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The REM de l'Est was a proposed second REM line that would have been 32 km (20 mi) long and included 23 stations. Announced in 2020, [ 92 ] [ 93 ] it would have used the same technology as the REM but would not be connected directly to the first section of the network.
Côte-de-Liesse station is a planned interchange station in the borough of Saint-Laurent in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.It is planned to be operated by CDPQ Infra and serve the Réseau express métropolitain (REM) system and will be the terminus of Exo's Mascouche line.
The firm had then yet to inaugurate the original REM system's first line. [16] The REM de l'Est was announced as a 32 km (19.88 mi) extension of the REM, with 23 stations connecting the underserved east of Montreal Island to downtown Montreal. [1] [17] Like the REM, the REM de l'Est would have been an electric, fully automated light metro system.
1970s and 1980s. ELC English Language Center was founded as an English education institute in Los Angeles, in 1978. [6]1990s. ELC English Language Center opens its second location In Boston, Massachusetts in 1990.
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The Quebec – New England Transmission (officially known in Quebec as the Réseau multiterminal à courant continu (RMCC) [1] and also known as Phase I / Phase II [2] and the Radisson - Nicolet - Des Cantons circuit, [3] and known in New England as the Northern Pass) is a long-distance high-voltage direct current (HVDC) line between Radisson, Quebec and Westford Road in Ayer, Massachusetts.
Beginning on May 11, 2020, the Mascouche line was rerouted around the Mount Royal Tunnel, bypassing Mont-Royal and Canora stations due to the construction of the Réseau express métropolitain (REM). [2] In 2025, Côte-de-Liesse will open as the Mascouche line's new southern terminus, replacing Central. Riders wishing to reach Central Station ...
In November 2019, Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante first expressed a desire to name the station after the late Premier of Quebec, Bernard Landry, due to his involvement as Quebec's Minister of Finance, in the redevelopment of the area adjacent to Griffintown and the western portion of Old Montreal as the Cité du Multimédia, a business cluster for Information Technology companies. [7]