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Ladner Leisure Centre

Buildings and structures in Delta, British ColumbiaEvent venues established in 1992Ice hockey venue stubsIndoor arenas in British ColumbiaIndoor ice hockey venues in Canada
Metro Vancouver stubsSports venues in British Columbia
Ladner Leisure Centre 2015
Ladner Leisure Centre 2015

The Ladner Leisure Centre is a recreation centre in Ladner, a community in Delta, British Columbia. The facility contains an ice rink and two swimming pools, a six-lane 25-metre competition pool and a wading pool for casual use. It also houses a 2,800 square foot weight room, a fitness studio, multi-purpose rooms, a swirl pool, a sauna, as well as a Blenz coffee shop and a private physiotherapy clinic.The facility is the official training centre of the WHL's Vancouver Giants, the home rink of the PJHL's Delta Ice Hawks, and a home rink, along with Tilbury Arena and South Delta Recreation Centre, for the South Delta Minor Hockey Association. During the summer months the ice is removed and surface is used for lacrosse where it is the home of the BCJLL's Delta Islanders as well as the Delta Lacrosse Association.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ladner Leisure Centre (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Ladner Leisure Centre
Clarence Taylor Crescent, Delta

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 49.08659 ° E -123.05829 °
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Address

Clarence Taylor Crescent
V4K 3X3 Delta (Ladner)
British Columbia, Canada
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Ladner Leisure Centre 2015
Ladner Leisure Centre 2015
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George Massey Tunnel
George Massey Tunnel

The George Massey Tunnel (often referred to as the Massey Tunnel) is a highway traffic tunnel in the Metro Vancouver region of southwestern British Columbia. It is located approximately 20 km (12.4 mi) south of the city centre of Vancouver, British Columbia, and approximately 30 km (18.6 mi) north of the Canada–United States border at Blaine, Washington. Construction, costing approximately $16.6 million in 1959 ($140 million in 2017), began on the tunnel in March 1957, and it was opened to traffic on May 23, 1959 as the Deas Island Tunnel. Queen Elizabeth II attended the official opening ceremony of the tunnel on July 15, 1959. It carries a four-lane divided highway under the south arm of the Fraser River estuary, joining the City of Richmond to the north with the City of Delta to the south. It is the only road tunnel below sea level in Canada, making its roadway the lowest road surface in Canada. The Massey Tunnel was the first to use immersed tube technology in British Columbia.The tunnel forms part of Highway 99. It is named for Nehamiah "George" Massey, a former Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. He represented Delta between 1956 and 1960, and was a long-time advocate of a permanent crossing to replace the Ladner Ferry that crossed the south arm of the Fraser River. The tunnel was renamed the George Massey Tunnel in 1967, three years after Massey died. It is still sometimes referred to by its previous name, the Deas Island Tunnel. Dangerous goods are not allowed to pass through the tunnel.