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The Toowoomba Goods Shed dates from 1896, although a smaller goods shed was constructed with the 1867 structure. Plans had been prepared for this replacement shed as early as 1884, the new plans called for a shed 250 by 75 feet (76 by 23 m) of timber and galvanised iron on pile foundations with two 150-by-15-foot (45.7 by 4.6 m) platforms and ...
In 1855 the Toll Bar Road was opened and the traffic that soon came to use this route facilitated the expansion of the settlement of "The Swamp", from 1857 officially known as Toowoomba. By the early 1860s Toowoomba was the principal settlement on the Darling Downs, supplanting nearby Drayton as the service centre for the surrounding district ...
Oakey–Cooyar Road is a continuous 58.8 kilometres (36.5 mi) road route in the Darling Downs and Toowoomba regions of Queensland, Australia. The entire route is signed as State Route 68. It is a state-controlled part regional and part district road (number 417).
On 2 November 1909, the Queensland Legislative Assembly passed legislation to build a railway line from Oakey to Cooyar, a distance of 38 miles 50 chains (62.2 km). The intention was to subsequently extend the line to Tarong, which was connected by rail to Kingaroy and beyond into the Burnett River area.
Former route of US 222 through the Reading area that was replaced by multiple expressways US 322 Bus. 9: 14 I-99/US 220/US 322 near State College: US 322 near Boalsburg: 1985: current Former route of US 322 through State College and Boalsburg that was replaced by an expressway US 322 Truck: 4: 6.4 US 30 Bus./US 322 in Downingtown: US 30 Bus./
The Bellman Hangar was designed in the United Kingdom in 1936 by the Directorate of Works structural engineer, N. S. Bellman, as a temporary aircraft hangar capable of being erected or dismantled by unskilled labour with simple equipment and to be easily transportable. Commercial manufacturing rights were acquired by Head Wrightson & Co of ...
Pennsylvania Route 194 (PA 194) is a 31-mile-long (50 km) north–south state highway located in south-central Pennsylvania.The southern end is at the Maryland state line, where it continues south as Maryland Route 194 (MD 194), and the northern terminus is at the intersection with PA 74 near the borough of Dillsburg.