place

Bayshore station (Ottawa)

2000 establishments in OntarioRailway stations scheduled to open in 2026Transitway (Ottawa) stations
Bayshore OC station
Bayshore OC station

Bayshore is a station on the transitway in Ottawa, Ontario, served by OC Transpo buses. It is located in the western transitway section at the Bayshore Shopping Centre in the neighbourhood of Bayshore.Prior to its construction, buses used Woodridge Crescent and entered the shopping centre parking lot, which is prone to congestion and extensive delays. Due to no access to westbound Woodridge Crescent from Bayshore Drive northbound (except emergency vehicles), routes 11, 82, 57, and 173 have to travel around the shopping centre, on Richmond Road and Holly Acres Road, to enter the small bus-route access to the station. Eastbound trips of routes 11, 82, 57, and 173 travel on Woodridge Crescent eastbound, then on Bayshore Drive southbound, and then their regular route from Richmond Road onward. A second platform allowed rapid routes 61, 62, and 63 to pass through the station via a transitway segment between Pinecrest station and Moodie station, which was originally built in 2009 and later extended towards Moodie in 2017. On April 24, 2022 the transitway was closed for construction of the Stage 2 O-Train extension. In addition, the buildings and pedestrian overpass to Bayshore Shopping Centre were closed for construction. It is expected to be completed in early 2024.

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

Bayshore station (Ottawa)
Western Transitway, Ottawa Nepean

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Bayshore station (Ottawa)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 45.345833333333 ° E -75.809444444444 °
placeShow on map

Address

Western Transitway

Western Transitway
K2B 8S8 Ottawa, Nepean
Ontario, Canada
mapOpen on Google Maps

Bayshore OC station
Bayshore OC station
Share experience

Nearby Places

Qualicum-Graham Park

Qualicum-Graham Park or Qualicum is a suburban neighbourhood in College Ward in the City of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It is located in the former City of Nepean in the west end of the city. Many of the residences in the area are executive homes situated on large lots (100x100) being built in the 1960s. Qualicum Street boasts large custom houses built by Bill Teron. The neighbourhood is bounded to the north by the Queensway, to the west by Richmond Road, to the south by Baseline Road, and to the east by Morrison Drive at the former Ottawa-Nepean border towards Redwood. Named after Qualicum Beach in British Columbia. According to the Canada 2011 Census, the total population of the neighbourhood was 1,715.Most of the streets are named after Aboriginal peoples and towns in British Columbia. The following streets are located in the community: Aleutian Road- named after the Aleutian Islands in Alaska. Chinook Crescent- the Chinook winds in the Canadian Prairies. Cowichan Way- named after the Cowichan peoples in BC. Esquimalt Avenue- a town on Vancouver Island. One of the main streets in the neighborhood; starts at Beaumaris and ends at Okanagan Kitimat Crescent-Town in northwestern British Columbia Kitsilano Court- Named after a suburb in Vancouver, British Columbia. Located at the former Graham Park Public School grounds in Qualicum-Graham Park. Built in 2015. Mohawk Crescent- Named after the Mohawk people. The tribe is located in the St. Lawrence Region; Southern Quebec, Eastern Ontario, and Northern New York. Nanaimo Drive-A town in Vancouver Island. Another main street in the neighbourhood. Okanagan Drive- Named after the Okanagan Valley around the Rocky Mountains in BC. Starts at Nanaimo Drive, which curves and ends at Baseline Road. Qualicum Street- Named after Qualicum Beach on Vancouver Island. Qualicum street is parallel along Baseline Road. Starts at Draper Avenue and ends at Esquimalt Avenue. Sioux Crescent- Named after the Sioux in the Northern United States(Minnesota, Dakotas, Iowa and Montana) and the Prairies in Central Canada (Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan).

Queensway Carleton Hospital
Queensway Carleton Hospital

Queensway Carleton Hospital (QCH) is a 355-bed hospital located in the west end of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada that delivers acute care and is west Ottawa's only full-service hospital. QCH was officially opened on October 5, 1976, by then Ontario Premier William Davis and currently serves a population of more than 500,000 and is the secondary referral center for the Ottawa Valley. QCH focuses on its cornerstone health care programs: emergency, childbirth, Geriatric, mental health, rehabilitation, medical and surgical, and critical care.In 2015 QCH obtained its "Accreditation with Exemplary Standing" from Accreditation Canada, the highest award level of accreditation with an overall compliance score of 99.4 (2014/2026 compliant standards) and meeting all 31/31 Required Organizational Practices.The executive management team is led by President and chief executive officer Dr. Andrew Falconer and the medical team reports to Chief of Staff Dr. Katalin Kovacs. Dr. Falconer replaced Tom Schonberg who died in February 2019.In fiction, The hospital was mentioned in the episode The Smile in “Homeland” where the character Carrie Mathison, received a temporary new identity, “Kate Morrissey”, for a CIA mission, with one of the facts of Morrissey being born in the hospital. However, the hospital did not have a maternity ward at the time of her birth and her place of birth is incorrectly listed as Ottawa when at that time the hospital within Nepean (before amalgamation of the city of Ottawa).