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Queenston is a compact rural community and unincorporated place 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) north of Niagara Falls in the Town of Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, Canada. [1] It is bordered by Highway 405 to the south and the Niagara River to the east; its location at the eponymous Queenston Heights [2] on the Niagara Escarpment led to the establishment of the Queenston Quarry in the area.
Queenstown Central is the central business district of Queenstown in the South Island of New Zealand. It also contains residential areas. It also contains residential areas. The area contains Queenstown Primary and St Joseph's schools, and contained Wakatipu High School until it moved to Frankton at the beginning of 2018.
This is a list of historic places in Central Ontario, containing heritage sites listed on the Canadian Register of Historic Places (CRHP), all of which are designated as historic places either locally, provincially, territorially, nationally, or by more than one level of government.
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on et.wikipedia.org Kesk-Ontario; Usage on fa.wikipedia.org انتاریوی مرکزی; Usage on fr.wikipedia.org
Equirectangular projection, N/S stretching 155 %. Geographic limits of the map: N: 57.1° N; S: 41.3° N; W: 95.5° W; E: 74.0° W; Date: 26 August 2009: Source: Own work, using United States National Imagery and Mapping Agency data; World Data Base II data; Statistics Canada/Statistique Canada; Author: NordNordWest: Permission (Reusing this file)
Queenstown is the name of several human settlements around the world, nearly all in countries that are part of the Commonwealth of Nations. Queenstown may refer to: Places currently named Queenstown
Central Ontario is a secondary region of Southern Ontario in the Canadian province of Ontario that lies between Georgian Bay and the eastern end of Lake Ontario.. The population of the region was 1,123,307 in 2016; however, this number does not include large numbers of seasonal cottage country residents, which at peak times of the year swell its population to well in excess of 1.5 million.
Highway 405 was part of a network of divided highways envisioned by Thomas McQuesten in the mid-1930s to connect New York with Ontario. [3] Though the Queen Elizabeth Way would cross the Niagara River by 1942 in Niagara Falls , Highway 405 and the Lewiston–Queenston Bridge would form the first direct freeway link between the neighbouring ...