Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Chinguacousy Civic Centre opened in 1972 at 150 Central Park Drive and is home to the Lester B. Pearson Theatre. Home to Brampton City Council from 1974 until 1991. Library closed in 2023 and relocated to temporary home at Ski Chalet at Chinguacousy Park as site the future home to Toronto Metropolitan University’s Medical School. [13]
Formerly at 150 Central Park Drive from 1972 or 1973 and was located inside the Bramalea Civic Centre. Brampton was the first public library system in Ontario to acquire federal and provincial case law records. The case law collection was opened in this branch in 1978, on the prompt of the Central Ontario Regional Library System. [9]
Bramalea Terminal [2] is a Brampton Transit bus station serving the community of Bramalea in Brampton, Ontario, Canada.It is located at the south west corner of Peel Centre Drive and Central Park Drive on the north side of the Brampton Civic Centre.
Chinguacousy Park Clock Chinguacousy Splash Pad. Donald M. Gordon Chinguacousy Park, colloquially known as Chinguacousy Park, is a large 40-hectare (100-acre) park [1] in the Bramalea section of Brampton, Ontario, Canada. It is bounded by Queen Street East on the southeast, Bramalea Road on the northeast, and Central Park Drive on the north and ...
There was a short tunnel under Team Canada Dr. connecting the mall and Civic Centre outside areas, visible in early aerial imagery but since removed. [citation needed] Although Chinguacousy Township (and thus Bramalea) was amalgamated with Brampton in 1974, the Bramalea City Centre retained the name of the satellite community in which it was ...
– Central Park Dr. (continues north as North Park Dr.) Howden Boulevard is a short collector street with a C-shaped course, running south as a continuation of North Park Drive at that street's southwestern terminus at Williams Parkway It curves to the east at Vodden Street (as a continuation of its alignment) and ends at Central Park Drive ...
The Springdale Library and Komagata Park hold a LEED gold rating which was the targeted level of sustainability that the City of Brampton encouraged RDHA to achieve. Collaborating with Brady Peters, Tyler Sharp RDHA Design Principal created a solar-responsive ceramic frit pattern for the building's windows. [ 2 ]
The CAA Centre (formerly the Brampton Centre for Sports & Entertainment and the Powerade Centre) [1] is a 5,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Brampton, Ontario, Canada. It was built in 1998, and officially opened the same year on October 7. In 2023, the arena became home to the Brampton Honey Badgers of the Canadian Elite Basketball League. [2]