In the News: Difference between revisions

From EGM Heritage

No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 39: Line 39:
'''Bridging the Past''', The Winnipeg Free Press 2015 07 05
'''Bridging the Past''', The Winnipeg Free Press 2015 07 05


Winnipeg's love-hate affair with CPR Yards crossings has been smouldering for more than 120 years.''([http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/bridging-the-past-311665381.html '''Read the full article...'''])''
Winnipeg's love-hate affair with CPR Yards crossings has been smouldering for more than 120 years. ''([http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/bridging-the-past-311665381.html '''Read the full article...'''])''

Revision as of 19:56, 24 September 2016

Life by the Rails, The Winnipeg Free Press 2016 09 08

Mike Deal/Winnipeg Free Press

A quick history lesson: Macdonald was the prime minister in the early 1880s when the city’s founding fathers were loading up the war chest to convince both the federal government and Canadian Pacific Railway officials to run the main line of what would become the transcontinental railway through Winnipeg.

That main line was supposed to be built through Selkirk, at the strict insistence of the railway’s engineers, because the Winnipeg area was under water about every generation or so from flooding of the Red and Assiniboine rivers. (Read the full article...)


Pump it Up, The Winnipeg Free Press 2016 09 02

Wayne Glowacki/Winnipeg Free Press

The 110-year-old pumping station at the corner of Waterfront Drive and James Avenue doesn’t look much different but work has been going on to transform the historic building into a vibrant residential, office and commercial centre.

Developer Bryce Alston said his group is waiting for confirmation from city hall that the $17-million project will qualify for a 20-year property-tax freeze before the deal with CentreVenture to take ownership of the property closes. (Read the full article...)

Also see James Avenue Pumping Station for additional information.


Antarctica Polar Rescue, The Guardian 2016 06 23

Rothera Antarctic Survey Station, The Guardian

A plane evacuating two workers in need of urgent medical treatment has successfully returned from a freezing and risky 3,000-mile midwinter round trip to a remote base at the south pole.

The Twin Otter aircraft – the only type of plane in the world capable of flying in the -60C (-76F) temperatures of the polar midwinter – began its return journey from the US science station at the pole to the British Rothera base on the Antarctic peninsula in the early hours of Wednesday morning. The flight took approximately 10 hours each way. (Read the full article...)

Also see Rothera Station for additional information.


Backtracks: The Story of Winnipeg's Streetcars

A 29 minute video on the history of Winnipeg's streetcars. (Watch the video...)


Bridging the Past, The Winnipeg Free Press 2015 07 05

Winnipeg's love-hate affair with CPR Yards crossings has been smouldering for more than 120 years. (Read the full article...)