Lyndon Mendoza > Zoom!
Lyndon Mendoza > Starbright
Lyndon Mendoza > Toronto Union Station Clock
Lyndon Mendoza > The Flatiron

Once the head office of the Goodenham and Worts Distillery.  Corner of Church and Front St.
Lyndon Mendoza > Toronto Skyline


HDR, Vertical Pano
Lyndon Mendoza > 1948 Chevy Truck

This is the heart of a flaming chevy truck done in a 4 exposure HDR.
Lyndon Mendoza > The Panagiotis

The most commonly accepted story regarding the wreck of the Panagiotis maintains that she spent the later part of her life as a smuggler ship.  In 1980 (during a time of record population lows on the island of Zakynthos), Panagiotis was making her way from Turkey with a freight of contraband cigarettes (for the Italian Mafia, as some versions of the story assert).  The crew was suspected by authorities, and so the Panagiotis was pursued by the Greek Navy.  Encountering stormy weather, she ran aground in a shallow cove to the north of Porto Vromi, where the crew abandoned ship to evade the pursuing Navy.

To this day, she remains at the site which is now called "Navagio" for the Greek "shipwreck."
Lyndon Mendoza > Toronto's Chinatown

First developed in the late 19th century, it is now one of the largest Chinatowns in North America.  Situated along Spadina Rd and Dundas St west.
Lyndon Mendoza > New Day
The Panagiotis

The most commonly accepted story regarding the wreck of the Panagiotis maintains that she spent the later part of her life as a smuggler ship. In 1980 (during a time of record population lows on the island of Zakynthos), Panagiotis was making her way from Turkey with a freight of contraband cigarettes (for the Italian Mafia, as some versions of the story assert). The crew was suspected by authorities, and so the Panagiotis was pursued by the Greek Navy. Encountering stormy weather, she ran aground in a shallow cove to the north of Porto Vromi, where the crew abandoned ship to evade the pursuing Navy.

To this day, she remains at the site which is now called "Navagio" for the Greek "shipwreck."
Lyndon Mendoza > The Panagiotis

The most commonly accepted story regarding the wreck of the Panagiotis maintains that she spent the later part of her life as a smuggler ship.  In 1980 (during a time of record population lows on the island of Zakynthos), Panagiotis was making her way from Turkey with a freight of contraband cigarettes (for the Italian Mafia, as some versions of the story assert).  The crew was suspected by authorities, and so the Panagiotis was pursued by the Greek Navy.  Encountering stormy weather, she ran aground in a shallow cove to the north of Porto Vromi, where the crew abandoned ship to evade the pursuing Navy.

To this day, she remains at the site which is now called "Navagio" for the Greek "shipwreck."
The Panagiotis

The most commonly accepted story regarding the wreck of the Panagiotis maintains that she spent the later part of her life as a smuggler ship. In 1980 (during a time of record population lows on the island of Zakynthos), Panagiotis was making her way from Turkey with a freight of contraband cigarettes (for the Italian Mafia, as some versions of the story assert). The crew was suspected by authorities, and so the Panagiotis was pursued by the Greek Navy. Encountering stormy weather, she ran aground in a shallow cove to the north of Porto Vromi, where the crew abandoned ship to evade the pursuing Navy.

To this day, she remains at the site which is now called "Navagio" for the Greek "shipwreck."
See photo in gallery

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