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For a little over a year, The Brampton Bulletin attempted to challenge the Guardian, but it was dismantled after a series of editor changes. Brampton is the official city of license for two radio stations, CHLO and CFNY. Both stations address their programming toward the entire Greater Toronto Area rather than exclusively to Brampton. CFNY was ...
Huttonville, Brampton Has a small diversion/concurrency with RR 1; continues east of McMurchy Avenue under the jurisdiction of the City of Brampton as Queen Street West, resumes Regional jurisdiction at Highway 410 as Regional Road 107 Airport Road: Interchange with Highway 427 (boundary with the City of Toronto), continues as Dixon Road
Bramalea Road is named after the city's Bramalea district; Bramalea is a portmanteau of Brampton, Malton (Malton being a village that is part of Mississauga today), and lea (an old English word meaning meadow or grassland) created by the farmer William Sheard, who owned a large parcel of cattle grazing land that he sold for the new venture ...
The proposed Queen Street-Highway 7 Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) corridor is "poised to be a game-changer for Brampton and Vaughan". [1] This project aims to address the city's growing transportation challenges while stimulating economic growth and enhancing quality of life. [2] Key benefits of a BRT on Queen Street include: [3]
A TikTok posted by the city of Wichita said crews usually respond to fill reported potholes within 24 hours. The city fills around 70,000 potholes a year, according to the TikTok. Sedgwick County ...
This page was last edited on 12 January 2015, at 16:13 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Brampton's Old Fire Hall, built in 1854 at 2 Chapel Street, was originally a market hall. The second floor "long room" was being used by the village council chambers by 1860. The first meeting of Brampton Town Council took place here in 1874. Council meetings were held here until 1911. [9]
In 1970, the City of Brampton bought the 40-hectare (100-acre) farm from the last owners (surveyed in 1820s by Richard Bristol and eventually acquired by the Crawfords whom expanded their holdings from 1834 to 1870s and sold by the Crawfords in 1946), [4] with the intention of building a large park, [5] paying for land and facilities from the proceeds of subdivision agreements.