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Lougheed Town Centre station

2002 establishments in British ColumbiaBuildings and structures in BurnabyEvergreen Extension stationsExpo Line (SkyTrain) stationsMillennium Line stations
Railway stations in Canada opened in 2002Use mdy dates from September 2016
Lougheed Town Centre platform level
Lougheed Town Centre platform level

Lougheed Town Centre (sometimes abbreviated as Lougheed) is an elevated station on the Expo and Millennium Lines of Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain rapid transit system. The station is located at Lougheed Highway and Austin Road in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. Initially a Millennium Line station, a reorganization of SkyTrain service patterns in 2016 brought a branch of the Expo Line over the existing tracks to serve the station. It is one of three stations where transfer between the Expo Line and the Millennium Line is possible, the other two such points of transfer being Commercial–Broadway and Production Way–University stations. The station is adjacent to a mid-size shopping mall, the City of Lougheed, formerly named "Lougheed Town Centre", from which the station drew its name. A Korean neighbourhood exists within walking distance of the south side of the station.

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

Lougheed Town Centre station
Lougheed Highway, Burnaby

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Lougheed Town Centre stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 49.24846 ° E -122.89702 °
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Address

Lougheed Town Centre

Lougheed Highway
V3N 4P5 Burnaby
British Columbia, Canada
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Lougheed Town Centre platform level
Lougheed Town Centre platform level
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Nearby Places

Vancouver Golf Club

Vancouver Golf Club, located in the Canadian city of Coquitlam, British Columbia, is the oldest golf club in the Lower Mainland.Established 113 years ago in 1910, it opened the following year on a former sheep farm on the west side of Blue Mountain. The suburban club was originally considered to be far outside of the major population centre of Vancouver, requiring a trip on the British Columbia Electric Railway and often an overnight stay at the club. Today, the club is considered to be centrally located in the Lower Mainland.The club has hosted the Canadian Women's Open three times on the LPGA Tour, in 1988, 1991, and 2012. The first two events were held as the du Maurier Classic, a women's major, and were won by Sally Little and Nancy Scranton, respectively. The 2012 edition was won by 15-year-old amateur Lydia Ko and the tournament is scheduled to return in 2015. Vancouver Golf Club also hosted one Senior PGA Tour event in the 1985, the Canada Senior Open Championship, won by Peter Thomson of Australia.The club became the subject of controversy in 2008 when it became known that a rule was implemented eight years earlier that required new members to be able to speak English, regardless of their ability to pay the $65,000 full-play membership fee. The club stated it did not forbid members from speaking other languages while on the grounds, but required the English proficiency in order to ensure that members could understood and abide by club rules.