Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Park City is home to Park City Mountain Resort, Canyons Village at Park City, Deer Valley Resort, Woodward Park City, the Utah Olympic Park (including the Alf Engen Ski Museum and Eccles Salt Lake 2002 Olympic Winter Games Museum), the Park City Museum, the Eccles Center Theater, an outlet mall, [30] Main Street shopping and dining, and ...
Phoenixville lies on the Dfa (humid continental) climate zone of the Köppen climate classification, immediately bordering upon the Cfa (humid subtropical) zone. Phoenixville is located in USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 6b. [29] Annual precipitation averages 43.3 inches (110 cm), and annual snowfall averages 16.3 inches (41 cm). [30]
The Canyons opened as Park City West in 1968, a sister resort to the nearby Park City Mountain Resort which opened five years earlier. It was renamed ParkWest in 1975 after a change in ownership, and the name was changed again in 1995 to Wolf Mountain (not to be confused with the small ski area of the same name near Ogden, Utah) for two seasons, then became The Canyons in 1997, after the ...
At the time of nomination (c. 1987), the district contained 908 contributing building, 52 non-contributing buildings and one contributing structure (bridge). The district is "roughly bounded by Penn St., RR tracks, Fourth Ave., and Wheatland St." [2] This historic district is the largest in Chester County.
South of Phoenixville on White Horse Road: Schuylkill Township: 65: Phoenixville Historic District: Phoenixville Historic District: March 17, 1987 : Roughly bounded by Penn Street, railroad tracks, 4th Avenue, and Wheatland Street
The company then developed plans for a $50 million renovation project of Park City Mountain, that, among other upgrades would merge Park City Mountain and the Canyons via the Quicksilver Gondola. [5] After construction by Doppelmayr completed in 2015, Park City transformed into the largest lift-serviced ski resort in the United States .
Park City High School Mechanical Arts building, September 2012. The district includes 47 contributing buildings on 13 acres (5.3 ha) along most of Park City's Main Street through its business section, plus part of Heber Avenue. All were built after the fire of June 19, 1898.
Trenton City/Calhoun Street Bridge, spans Delaware River between Morrisville, Pennsylvania, and Trenton, New Jersey (Phoenix Bridge Co.), NRHP-listed [12] Mill City Oregon Railroad Bridge, now a pedestrian bridge. A Phoenix Column bridge, manufactured in 1888, moved to San Jose, CA then Lake Oswego Oregon then to Mill City Oregon, Installed 1919.