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Map of the 46 media markets in Canada. Markets are Designated Market Areas (DMAs), as listed at TV Radio World . Edmundston / Woodstock, NB is part of the Presque Isle, ME DMA .
North Market is a food hall and public market in Columbus, Ohio.The Downtown Columbus market was established in 1876, and was the second of four founded in Columbus. The market is managed by the non-profit North Market Development Authority (NDMA), which also manages North Market Bridge Park, a market in Dublin, Ohio.
The North Market Historic District is a historic district in Downtown Columbus, Ohio. The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 and the Columbus Register of Historic Properties in 1983. [1] The district consists of two-to-four-story warehouses, dating from 1880 to 1910. [2]
North End Market House (1876-1948) The second North Market (1948-1995) The site is in the North Market Historic District, and is the historical site of the first two buildings that housed North Market, the city's oldest surviving marketplace. The market currently occupies an adjacent building, with the project site utilized as a 130-space ...
It encompasses 44 buildings in the city's downtown, most on North Market Street between 6th and 9th avenues. The district was the commercial center of the city between roughly 1870 and 1968, and contains an architecturally distinguished collection of late 19th- and early 20th-century architecture.
In 1876, a market house was built on part of the graveyard property; the market was a predecessor to today's North Market, located adjacent to the site. [3] Clearing of the original portion, the John Kerr tract, took place from November to December 2, 1881.
Central Market was a public market in Downtown Columbus, Ohio. The market operated from 1814 to 1966, was the location of Columbus's first city hall for two decades, from 1850 to 1872. It moved three times, each time into successively larger buildings.
The market's location, at the cross section between Charles Street and Maryland Avenue, was originally the site of two country homes, including the site of Confederate General Bradley Tyler Johnson's former residence. [1] With the rapid growth of North Baltimore in the early 20th century the area was no longer "country". The market hosted close ...