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Grenada Village is one of the northern suburbs of Wellington, New Zealand, between Paparangi and Grenada North. In 1991, a new landfill was opened in Grenada, with direct access via an overbridge to the adjacent motorway .
Grenada North is a small suburb in northern Wellington, New Zealand. It is 5 km south of Porirua's city centre, and 13 km north of Wellington's city centre. Its western boundary is formed by State Highway 1 (SH 1N) and Takapu Road. The suburb itself was named after Grenada in the Caribbean, and most streets are named after Caribbean islands.
Wellington Ferry (Interislander) SH 1 and SH 1/Classic New Zealand Wine Trail concurrency begins: 1: 0.62: Kent Street – Wellington Ferry : Tuamarina: 20: 12: Wairau River: Spring Creek: 23: 14: SH 62 (Rapaura Road) – Nelson: Blenheim: 28: 17: SH 6 (Nelson Street) – Nelson, West Coast: 29: 18: Park Terrace Redwood Street – Redwoodtown ...
Grenada North Linden is a subdivision of Tawa , the northernmost suburb of Wellington , New Zealand . Linden lies at the northern end of Tawa, just south of the city of Porirua .
Glenside, Wellington. Glenside is a suburb of Wellington, New Zealand. It is bounded by Tawa to the North, Churton Park to the West/South and Grenada across the motorway to the East. Glenside was first settled in 1840. Ngāti Toa are the mana whenua. The area was known as "The Halfway" from 1840 until 1928.
Paparangi, one of the northern suburbs of Wellington in New Zealand, lies approximately 10 km north of the city centre, north-east of Johnsonville, north-west of Newlands and south of Grenada and Woodridge. The population was 2,841 at the time of the 2013 census, an increase of 96 from the 2006 census population. [3]
Wellington: IPL Books. ISBN 0-908876-05-X. Hoy, Douglas George (1970). Rails Out of the Capital. Wellington: The New Zealand Railway and Locomotive Society. Hoy, Douglas George (1972). West of the Tararuas: An Illustrated History of the Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company. Wellington, Dunedin: Southern Press. Mahoney, John Daniel (1987).
Redwood is named after the first Catholic Archbishop of Wellington, Francis Redwood, who was ordinary from 1874 until 1935 (bishop from 1874 and archbishop from 1887). It is located on 108 acres of land given in 1855 by Sir George Grey, Governor of New Zealand, to Philippe Viard, the first Roman Catholic Bishop of Wellington for the establishment of a school.