North Street Station (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
The North Street Station was the railway terminal for Halifax, Nova Scotia from 1877 to 1920. It was built by the Intercolonial Railway in the North End of Halifax and was the second largest railway station in Canada when it opened in 1878. Damaged, but repaired after the Halifax Explosion, it served until the current Halifax terminal location opened as part of the Ocean Terminals project in the city's South End in 1919.
Workers clear debris from the North Street Station's collapsed train shed.
A passenger train departs through devastated Richmond after December 9 when tracks were cleared and service resumed.
The North End of Halifax is a neighbourhood of Halifax, Nova Scotia occupying the northern part of Halifax Peninsula immediately north of Downtown Halifax.
Agricola Street
Moran Street, a typical North End residential side street.
View of BIO & Coast Guard base on the shore of North Dartmouth across the fields in Merv Sullivan park, known locally in the North End as the Pit.
The former Bloomfield School became Bloomfield Centre, a local arts community, before being shuttered.