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・ Waterville Bridge
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Waterside Centre
・ Waterside hot water hay pellet furnace
・ Waterside Karori
・ Waterside Mill, Ashton-under-Lyne
・ Waterside Plaza
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・ Waterside Shops
・ Waterside Theatre
・ Waterside Workers Federation of Australia
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・ Waterside, East Dunbartonshire
・ Waterside, New Brunswick
・ Waterskiing at the 2010 Asian Beach Games


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Waterside Centre : ウィキペディア英語版
Waterside Centre

The Waterside Centre is a commercial development in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada built by local real estate developer Armour Group. The project involves demolishing six heritage buildings and replacing them with a nine storey retail and office building, clad at ground level with the reconstructed facades of most of the former heritage buildings.
==Site==
The original six buildings occupy a downtown block facing the Halifax waterfront bounded by Upper Water Street, Duke Street, Hollis Street and the Cogswell Interchange. Along with the adjacent waterfront buildings of Historic Properties and the Victorian commercial buildings of the Granville Mall, the site is one of the only intact blocks of 19th-century buildings in Downtown Halifax. It includes the oldest storefront in Halifax and the site of the famous 18th-century tavern “The Great Pontack”, where James Wolfe planned the siege of Louisbourg and Quebec. The buildings have housed commercial and retail tenants, but Armour group has said that the buildings are no longer economical and their replacements by facades should be seen as restoration.〔(Armour Group Waterside Development Web Page )〕 The buildings on the block include the 1820 Harrington MacDonald-Briggs Building the oldest remaining commercial building in Halifax,〔("Harrington MacDonald-Briggs Building" ''Nova Scotia Historic Places Initiative Database'' )〕 the 1861 Fishwick & Company Building,〔("Fishwick & Company Building" ''Nova Scotia Historic Places Initiative Database'' )〕 the 1926 Imperial Oil Building 〔("Imperial Oil Building", ''Nova Scotia Historic Places Initiative Database'' )〕 as well as the 1840 Sweet Basil Building, the last wooden "sailortown" building on Halifax's Water Street.
The only building on the historic block not facing demolition by Armour group is the Morse’s Tea Building owned by another developer who has converted the 1841 structure for office use and retained its interior and exterior structure.〔("Morse's tea Building" ''Nova Scotia Historic Places Initiative Database'' )〕

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