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The largest hospital in the region is the East Kootenay Regional Hospital in Cranbrook. [10] There are also hospitals in Creston (Creston Valley Hospital), [11] Fernie (Elk Valley Hospital), [12] Invermere (Invermere & District Hospital), [13] and Golden (Golden & District Hospital). [14] Primary health centers are present in Sparwood and ...
Cranbrook has a major Canadian Pacific Railway yard, which serves as a key gateway for trains arriving from and departing to the United States. The McPhee Bridge also known as the St. Mary's Bridge rises high above the St. Mary River and is near the Cranbrook/Canadian Rockies International Airport and the Shadow Mountain Golf Community.
Community Bank is a commercial bank serving customers in Oregon and Washington. The bank is headquartered in Joseph, Oregon . On August 13, 2024, Washington-based credit union Spokane Teachers Credit Union (STCU) announced plans to acquire Community Bank.
As of 2023, 35 places are heritage-listed in the Shire of Cranbrook, [1] of which one is on the State Register of Heritage Places, the Tenterden Agricultural Hall, a building destroyed by bush fire on 27 December 2003.
The Western Financial Place (formerly known as the Cranbrook Recreational Complex) is a 4,268-seat (plus 352 standing room) [3] arena and an aquatics centre which is located in the East Kootenay's in the town of Cranbrook, British Columbia. Western Financial Place is a multi-purpose recreational facility.
St. Dunstan's Playhouse, while not formally a part of the Cranbrook Educational Community, is located on the Cranbrook grounds near the Cranbrook House. The Playhouse, a 206-seat theater, houses the St. Dunstan's Theatre Guild of Cranbrook. The guild was founded in 1932 by Henry Scripps Booth, the son of Cranbrook's founders George and Ellen Booth.
The “nearest small fishing community,” it said, was located “outside the project area.” This came as a surprise to Budha Ismail Jam. Yunus Suleman Gadh stands in the hut that serves as his home for eight months a year.
St Dunstan's Church, also known as the Cathedral of the Weald, in Cranbrook, Kent, England, dates to the late 13th century.It is now Grade I listed. [2]Its 74 feet-high tower, completed in 1425, has a wooden figure of Father Time and his scythe on the south face.