Captain John's Harbour Boat Restaurant

The MS Jadran, the second home of Captain John's Harbour Boat Restaurant in December 2005.
History
NameMS Jadran
OwnerJadrolinija 1957-1975, John Letnik 1975-2015
OperatorJadrolinija 1957-1975, John Letnik 1975-2015
Port of registryRijeka,  Yugoslavia 1957-1975
BuilderBrodogradiliste "Split" Shipyards, Brodosplit, Split, Yugoslavia
Completed1957
Acquired1957
In service1957-1975
Out of service1975
FateSold in 1975 and operated as floating restaurant in Toronto from 1975-2012; towed from Toronto Harbour May 28, 2015, scrapped
General characteristics
Class and typeJ Class passenger ferry
Tonnage2,564 GT
Length89.9 m (294 ft 11 in)
Beam13.1 m (43 ft 0 in)
Draught4.6 m (15 ft 1 in)
Decks3
Propulsion2 x Sulzer Type diesel engines
Speed18.0 knots (33.3 km/h; 20.7 mph)
Capacity191 passengers (159 first class, 32 tourist)

Captain John's Harbour Boat Restaurant (incorporated as 1518756 Ontario Inc.) was a restaurant and banquet hall in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. For most of its existence it was located in the MS Jadran, a former Adriatic passenger ship that was permanently docked at the foot of Yonge Street at 1 Queens Quay West on Toronto's waterfront. The ship was moored off on a small laneway at the foot of Yonge Street called Captain John's Pier. Once a prestige destination, the restaurant was open every day of the year, including all major holidays such as Christmas and New Year's Day, for almost 40 years. When it opened, the waterfront was an industrial portland. The Harbourfront redevelopment turned the area into a recreational destination for residents and tourists and a residential neighbourhood; Captain John's helped begin a gentrification process that ultimately claimed it as a victim.[1][2]

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  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference condo was invoked but never defined (see the help page).