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Dartmouth Crossing is a C$280 million commercial development owned by North American Development Group. [2] When it was first being developed, it was the largest retail construction project in Canada east of Calgary. [3] It is located north of the interchange between Highway 111 and Highway 118 in Dartmouth.
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
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.
Toys "R" Us - Opened 1994 only location in Nova Scotia - Relocated to a nearby shopping center, Dartmouth Crossing in December 2012. Forever 21 - Former Toys "R" Us - Closed late 2019 and replaced with Decathlon; Dominion [23] - Opened 1974. [24] Later converted to IGA, which closed in 2002 and was replaced with a Winners/HomeSense. [25]
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Highfield Park is home to the Highfield Terminal, a transit station run by Halifax Transit served by six bus routes. [2]There are direct buses to Halifax Shopping Centre (route 3), Downtown Dartmouth (route 53), Dartmouth Crossing (route 72), Burnside Industrial Park (routes 3, 64, 72), Clayton Park (route 39), Mic Mac Mall (route 72), and various other destinations.
Shubenacadie Canal Map, Nova Scotia, 1831 Partially restored lock. In recent decades, ... Dartmouth Crossing is located on Highway 118 across from Shubie Park ...
At around 600 miles wide and up to 6,000 meters (nearly four miles) deep, the Drake is objectively a vast body of water. To us, that is. To the planet as a whole, less so.