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(Centre) Station Street, Thirty Road RR 20 (Former Highway 20) RR 73 (Mud Street East) Smithville Originally included Thirty Road north of RR 73, Ridge Road East and Park Road to RR 81 (Main Street East) downloaded after 2002
Corktown, Ferguson South, landmark GO Transit station, Hunter Street James Street South, street life Locke Street South. 50 Road; Aberdeen Avenue, named after Lord Aberdeen (John Hamilton-Gordon, 1st Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair) and Lady Aberdeen (Ishbel Hamilton-Gordon, Marchioness of Aberdeen and Temair) who both lived in Hamilton on Bay Street South (1890–1898) with their four children.
In Hamilton, there are 21 buildings that stand taller than 75 metres (230 ft). The tallest building in the city is the 43- storey , 127 m (417 ft) Landmark Place . The second-tallest building in the city is 20 George St, standing at 104 m (341 ft) tall with 32 storeys.
Signage on the ramp leading from Highway 403 to the Linc. The Lincoln M. Alexander Parkway begins in the west end of Hamilton at a large turbine interchange with Highway 403, which also provides access to Rousseaux Street (formerly the westernmost part of Mohawk Road) from westbound Highway 403 and The Linc. [1]
It is bordered to the north by Main Street and Dundas, to the south and east by Highway 403, and to the west by Dundas and Ancaster. Bartonville; Hamilton Beach; Beasley, named after Richard Beasley (1761-1842), soldier, political figure, farmer and businessman in Upper Canada. [4] Blakely
Hamilton Centre is a provincial electoral district in Ontario, Canada, that is represented in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario. It was created for the 1926 provincial election but abolished with the 1999 provincial election when the number of constituencies represented in the legislature was reduced.
Streets were designated "North" or "South" if they crossed King Street or Highway 8. [7] The overall design of the townsite, likely conceived in 1816, was commonplace. George Hamilton employed a grid street pattern used in most towns in Upper Canada and throughout the American frontier. The eighty original lots had frontages of fifty feet; each ...
FirstOntario Centre (originally Copps Coliseum) is a sports and entertainment arena at the corner of Bay Street North and York Boulevard in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Opened in 1985, it has a capacity of up to 19,000.