Quinpool Road
Quinpool Road runs from the Armdale Rotary through Connaught Avenue, terminating at what is known as the Willow Tree, on Robie Street - an unusual five-way intersection named for the prominent tree that once grew in the median. The street is commercialised from Connaught Ave to the Willow Tree and comprises a popular shopping and dining centre for the local community. It is also part of the Nova Scotia provincial road system, meaning that the Province of Nova Scotia pays the Halifax Regional Municipality in part for snow clearing and maintenance.
While the street is an important commercial district in Halifax, it also forms a major boundary between the city's working class North End and wealthier South End, both physically and socially. Quinpool is also the heart of the city's middle class West End neighbourhood. The area was also home to two longtime rival high schools, Queen Elizabeth High School and St. Patrick's High School until their merger as Citadel High School in September 2007. St. Patrick's High School was since renamed the Quinpool Education Centre, and hosted a number of educational programs and social services. The city declared the school building surplus and it was demolished.
The name Quinpool dates from at least 1808 and is believed to come from an Irish widow named Quinn who lived by a stretch of water in the Northwest Arm known as 'Quinn's Pool'.
Notable places
- Deadman's Island Park
- Oxford Theatre (closed; converted into commercial use)
- East Coast Bakery ("Bagel Bagel Bagel")
- ProSkates
- Dilly Dally Cafe
- Ben's Bakery (closed, some buildings demolished)
- Quinpool Centre
- The Trail Shop (50+ year old outdoor store)
- Saint Patrick's High School (demolished)
- Atlantica Hotel
- Queen Elizabeth High School (demolished)
- Ardmore Tea Room
- Shaar Shalom Synagogue
See also
- Life – a 1968 sculpture on Quinpool Road
References
- ^ "Surplus Property: 6067 Quinpool Road". Halifax Regional Municipality. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
- ^ 'Quinpool Road', Cyril Burne, Halifax Street Names: An Illustrated Guide, Shelagh MacKenzie editor, Formac Publishing Halifax, 2004, ISBN 0-88780-652-X, page 129.