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Laurel Creek Conservation Area, or simply Laurel Creek, is a park located in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. [1] [2] The park is owned by the Grand River Conservation Authority (GRCA). [1] [2] Laurel Creek is open year-round and offers several outdoor activities, such as swimming, campsites, picnic tables, and playgrounds. [2]
Waterloo Park is an urban park situated in Waterloo, ... The lake was created in 1816 when the Laurel Creek, then called Beaver Creek, was damned by Abraham Erb. [43]
Sunfish Lake is a small, 25 hectare meromictic lake located north-west of Waterloo, Ontario, in the village of St. Agatha in northern Wilmot Township, and is the source of Laurel Creek. It is one of a few meromictic lakes in Ontario, that is, its deep bottom waters (21 metres or 70 feet) are totally devoid of oxygen.
The Spurline Trail is a multi-use urban rail with trail which connects the cities of Waterloo and Kitchener, Ontario, Canada.Its northern trailhead is at the point where the CN Waterloo Spur crosses Laurel Creek; it connects to the Laurel Trail there, and is close to Uptown Waterloo.
Laurel Creek Conservation Area is in western Waterloo—north-west of University of Waterloo's Environmental Reserve—and houses 122 campsites, 4.5 kilometres (2.8 mi) of trails, and facilities for canoeing, swimming, windsurfing, cycling, and sailing.
Abraham Erb, the original architect of the house, came to the settlement that would become Waterloo from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania in 1806, [1] [2] settling on Lots 14 and 15 of the German Company Tract. [1] Erb first built a sawmill on Laurel Creek (then Beaver Creek) in 1808 and built a gristmill on Laurel Creek in 1816.
Laurel Creek Conservation Area; M. Mutual Life; S. ... Waterloo Regional Police Service; WWW Trilogy This page was last edited on 15 June 2021, at 04:04 (UTC). ...
The Walter Bean Grand River Trail (also sometimes shortened as the Walter Bean Trail) is a 76-kilometre (47 mi) [2] multi-use trail that runs along the Grand River in the Regional Municipality of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. The trail runs through the cities of Cambridge, Kitchener and Waterloo and is owned and maintained by the cities. [3]