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Canadian Grain Commission

1971 establishments in CanadaAgricultural organizations based in ManitobaAgriculture and Agri-Food CanadaAgriculture companies of CanadaAgriculture in Canada
BarleyBrassicaCompanies based in WinnipegCropsFederal departments and agencies of CanadaGovernment agencies established in 1971Marketing boardsWheat organizationsWheat production in Canada
The Canadian Grain Commission building at 303 Main Street, Winnipeg Manitoba
The Canadian Grain Commission building at 303 Main Street, Winnipeg Manitoba

The Canadian Grain Commission (CGC; French: Commission canadienne des grains) is an agency of the Canadian government responsible for regulation of the grain-handling industry in Canada, as well as to protect producers' rights and ensure the integrity of grain transactions.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Canadian Grain Commission (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Canadian Grain Commission
William Stephenson Way, Winnipeg Fort Rouge–East Fort Garry

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Wikipedia: Canadian Grain CommissionContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 49.894027777778 ° E -97.136944444444 °
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Address

William Stephenson Way
R3C 3Z8 Winnipeg, Fort Rouge–East Fort Garry
Manitoba, Canada
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The Canadian Grain Commission building at 303 Main Street, Winnipeg Manitoba
The Canadian Grain Commission building at 303 Main Street, Winnipeg Manitoba
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Downtown Winnipeg
Downtown Winnipeg

Downtown Winnipeg is an area of Winnipeg located near the confluence of the Red and Assiniboine rivers. It is the oldest urban area in Winnipeg, and is home to the city's commercial core, city hall, the seat of Manitoba's provincial government, and a number of major attractions and institutions. The City of Winnipeg's official downtown boundaries are: the Canadian Pacific Railway mainline on the north, Gomez Street and the Red River on the east, and the Assiniboine River on the south; the western boundaries of downtown are irregular, following along a number of different streets, back lanes, and across properties. Generally speaking, the western boundaries are rarely further west of Balmoral and Isabel Streets. In 2016, Canadian Geographic produced a map that generalize Winnipeg's downtown boundaries.Neighbourhoods in the downtown area include the Exchange District, Central Park, The Forks, and Chinatown. The downtown area is roughly 3 square kilometres (740 acres). Winnipeg Square, Canada Life Centre, Portage Place, and the flagship store of The Bay (closed 30 November 2020) are all located on the downtown section of Portage Avenue. On Main Street are Winnipeg's City Hall, Union Station, and the Manitoba Centennial Centre, which includes the Manitoba Museum, the Planetarium, the Centennial Concert Hall, and the Winnipeg Railway Museum. Although over 60,000 people work downtown, only 13,470 people actually live in the Downtown area.There are several residential projects under construction on Waterfront Drive and in the Exchange District, and the residential population of the area is projected to increase substantially in the next few years.