place

Rosemère station

1997 establishments in QuebecExo commuter rail stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Canada opened in 1997Railway stations in Laurentides
Rosemère (exo) train station
Rosemère (exo) train station

Rosemère station is a commuter rail station operated by Exo in Rosemère, Quebec, Canada. It is served by the Saint-Jérôme line. The station is located in ARTM fare zone C, and currently has 382 parking spaces. Prior to the reform of the ARTM's fare structure in July 2022, it was in zone 5.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Rosemère station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Rosemère station
Chemin de la Grande-Côte,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Rosemère stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 45.633888888889 ° E -73.795 °
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Address

Café Bistro de la Gare de Rosemère

Chemin de la Grande-Côte
J7A 1H4
Quebec, Canada
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Rosemère (exo) train station
Rosemère (exo) train station
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Groulx
Groulx

Groulx is a provincial electoral district in the Laurentides region of Quebec, Canada, that elects members to the National Assembly of Quebec. It notably includes the city of Boisbriand as well as a few other small cities. It was created for the 1981 election from a part of the Terrebonne electoral district. In the change from the 2001 to the 2011 electoral map, it gained a small part of the city of Blainville from the Blainville electoral district; it did not previously include any part of that city. In the change from the 2011 to 2017 electoral map, the riding will lose the Saint-Rédempteur neighbourhood of Blainville to the riding of Blainville. From its creation in 1981 until 2007, Groulx was a bellwether riding always sending a member from the governing party to the National Assembly. Since the ADQ breakthrough in the suburbs of Montreal in 2007, the riding has been targeted by all major parties and is part of a collection of ridings that determine Quebec elections. The riding is overwhelmingly francophone and white, and has a strong nationalist undercurrent, making it a battleground riding between the Parti Quebecois, ADQ/CAQ, and the Quebec Liberals. In 2014, the PQ nominated Martine Desjardins, former leader of the FEUQ during the 2012 student strike. She was seen as a star candidate. While the PQ began the campaign with a strong lead among francophones and heavily targeted CAQ-held ridings such as Groulx, the fall of the PQ and rise of the CAQ during the last two weeks of the campaign kept this riding in the hands of the CAQ, albeit in a tight 3-way split with no candidate receiving more than 31% of the vote.

Place Rosemère
Place Rosemère

Place Rosemère is a super regional mall in Rosemère, Quebec, Canada. It is near the intersection of Quebec Autoroute 640 and Quebec Autoroute 15. Its anchor stores are Walmart, La Baie and Best Buy. It has 200 stores, including a food court of thirteen restaurants. Place Rosemère is operated by Morguard Investments.Place Rosemère began modestly when it first opened in August 1975 with approximately 65 stores at 337,000 square feet anchored by Woolco, Beaver Lumber and Dominion. The Hudson's Bay Company had planned a La Baie store for the ianguration of the mall, but nothing ever came out of this announcement and it's only on March 13, 1991, that it opened at Place Rosemère.Dominion was acquired by Provigo on June 15, 1981 and Woolco by Wal-Mart in 1995.The mall was purchased by Morguard in late 1986.A first expansion, opened in 1991, brought to the mall to 90 stores along with the newly opened La Baie store of 140,000 square feet. The mall itself reached 605,677 square feet and almost doubled its floor area. This expansion also relocated the Canadian Tire store into the new section. Another expansion, opened on September 19, 2002, brought the mall to its current size and layout as Wal-Mart relocated to a new location earlier in February 2002 and a new Sears store moved to the old Wal-Mart store. This expansion coincided with the closing of two other anchor stores when Canadian Tire moved to a standalone location across the street and Provigo, one of the last supermarkets to be located in a Canadian regional mall, closed its doors. Some smaller stores took the place of the old Canadian Tire store, and Zara, Pharmaprix and Dormez-Vous took the place of the old Provigo store. A new Best Buy store opened on November 13, 2008.