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Somerset–Bridlewood station

2004 establishments in AlbertaAlberta building and structure stubsAlberta transport stubsCTrain stationsCanadian railway station stubs
Railway stations in Canada opened in 2004
CTrain Somerset2
CTrain Somerset2

Somerset–Bridlewood station is a CTrain light rail station in Somerset, Calgary, Alberta, Canada. It is the current southern terminus of the South Line (Route 201). The station is one of two that opened on June 28, 2004 as part of the South LRT Extension Phase II. The station is located on the exclusive LRT right of way (adjacent to CPR ROW), 16.9 km south of the City Hall interlocking along Shawville Gate. 913 parking spaces are included in the park-and-ride facility at the station. The station consists of a center-loading platform with at-grade crossings at both ends of the platform. The platform is also constructed to accommodate a four-car-length train. In 2005, the station registered an average of 10,100 boardings per weekday. In 2007, the station registered an average of 13,000 boardings per weekday.

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

Somerset–Bridlewood station
Shawville Way SE, Calgary Shawnessy

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Wikipedia: Somerset–Bridlewood stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.899166666667 ° E -114.06916666667 °
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Address

Shawville Way SE
T2Y 3H9 Calgary, Shawnessy
Alberta, Canada
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CTrain Somerset2
CTrain Somerset2
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Nearby Places

St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church (Calgary)
St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church (Calgary)

St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church is a historic Carpenter Gothic style Roman Catholic church building located at 14608 Macleod Trail in the Midnapore neighbourhood in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. It was built in 1904 by local craftsmen on land donated by Patrick Glenn, son of John Glenn and a member of one of Calgary's pioneer farm families. Its steep pitched roof and lancet windows are typical of Carpenter Gothic churches. St. Patrick's was served by noted missionary priest Fr. Albert Lacombe until his death in 1916. Because of its architecture, its connection with Fr. Lacombe and its significance in the religious development of southern Alberta, it was designated a Provincial Historic Resource on April 10, 2001.The church is set back from the east side of Macleod Trail, and is located north of St. Paul's Anglican Church, a Registered Historic Resource built in 1885. On a hill directly east of the churches stands Lacombe Home, a Provincial Historic Resource built in 1910. St. Patrick's congregation moved to a new building in 1983. The original St. Patrick's church was later used by Midlands United Church, St. Paul's Anglican Church, and All Saints (Lutheran) Church - but was soon vacant and fell into disrepair. In 1997 the Diocese sold the land to Memorial Gardens Association (Alberta) Limited, and the entire property is registered as a cemetery. In late 2010 the Roman Catholic Diocese of Calgary reacquired the land and in June 2011 permitted the St. John Chrysostom Russian Orthodox Church to begin rehabilitation of the church and use of it as a place of worship.