Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Assembly Hall was renovated in 2000 and opened to the public in 2001. It is now operated by the City of Toronto. [14] The grounds are now open to the public as a park. A Tim Hortons occupies the former Carriage House. A new Welcome Centre was built and opened in September 2016.
Belfast Grand Central station (originally the Belfast Transport Hub [6]) is a railway and bus station in the city centre of Belfast, Northern Ireland. It has replaced Great Victoria Street railway station and the Europa Buscentre. [7] [8] It is built next to its predecessors, in a new neighbourhood called Weaver's Cross. [9]
Belfast Waterfront is a multi-purpose conference and entertainment centre, in Belfast, Northern Ireland, designed by local architects' firm Robinson McIlwaine. The hall is located in Lanyon Place, the flagship development of the Laganside Corporation .
Belfast Corporation used their profits from the gas industry to pay for the construction of the Belfast City Hall. [6] The building, which was designed by Sir Alfred Brumwell Thomas in the Baroque Revival style , was built in Portland stone at a cost of £369,000 and opened on 1 August 1906. [ 7 ]
The complex is located in the Titanic Quarter of Belfast. It is a 15-minute walk from the city centre, over the Lagan Weir and Queen Elizabeth Bridges. Visitors are also able to access it via services provided by Translink NI. Glider (Belfast) is the newest way to access the arena from the city centre. The Glider Bus route 'G2' travels from the ...
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Like the Olympic Villages provided for other games, the Athletes' Village provided in Toronto for the 2015 Pan American Games was a new construction. [ 5 ] [ 3 ] However, learning a lesson from the Athletes' Village provided for the 2010 Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver , British Columbia , developers decided the units would not be fully ...
Cultúrlann McAdam Ó Fiaich (An Chultúrlann) is an Irish language cultural centre in The Gaeltacht Quarter and is located on the Falls Road, Belfast. Opened in 1991, the centre underwent renovation in 2010 and was opened the following year by then Irish President Mary McAleese .