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    Sports and recreational facilities including: arenas, tube slides, water games, water games, iron and pebble games, game modules, skateboard modules, skating rinks, pools, multi-functional tracks, beaches, courts, dance floors, beaches, courtyards and dance floors, the archery site and the archery site and the fields for baseball, basketball, soccer, petanque, multi-functional tracks, beaches, courts and dance floors, beaches, courtyards and dance floors, the archery site and the fields for baseball, basketball, soccer, petanque, pickleball, soccer, tennis, ultimate frisbee, and volleyball. Attributs:type - Type of installationDetail - Details about the installation (e.g. number of tennis courts, configuration of soccer fields, etc.) NAME - Name of the installationSurface - Type of surfaceLighting - Installation lighting**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**

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    Footprint and location of parks in the City of Repentigny.**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**

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    Bicycle path routes.attribute:Name - Name of the bike pathTypeLane - Type of bike path**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**

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    The Waterfront Route is made up of ancient roads along the St. Lawrence, Lake Saint-Louis, Lac des Deux Montagnes, Rivière des Prairies, the Lachine Canal and the Aqueduct Canal. 180 kilometers long, it is punctuated by more than 1000 heritage elements that evoke the major pages of Montreal's history. Heritage buildings and complexes, maritime infrastructures, nautical equipment, parks and shoreline walks, views of bodies of water, coastal landscapes, natural environments and archaeological sites follow one another. Each of the heritage elements is associated with a historical theme: * The Montreal archipelago and the Native American presence * Waterways to trade and settle * Agricultural villages * Water, a resource to be exploited and controlled * Workers' villages * Shorelines, spaces for well-being and recreation * Shores, spaces for well-being and leisure * Parks on the shore * Parks on the shore * Water, an obstacle to be crossed by bridges and crossings * Transit villages * Other notable elements unrelated to the themes Historical [interactive mapping] (https://montreal.ca/articles/le-parcours-riverain-22677) is available to explore the waterfront routes on the island of Montreal.**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**