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The Vüze, formerly known as Fenwick Place and Fenwick Tower, [1] is a residential apartment building in the south end of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. At 106 metres and 33 storeys in height, it was the tallest building in Atlantic Canada from its construction in 1971 until 2023.
Downtown Halifax in 2015. Halifax, Nova Scotia, with an estimated population of 439,819 in 2021, is the most populous municipality in Atlantic Canada. [1]According to the now-defunct website Emporis, the municipality contained 105 high-rise buildings over 35 m (115 ft) tall in 2022. [2]
Festival Tower C: Vaughan: 178 m (584 ft) 2024 28 88 Queen Street East - South Tower: Toronto: 177 m (581 ft) 2024 29 VuPoint Tower 1: Pickering: 172 m (564 ft) 2025 30= 3600 Hurontario Street: Mississauga: 171 m (561 ft) 2026 30= Avia 1: Mississauga: 171 m (561 ft) 2024 32 Oro at Edge Towers: Mississauga: 170 m (558 ft) 2026 33 Tour des ...
This list includes the tallest buildings in the region of Atlantic Canada, which consists of the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Prince Edward Island. Buildings in five cities are included in this list; Halifax , Moncton , Saint John , Fredericton , and St. John's , each having buildings at least ...
1515 South Park Street Halifax Hotel 9 29.88 m (98.0 ft) 1927-1928 2 floors added in 1967 Government House (Nova Scotia) 1451 Barrington Street Halifax Government 3 1805 Official residence of the Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia and example of Adam-Georgian architecture: King's Wharf 50 King's Wharf Plaza Dartmouth Residential 33 120 m (390 ft)
The Nova Centre complex occupies two city blocks in downtown Halifax.One block was formerly home to the longtime headquarters of the Halifax Chronicle-Herald newspaper.. The project received federal, provincial, and municipal public funding as it would house, in the podium levels and basement, the new Halifax Convention Centre operated by the Crown corporation Trade Centre Limited (TDL).
In early 2023, the south-facing concrete façade of the tower was replaced with solar panels in order to reduce the university's carbon footprint. Retrofitted at a cost of C$8.5 million, the installation is expected to generate around 100,000 kWh yearly, and makes the Loyola Residence the tallest solar-integrated building in North America.
By 1813, the Tower mounted four 6-pound guns on garrison carriages on its barrack level, two 24-pound guns on traversing platforms and six 24-pound carronades on traversing slides on top. After 1864, the Tower was used as a self-defensible depot magazine. The park was the site of several small farms during the early settlement of Halifax.