Kitchener, Ontario railway station - Factbites
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Topic: Kitchener, Ontario railway station


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 Kitchener, Ontario - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
VIA Rail trains between Sarnia and Toronto stop at the Kitchener railway station slightly to the north and east of the city's downtown at the corner of Victoria Avenue and Weber Street; one local bus route stops next to the station.
The City of Kitchener, in southwestern Ontario, Canada, has a population of 190,399 (2001 census).
According to the mid-2001 census, the population estimates there were 414,284 people residing in metro Kitchener, located in the province of Ontario, of whom 49.2 per cent were male and 50.8 per cent were female.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Kitchener,_Ontario   (2787 words)

  
 Milton (GO Station) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Milton GO Station is the western terminus of GO Transit's Milton railway line in the Greater Toronto Area, Ontario, Canada.
The station is located very close to Highway 401, and is placed to be accessible to residents of Cambridge, Kitchener, and Waterloo who work in Toronto to park and ride.
Along with Streetsville and Dixie, this is one of three Milton line stations that feature the necessary mini-platform to allow passengers dependent on wheeled mobility aids to board the trains.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Milton_(GO_Station)   (284 words)

  
 Grand River Railway
Serving the highly industrialized area of Central Ontario north and south of Preston (now part of Cambridge), the Grand River Railway and the Lake Erie & Northern Railway, together formed the Canadian Pacific Electric Lines with headquarters in Preston, Ontario, Canada.
The Grand River Railway served its area in a "Y" shaped pattern, Galt (Main Street) being at the base, Preston at the fork, Kitchener/Waterloo at the west, or left tip, and Hespeler to the east, or right.
Preston once boasted its own radio station, CKPC.
www.trainweb.org /elso/grr.htm   (284 words)

  
 Knights Inn Ontario
When you stroll the Heritage you see the oldest log church in Ontario, a one-room schoolhouse and the Jerseyville railway station, built in 1896.
Opera Ontario is an internationally-recognized company serving the cities of Hamilton and Kitchener-Waterloo.
Some of the local favourites include Gage Park, the Hamilton Beach Recreational Trail on the shores of Lake Ontario, the Battlefield Creek Trail, the Chedoke Radial Trail, Cootes Drive Trail in the heart of Cootes Paradise, the Escarpment Rail Trail, the Hamilton to Brantford Rail Trail, and the Waterdown Wetlands Trail.
www.knightsinnhamilton.com /attractions   (284 words)

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