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LaSalle is a town in Essex County, Ontario, Canada. It is a bedroom community of the City of Windsor and part of the Windsor Census Metropolitan Area , and is located south of that city. LaSalle, along with Windsor, is the oldest French settlement area in Southwestern Ontario , and the oldest continually inhabited European settlement in Canada ...
The following is a list of indoor arenas in Canada with a capacity of at least 1,000 for sporting events. The arenas in the table are ranked by capacity; the arenas with the highest capacities are listed first.
Town of LaSalle; Municipality of Leamington; Town of Tecumseh; Town of Amherstburg; Town of Kingsville; Town of Essex; The City of Windsor and the Township of Pelee are within the Essex census division but are not part of Essex County. The census division had a population of 422,860 as of 2021. [2]
The Meadowvale Community Centre was officially opened in January 1982. The original building was 43,500 square feet, including a pool, fitness centre with racquetball and squash courts, meetings rooms (including a large auditorium) and lobby space. [1] In 2014, the community centre was closed for redevelopment by the City of Mississauga.
The Township of Mississauga moved to 1 City Centre Drive near Burnhamthorpe and Hurontario in 1971. It along with Square One was located on the old Robert Norman Carr farm. Built as a 5 floor office building, it was converted as a civic centre in 1971. In 1974 it became City Hall and remained so until 1984.
The Living Arts Centre is a 225,000 sq ft (20,900 m 2) multi-use facility which opened in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, on October 7, 1997.The complex houses three theatres for the performing arts, Hammerson Hall, RBC Theatre and Rogers Theatre [1]), an exhibition gallery (the Laidlaw Hall [2]), seven art studios and facilities for corporate meetings.
Opened in 1972, the centre's exhibit space nearly doubled from the original 260,000 square feet (24,000 m 2) following a major expansion and renovation in 2002.The centre now features over 548,000 square feet (50,900 m 2) of exhibit and meeting space and approximately one million square feet (93,000 m 2) floor area which includes exhibit, meeting, office and retail space.
However, they are combined as a single Mississauga listing in the phone book. The first Touch-Tone telephones in Canada were introduced in Malton on 15 June 1964. [35] On 1 January 2010, Mississauga bought land from the Town of Milton and expanded its border by 400 acres (1.6 km 2), to Highway 407, affecting 25 residents. [36]