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Platform with service to Waterfront. Yaletown–Roundhouse is an underground station on the Canada Line of Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain rapid transit system. The station is located on Davie Street at Mainland Street, approximately 80 metres (260 ft) northwest of Pacific Boulevard, and serves the residential and retail areas of Yaletown and Downtown Vancouver in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
The largest "as-built" roundhouse ever constructed is believed to have been the Boston and Maine's East Somerville roundhouse outside Boston, today the site of the Boston Engine Terminal. It was built with stalls 112 feet (34.1 m) long, 90 feet (27 m) of open space between the roundhouse and the turntable, and a 110-foot (33.5 m) turntable ...
Roundhouse, Manchester, New York; Roundhouse, Richmond Hill, New York; Pennsylvania Railroad Shops & Roundhouse, West Seneca, New York; New York Central System roundhouse, Rouses Point, NY; New York Central System roundhouse, Utica, NY; roundhouse, Woodlawn, NY (Buffalo area) roundhouse, Sloan, NY (Buffalo area) roundhouse, Retsof, NY 4/16 ...
Station Warsaw: Wyoming: New York NY-52: Erie Railway, Avon Station 1972 Station Avon: Livingston: New York NY-53: Erie Railway, Avon Freight Station 1972 Station Avon: Livingston: New York NY-54: Erie Railway, Buffalo Division, Bridge 361.66 1875 1971 Bridge Portageville: Wyoming: New York
Category: Canada Line stations. ... Yaletown–Roundhouse station; YVR–Airport station This page was last edited on 27 September 2012, at 22:38 ...
Yaletown is an area of Downtown Vancouver, Canada, bordered by False Creek and Robson and Homer Streets. Formerly a heavy industrial area dominated by warehouses and rail yards, since the 1986 World's Fair it has been transformed into one of the most densely populated neighbourhoods in the city.
A turntable for the Central Railroad of New Jersey. Turnplates at the Park Lane goods station of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway in 1831. Early wagonways were industrial railways for transporting goods—initially bulky and heavy items, particularly mined stone, ores and coal—from one point to another, most often to a dockside to be loaded onto ships. [4]
Morris Grove station was originally a South Side Railroad of Long Island station house located at Berlin Station that was moved to 124th Street in 1878 and renamed "Morris Grove." The station was later renamed "Morris Park," for a park that was located behind the depot, and closed in 1886 to be replaced by the "new" Morris Park station on ...