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The Port Moody Panthers are a Junior ice hockey team based in Port Moody, British Columbia, Canada. The Panthers play their home games at the Port Moody Recreation Complex arena. The Panthers play their home games at the Port Moody Recreation Complex arena.
It is located in Port Moody, British Columbia, on the south side of the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) tracks, at the north foot of Williams Street, approximately 200 metres (660 ft) north of St. John's Street. Moody Centre replaced the previous Port Moody station on the West Coast Express.
Port Moody is well-known for its number of craft breweries, many of which happen to be conveniently located on the same street, which is known as Brewer's Row. [19] Port Moody's economic development focus in recent years has been on the arts and culture sector, including the development of a new Port Moody identity as the “City of the Arts.”
The first station in Port Moody was built in 1882 [4] as the original western terminus for the Canadian Pacific Railway, before it was extended to Vancouver. [5] The second railway station, built in 1908, was first moved to a location west of Queen Street [4] in 1945 and, when the CPR discontinued passenger service in 1976, was bought by The Port Moody Historical Society, who moved it again in ...
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NewPort Village is a small commercial and residential area in Port Moody, British Columbia. The area is located just east of the Burrard Inlet, and across Ioco Road from the city hall, library, and the arena. What is now NewPort Village used to be a forest; the area was not developed until the mid-1990s.
The district of Port Moody-Coquitlam was established by the Electoral Districts Act, 2008, and was first contested in the 2009 general election. The riding adopted its current name and had modest boundary changes in the 2024 election , which implemented the results of the 2021 redistribution .
The Museum was established in 1969 through the efforts of the Port Moody Historical Society (which became the Port Moody Heritage Society in 1979 [1]).. First housed in a now-demolished building on Kyle Street behind Port Moody's former City Hall, the Port Moody Historical Society moved the collection to the city's second CPR train station in 1978.