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A dozen flights with over 2,000 passengers were diverted to the Greater Moncton Airport. In May 2001, the new, state-of-the-art international air terminal was completed and officially opened in 2002 by Queen Elizabeth II. The Greater Moncton International Airport is the busiest airport in New Brunswick, serving more than 552,629 passengers per ...
This is a list of airports in New Brunswick. It includes all Nav Canada certified and registered water and land airports , aerodromes and heliports in the Canadian province of New Brunswick . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Airport names in italics are part of the National Airports System .
Edmonton Airports operates the Edmonton International Airport (EIA) and the Edmonton/Villeneuve Airport. [4] The EIA is owned by Transport Canada, leased by Edmonton Airports, and part of the National Airports System. [5] It includes a planned inland port logistics support facility in support of the Port Alberta initiative. [6]
The main destinations for shopping in Greater Moncton are the Northwest Centre, and the Wheeler Park Power Centre in Moncton, and Champlain Place in Dieppe, which, at 816,000 square feet (75,800 m 2), [13] is the largest shopping mall in Atlantic Canada and has over 160 stores and services.
Moncton/McEwen Airport (TC LID: CCG4) is a private aerodrome located in the north of the City of Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. The centre 35 ft (11 m) of the runway is asphalt and the facility is often used for sport parachute jumping.
The Blue Cross Centre is a large and prominent office building located in the central business district of Moncton, New Brunswick. The building features a three-story section facing Main Street and a nine-story tower to the south joined by an atrium. The building was constructed in 1988 and now encloses a total area of 30,200 m 2 (325,000 sq ft).
The 1963 airside terminal with an Air Canada DC-9-30 at a jet bridge gate (1979) Transport Canada selected the current site for Edmonton International Airport, on the opposite side of the city from the military airport at RCAF Station Namao, and purchased over 28 km 2 (7,000 acres) of land.
The building has the most levels of any building in New Brunswick at 20. In 1970 the City of Moncton approved the building. At that time NBTel realized the building would be high enough to block radio signals coming from the 135 ft (41 m) tower they had at that time in downtown Moncton .