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1690 Hollis Street Halifax Office Building 13 1974 Home to Department of Health, Speaker's Office, Human Rights Commission, Voluntary Planning, Security Commission and Intergovernmental Affairs. Building being sold by Government of Nova Scotia. Radisson Suite Hotel Halifax: 1649 Hollis Street Halifax Hotel 10 1996 Bank of Nova Scotia Building
1472 Hollis Street 44°38′38″N 63°34′17″W / 44.64389°N 63.57139°W / 44.64389; -63.57139 ( Black-Binney A house reflective of the Palladian -inspired residences common during the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Eastern Canada ; notable residents include John Black , James Boyle Uniacke and Hibbert Binney
5136-38 Prince Street; 5140 Prince Street; 5144 Prince Street; 1695 Hollis Street Halifax NS 44°38′51″N 63°34′21″W / 44.6475°N 63.5724°W / 44.6475; -63.5724 ( Prince and Hollis Buildings
The Halifax Club is a private club in Halifax, Nova Scotia that was established in 1862. The club serves as a meeting place for business-minded men and women. It is a place where they can "meet, toast the day's successes, dine or simply relax in a warm atmosphere of history and tradition."
The RBC Waterside Centre is a commercial development in the downtown core of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada built by local real estate developer Armour Group.The project involves demolishing six heritage buildings and replacing them with a nine storey retail and office building, clad at ground level with the reconstructed facades of most of the former heritage buildings.
The demolished Tex-Park garage actually only occupied the northern half of what is commonly termed the "Texpark site". The southern half is mainly vacant, but also houses a five-storey office building at 1568 Hollis Street, built in 1960, which still has commercial tenants and is also owned by United Gulf Developments.
A restaurant, Elements on Hollis, opened in 2011 and showcases Nova Scotian cuisine. Roy's Lounge is a contemporary cocktail lounge named after bartender Roy Clorey, who began bartending at the Hotel Nova Scotian in 1963. The hotel also houses a fitness centre, an indoor saltwater pool, and a business centre.
The new, and present, station opened on June 19, 1930 [1] at the south end of Hollis Street, opposite Cornwallis Park. The structure is constructed of white limestone and has a colonnaded entry off Hollis Street. Inside, the Ticket Lobby has a high arched ceiling with a seated waiting area and ticketing/baggage counters.