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Ottawa Hydro Electric Company Building: 109 Bank Street: Somerset: 1934? W. C. Beattie: Ottawa Ladies' College: 268 First Avenue: Capital: 1912–1914: Allan Keefer: Ottawa Marble and Granite Works: 14 Waller Street: Rideau-Vanier: 1866: Ottawa New Edinburgh Club: 501 Sir George-Étienne Cartier Parkway: Rideau-Rockcliffe: 1914: C.P. Meredith ...
The Fairmont Château Laurier is a 660,000-square-foot (61,000 m 2) hotel with 429 guest rooms in the downtown core of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, located near the intersection of Rideau Street and Sussex Drive and designed in a French Gothic Revival Châteauesque style to complement the adjacent Parliament buildings.
Golden Palace can refer to: The Golden Palace, a TV sitcom spin-off of The Golden Girls; GoldenPalace.com, an Internet-based casino known for paying boxers to get tattoos of their website on their bodies; Domus Aurea (Latin for "Golden House"), a large palace built by the Roman emperor Nero; Golden Palace Hotel, in Tsaghkadzor, Armenia
[1] [2] [3] Located in Ottawa, the capital of the country on a 36-hectare (88-acre) estate at 1 Sussex Drive. The main building consisting of approximately 175 rooms across 9,500 square metres (102,000 sq ft), and 27 outbuildings around the grounds. Rideau Hall's site lies just outside the centre of Ottawa. [4]
The "GoldenPalace.com monkey" was officially named Callicebus aureipalatii, with "aureipalatii" literally translating into "of the golden palace" in Latin. [9] GoldenPalace.com also paid a woman to permanently tattoo their domain name on her forehead in 2005. [10] [11]
Ottawa (Golden Triangle) ON 45°25′13″N 75°41′20″W / 45.4204°N 75.689°W / 45.4204; -75.689 ( Lisgar Collegiate Institute Ottawa ( Golden Triangle ) municipality ( 15277 )
The Golden Girls (1985–1996) The Golden Palace (1992–1993) The Governor & J.J. (1969–1970) Grange Hill (1982–1984) Green Acres; Guiding Light; Gunsmoke; Happy Days (1974–1984) Hardcastle and McCormick; Have Gun-Will Travel; Here's Lucy (1972–1974) Highway Patrol; The Honeymooners; The Huckleberry Hound Show (1959–1964) Hustle; I ...
It sold the house in 2002 to the Algerian Embassy for $2.9 million, a record price for a heritage home in Ottawa. [34] Helen Foster, then the group's director, said they were planning to spend $6 million to build a 63,000-square-foot (5,900 m 2) Maharishi Peace Palace to house the movement's operations. [5]