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Dartmouth Crossing is connected to Burnside Industrial Park directly via Commodore Drive and indirectly via Wright Avenue. Overall, the centre is planned to house 20 big box stores, 40 shops, 15 boutiques, 20 restaurants, 10 service uses, two hotels, a movie theatre and 9,300 square metres (100,000 sq ft) of office space.
1.0: 0.62: 2 — Commodore Drive – Dartmouth Crossing: Southbound exit and entrance: 1.8: 1.1: 3: 12: Wright Avenue – Dartmouth Crossing, Burnside Industrial Park: North end of southbound collector/express lane: 4.7: 2.9: 4: 13: Hwy 107 to Route 318 / Akerley Boulevard – Cole Harbour, Eastern Shore, Burnside Industrial Park
In December 2008 it relocated to a free standing store in Dartmouth Crossing which closed early 2015 due to liquidation). Mark's - (formerly Mark's Work Warehouse) moved to Penhorn Mall in 1989. Kent - The opening date is currently unknown the Kent was a free standing store but it was relocated to Dartmouth Crossing in 2018 as of today it ...
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Shubie Park is a 16-hectare (40-acre) urban park in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia maintained by the Halifax Regional Municipality.. Heavily forested, Shubie Park is roughly linear in shape as it is bounded on the north and west by Highway 118 expressway and on the south and east by Lake Micmac and the southern edge of Lake Charles.
Bally's Twin River Lincoln Casino Resort, previously Twin River Casino Hotel, is a casino, hotel, and former race track in Lincoln, Rhode Island, owned and operated by Bally's Corporation. The facility has 202,000 square feet (18,800 m 2) of gaming space, with 3,900 slot machines, 110 table games, and 23 poker tables. [1] The hotel has 136 rooms.
The Dartmouth Natural Resource Trust in Dartmouth, is a non-profit land trust incorporated in 1971 working to preserve and protect Dartmouth's natural resources. [54] The trust has protected 5,400 acres of land since 1971 and owns 1,800 acres in Dartmouth as of 2020, [ 55 ] including 35 miles of hiking trails, and ocean and river walks.
The site was formerly home to the Dartmouth Arena, which was built in 1950 and burned down on 16 May 1974. A sod-turning ceremony was held for the new Sportsplex in March 1981 by Dartmouth mayor Daniel Brownlow and Premier John Buchanan. It was constructed by Dineen Construction and cost $7 million. The Sportsplex opened in 1982. [1]