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Polo Park

Buildings and structures in WinnipegCadillac FairviewNeighbourhoods in WinnipegShopping malls established in 1959Shopping malls in Manitoba
St. James, Winnipeg
Polo Park Shopping Centre in Winnipeg Manitoba (2013)
Polo Park Shopping Centre in Winnipeg Manitoba (2013)

Polo Park (corporately styled as CF Polo Park) is a shopping centre in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. It is situated on the former Polo Park Racetrack near the junction of Portage Avenue and St. James Street. Its grounds also includes a Scotiabank Theatre (formerly SilverCity). The mall is currently anchored by Husdon's Bay, Forever 21, Urban Planet, Sport Chek, and EQ3. It is the largest mall of the 8 malls in the city, and is the 15th largest shopping centre in Canada, ranking between Guildford Town Centre and Laurier Québec.For census purposes, Polo Park is also the name given to the neighbourhood including and surrounding the shopping centre.

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

Polo Park
Portage Avenue, Winnipeg

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Website External links Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Polo ParkContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 49.8838 ° E -97.199 °
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Address

CF Polo Park

Portage Avenue 1485
R3G 0W4 Winnipeg
Manitoba, Canada
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Website
cfshops.com

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linkWikiData (Q2102577)
linkOpenStreetMap (96764486)

Polo Park Shopping Centre in Winnipeg Manitoba (2013)
Polo Park Shopping Centre in Winnipeg Manitoba (2013)
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Winnipeg Velodrome

The Winnipeg Velodrome was a cycling facility built in Winnipeg, Manitoba for the 1967 Pan-American Games and managed by Winnipeg Enterprises. The facility was a banked short-track oval with a cement surface. The velodrome was located near the Winnipeg Arena and Winnipeg Stadium. Notable athletes to compete here include Jocelyn Lovell.The infield was large enough to accommodate a Canadian football-sized field, and indeed, the Velodrome was an important venue for high-school football in the city. It was planned as a facility that could relieve the larger Winnipeg Stadium from the duty of hosting amateur football, which was taking a serious toll on the grass field and making it unsuitable for professional play. Following the installation of artificial turf at Winnipeg Stadium in 1987, amateur teams resumed playing in the larger facility and football activity at the Velodrome declined sharply. Starting in 1994, the Velodrome was occasionally used as a practice facility by the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the Canadian Football League on days when the Winnipeg Goldeyes were using the Stadium. By the 1990s, the facility had become functionally obsolete for competitive cycling, and its use by cyclists had all but ceased. In light of the facility's deterioration, a decision was made to build a temporary velodrome for the 1999 Pan-American Games at the Red River Exhibition Park. The Winnipeg Velodrome was demolished in 1998 and the site is now occupied by retail stores. The temporary facility built to replace the Winnipeg Velodrome was itself disassembled and sold to a group in the Netherlands shortly after the 1999 Pan-American Games, leaving Manitoba without a velodrome facility.