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The Bayers Lake Industrial Park was developed from the mid-1980s, and was served by CN Rail's Chester Subdivision rail line running from Halifax to Yarmouth as well as Highway 102 and Highway 103. Some of the earliest developments were the Nova Scotia Liquor Commission head office and distribution centre and the Volvo Halifax Assembly , both ...
Bayers Lake is a lake of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. It is located west of the Halifax Peninsula and the intersection of highways 102 and 103 , and in the centre of Bayers Lake Business Park . The historic Halifax and Southwestern Railway ran along the lake's north shore and the railway maintained a siding called "Summit" beside the lake, so ...
The development was planned to fill in over a 20-year period, however a change to the Bayer's Lake Industrial Park (BLIP) from light-industrial to businesses mostly consisting of warehouse-style retailers (it was renamed to Bayer's Lake Business Park), saw Clayton Park West expand with the highest rate of urban growth in Nova Scotia's history.
Sport-Chek International 2000 Ltd. (doing business as Sport Chek) is the largest Canadian retailer of sporting clothing and sports equipment, with 191 stores throughout Canada as of 2020. It is the only national big box sporting goods retailer in Canada, although it is absent in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut , while Quebec and Yukon are ...
The rail line the trail follows now was built by Halifax and South Western Railway (H&SW) in 1904 to service towns along the South Shore. In 1906, H&SW merged with Canadian Northern Railway and in 1918, facing bankruptcy, was acquired by the federal government and placed under the control of the newly formed Canadian National Railways (CN).
The Nova Scotia Keltics play in the Rugby Canada Super League. On September 13, 2018 the National Lacrosse League announced it would be expanding into Halifax for the 2019-20 season. Halifax will have its first women's professional soccer team in 2025 when Halifax Tides FC of the Northern Super League begins play.
Later that month, the group met with the Halifax Regional Council in private about plans to bring a CFL team to Halifax, with the possibility of playing at Université de Moncton while a stadium in Halifax is being built. [5] [6] The possible stadium locations were narrowed down to two sites, in Dartmouth Crossing and Bayers Lake Business Park. [7]
Founded as the Nova Scotia Oilers in 1984; Became the Hamilton Bulldogs in 1996 Nova Scotia Voyageurs: Halifax: 1971-84: 3: Founded in 1969 as the Montreal Voyageurs; became the Sherbrooke Canadiens in 1984 Nova Scotia Oilers: Halifax: 1984-88: 0: Became the Cape Breton Oilers in 1988 Halifax Citadels: Halifax: 1988-93: 0