transform it into a stunning piece. This store in the Junction is a repository of all things old and nifty - from ancient lamps, typewriters, sewing machines and table fans to salvaged industrial signs, doors, mantels and moulding.

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