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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]
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 ...
Privateer's Warehouse, Historic Properties: 1869 Upper Water Street Commercial grouping reflecting Halifax's 19th century development 1790 The Bower (Halifax, Nova Scotia) [1] 5918 Rogers Drive Brenton Halliburton's home 1790 York Redoubt: 300 Fergusons Cove Rd, Fergusons Cove: Major seaward defences of Halifax Harbour until World War II: 1793
The Nova Scotia Association of REALTORS (NSAR) is the provincial Board/Association for REALTORS in Nova Scotia, representing 2,100+ real estate brokers and salespeople in 7 regions: Cape Breton Region of NSAR; Halifax Dartmouth Region of NSAR; Highland Region of NSAR; Northern Region of NSAR; South Shore Region of NSAR; Yarmouth Region of NSAR
Halifax is the capital and most populous municipality of the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, and the most populous municipality in Atlantic Canada.As of 2023, it is estimated that the population of the Halifax CMA was 518,711, [6] with 348,634 people in its urban area. [3]
In January 2014, Crombie's commercial leasing division issued eviction notices to two local food vendors, Ray's Lebanese Cuisine and A Taste of India, in the Scotia Square food court in Halifax, Nova Scotia. A petition to save the two popular restaurants' leased tenancy was circulated in February and received over 5200 signatures.
Historic Properties Halifax. The Historic Properties (also known as Privateers' Wharf) are warehouses on the Halifax Boardwalk in Halifax, Nova Scotia that began to be constructed during the Napoleonic Wars by Nova Scotian businessmen such as Enos Collins, a privateer, smuggler and shipper whose vessels defied Napoleon's blockade to bring American supplies to the British commander Duke of ...
Scotia Square is a commercial development in downtown Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. It was built from the late 1960s to late 1970s and is managed by Crombie REIT. The complex comprises several office buildings, a shopping centre, two hotels, a parking garage, and three apartment buildings. A fourth apartment building is under construction.