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The main destinations for shopping in Greater Moncton are the Northwest Centre, and the Wheeler Park Power Centre in Moncton, and Champlain Place in Dieppe, which, at 816,000 square feet (75,800 m 2), [13] is the largest shopping mall in Atlantic Canada and has over 160 stores and services.
Moncton is a geographic parish in Westmorland County, New Brunswick, Canada. [4]For governance purposes it is divided between the cities of Dieppe and Moncton; the town of Salisbury; the incorporated rural communities of Beausoleil and Maple Hills; [5] the Metepenagiag 3 Urban Reserve, Metepenagiag 8 Urban Reserve, and Soegao 35 Indian reserves; and the Southeast rural district. [6]
Moncton Free Meeting House: Culture Flat Iron Building: Commercial First Moncton United Baptist Church: Religion Former Moncton and Regional Public Library: Government Government of Canada Building, Moncton: Government Highfield Square: Shopping Hotel Beausejour: Lodging Humphrey Block: Commercial Higgins Block: Commercial King Street Convent ...
This image is a derivative work of the following images: File:Canada_New_Brunswick_location_map.svg licensed with Cc-by-sa-3.0 . 2009-09-28T14:04:56Z NordNordWest 1411x1388 (511824 Bytes)
Moncton's Capitol Theatre is a performing arts venue and hosts productions for the Atlantic Ballet Theatre of Canada, and Theatre New Brunswick. Moncton's Capitol Theatre , an 800-seat restored 1920s-era vaudeville house on Main Street, is the main centre for cultural entertainment for the city.
Sunny Brae was incorporated as a township from 1915 to 1954, when it amalgamated with the city of Moncton. [1] It now exists as a neighbourhood, with no markings to suggest its name or borders. The neighborhood is served by the bus line 61 Elmwood of Codiac Transpo. Today Sunny Brae is among the oldest established neighbourhoods in the city.
Route 128 is a provincial highway in the Canadian province of New Brunswick.The highway starts in Lutes Mountain as Homestead Road at Route 126.The road travels in a horseshoe pattern through two small communities before ending in the city of Moncton at an interchange with Route 15 (Wheeler Boulevard).
The image shows the wide median that the Province of New Brunswick generally employs on its divided highways. This portion of highway was completed about 1970. Route 15 only extended from Shediac to Strait Shores until the early 1970s, when the Shediac Four-Lane Highway (the first rural expressway in New Brunswick) was built from Dieppe to Shediac.