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1715-1719 Barrington Street Four-storey, stone Art Nouveau building to house GM Smith dry goods store. Building restored after deadly fire killed 10 in Kay's Department Store in November, 1950. 1893 Halifax Armoury: 2667 North Park Street Large, urban, Romanesque Revival drill hall for the active militia, 1895–99 1899
Barrington Street is a major street in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, running from the MacKay Bridge in the North End approximately 7 km south, through Downtown Halifax to Inglis Street in the South End. Its civic numbers range from 950 to 4756 on the Halifax Peninsula street grid numbering system.
In 1986, the company opened its first large-scale grocery store in Moncton, New Brunswick, using the name The Real Atlantic Superstore. In 1995, the name was shortened to Atlantic Superstore, and following the 2024 rebrand, the name was lengthened again to the present name, Real Atlantic Superstore. Further, the store designs were reformatted ...
5161 George Street Halifax Office Building 12 52 m (171 ft) 1960 Office tower in the downtown core of Halifax. Scotia Square Complex: 5201 Duke Street Halifax Shopping Centre 2 1960s-1970s A system of buildings connected by pedways and tunnels. It houses a mall, two hotels, and three offices towers. Barrington Tower: 1894 Barrington Street Halifax
Scotia Square is a commercial development in downtown Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.It was built from the late 1960s to late 1970s and is managed by Crombie REIT.. The complex comprises several office buildings, a shopping centre, two hotels, a parking garage, and three apartment buildings.
These innovated upon earlier shopping centres on Barrington Street in that they did not turn a blank wall to the street, but instead maintained continuous shop frontage. [7] Park Lane opened in 1988. City Centre Atlantic, a mixed-use development on Spring Garden Road, was developed by Halifax company Ryco Developments Limited in the late 1980s. [8]
Maritime Centre was designed at the same time the former City of Halifax was developing a viewplanes by-law that would protect certain views of Halifax Harbour from Citadel Hill. In November 1973, the president of MT&T, Gordon Archibald, stated that the tower would not block the view of George's Island from the hill.
Halifax Shopping Centre, located in Halifax, Nova Scotia, is Atlantic Canada's largest multi-building shopping centre. The centre is owned and operated by Primaris REIT. The property consists of an enclosed shopping centre with 641,585 square feet (59,605.2 m 2) of leasable area, which attracts over 110,000 people each week, and an adjacent property with larger format retailers and office ...