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The image shows the wide median that the Province of New Brunswick generally employs on its divided highways. This portion of highway was completed about 1970. Route 15 only extended from Shediac to Strait Shores until the early 1970s, when the Shediac Four-Lane Highway (the first rural expressway in New Brunswick) was built from Dieppe to Shediac.
Central Moncton (Old East End) Centennial: Centennial Park: Cherryfield: Downtown Moncton: Harrisville: Humphrey: Lakeview: Lewisville: 1973: Magnetic Hill: Mapleton: New North End: New West End: North-West End: Old North End: South End (Old West End) Sunny Brae: 1954: Sunny Brae rink Sunny Brae North: Tankville
Route 490 is a north–south provincial highway in the Canadian province of New Brunswick. The road runs from Route 116 intersection in Bass River. The road has a length of approximately 57.6 kilometres, and services small, otherwise isolated rural communities. In these areas, the highway is often unofficially referred to as "Main Street".
It is the highest daily circulated newspaper in New Brunswick. Moncton's daily newspaper is the Times & Transcript, which has the highest circulation of any daily newspaper in New Brunswick. [142] More than 60 percent of city households subscribe daily, and more than 90 percent of Moncton residents read the Times & Transcript at least once a week.
It was first designated in 1972 with the opening of the Shediac four-lane highway between Moncton and Shediac (now part of Route 15). Different sections of Route 134 continued to appear between the mid-1970s and the early 1990s as construction continued of new controlled-access alignments of Route 8 and Route 11.
Maintained by New Brunswick Department of Transportation: Length: 11.82 km [1] (7.34 mi) Existed: 1965 [2] –present: Major junctions; East end: Route 126 in Lutes Mountain: Route 2 (TCH) in Berry Mills: West end: Route 15 in Moncton: Location; Country: Canada: Province: New Brunswick: Major cities: Moncton: Highway system; Provincial highways ...
Halifax: 82.5 m (270 ft) 27 Under construction. Once finished, will be the tallest building in the community and former city of Dartmouth. 10= Assumption Place: Moncton: 80.8 m (265 ft) 20: 1972: Tied with Brunswick Square in Saint John for the tallest building in New Brunswick. [12] 10= Brunswick Square office tower: Saint John: 80.8 m (265 ft ...
Greater Moncton has a population of 157,717 (2021). Migration is mostly from other areas of New Brunswick (especially the north), Nova Scotia (13%), and Ontario (9%). 62% of new arrivals to the city are Anglophone and 38% are Francophone. The census metropolitan area (CMA) grew by 9% between 2016 and 2021.