Concord Pacific Place
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Concord_Pacific_Place an entity of type: WikicatNeighbourhoodsInVancouver
Concord Pacific Place war die Bezeichnung einer temporären Rennstrecke in Vancouver, Kanada. Sie wurde in dem gleichnamigen ehemaligen Weltausstellungsgelände in Vancouver angelegt und 2 mal umgestaltet.Von 1990 bis 2004 wurde auf dem Stadtkurs im Rahmen der Champ-Car-Serie das Molson Indy Vancouver ausgetragen. Der letzte Sieger hier war 2004 Paul Tracy.
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Concord Pacific Place is "Canada's biggest master-planned urban community" and is projected to be North America's largest in terms of occupants and area when completed. It is located in Vancouver, British Columbia, on the north shore of False Creek. The area was formerly the rail yards of the Canadian Pacific Railway, and was redeveloped into the main site of the 1986 World Exposition.
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Concord Pacific Place
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Concord Pacific Place
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Concord Pacific Place war die Bezeichnung einer temporären Rennstrecke in Vancouver, Kanada. Sie wurde in dem gleichnamigen ehemaligen Weltausstellungsgelände in Vancouver angelegt und 2 mal umgestaltet.Von 1990 bis 2004 wurde auf dem Stadtkurs im Rahmen der Champ-Car-Serie das Molson Indy Vancouver ausgetragen. Der letzte Sieger hier war 2004 Paul Tracy.
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Concord Pacific Place is "Canada's biggest master-planned urban community" and is projected to be North America's largest in terms of occupants and area when completed. It is located in Vancouver, British Columbia, on the north shore of False Creek. The area was formerly the rail yards of the Canadian Pacific Railway, and was redeveloped into the main site of the 1986 World Exposition. In 1988, it was purchased by with investors led by Hongkonger billionaire Li Ka-shing. It was subsequently expanded during Vancouver's recurrent housing booms of the 1990s and 2000s, brought about by greater port traffic and general economic activity, waves of Asian immigration, and the 2010 Winter Olympics. Estimates of the total size of the finished development range from a "[C]$2 billion... 200 acre site comprises approximately 8,000 units of accommodation" to a "[C]$4 billion [site]... [home to] more than 20,000 people on over 200 acres" to "about 50 buildings with 10,000 homes".
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