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Happyland Park was an amusement park in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. Construction started on May 1, 1906, on 13 hectares (32 acres) of land between Aubrey and Dominion streets. Portage Avenue bounded it to the north and the Assiniboine River was to the south. [1] Today this area is part of the Wolseley neighbourhood of Winnipeg.
The company's origins date back to 1950 as BACM Industries founded by the Simkin Family in Winnipeg. In 1973, BACM Industries was sold to Genstar Corporation and was renamed Genstar Development Company. At that time, the Company operated in Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary, and Vancouver. Soon after, operations were added in Toronto and then Ottawa.
A new industrial park named CentrePort Canada Rail Park [22] is in development on 665 acres (2.69 km 2) of CentrePort's 20,000 acres (81 km 2) of land, located west of the Winnipeg Airport. The Rail Park is currently in development (as of February 2021 [update] ) and, when complete, will provide rail serviced industrial land for companies ...
This is a list of neighbourhoods in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. There are 236-237 neighbourhoods in Winnipeg. [1] [2] [3] [4]
The neighbourhood of Osborne Village covers 93 ha (230 acres) of land with a population of approximately 12,745 as of 2016, [10] making it the most densely populated neighbourhood in Winnipeg. [1] [11] Osborne Village has Winnipeg's tallest residential building outside of the downtown core: 55 Nassau Street North. [12]
This is a list of historic places in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada entered on the Canadian Register of Historic Places, whether they are federal, provincial, or municipal.
He constructed a number of warehouses in a then underdeveloped, peripheral area of the city—the St. James Street area, which now is a retail area of Winnipeg. The land that he proposed developing was not for sale, but was vacant. Unable to purchase the property outright, he negotiated a 50-year lease on the property.
The land upon which Portage and Main sits was originally purchased by Henry McKenney on 2 June 1862. He chose land where the north-south and east-west ox cart paths crossed, in order to build a general store with his half-brother John Christian Schultz. [4] [5] Portage and Main is now the hub of some of Winnipeg's main transportation routes.