「facility」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)18ページ目
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Also known as "The Hostess House," the | facility was designed in 1942 by prominent architect G |
lso patched the 4000' concrete runway and the | facility was declared operational on 29 April, being d |
il establishment was at 124 and the wholesale | facility was at 126. |
resumed in 1950 until a rehabilitation of the | facility was completed in 1952. |
The | facility was commissioned in November 2007, and was de |
The final cost of the new | facility was nearly $1.25 million. |
Once again, the | facility was vacant, except for two security guards, d |
In 2007, the | facility was sold to the Heritage Golf Group, but reta |
This | facility was named in honour of Captain Hutcheson. |
The | facility was transferred to the United States Air Forc |
In 2007 a separate download | facility was developed to allow the download of OS Mas |
The | facility was opened January 3, 1968 and provides year- |
's history of such action when no replacement | facility was planned. |
tephen B. Smith Clubhouse and Indoor Training | Facility was built. |
After shut-down of DECCA, the | facility was not used until the year 2004. |
capital during the development phase and the | facility was initially owned 2/3 by Transitional and 1 |
The current three-story | facility was completed in 1977, and a second gymnasium |
The | facility was expanded and eventually had the capacity |
The | facility was built by J. Ray McDermott and is located |
Located next to Robertson Stadium, the | facility was demolished in 1996 to make room for renov |
The | facility was the first home to the Houston Cougars men |
A new | facility was purchased in 1959 and later expanded. |
The Roundhouse | facility was demolished on March 13, 1999. |
In 2009 an expansion and renovation of the | facility was designed by Lonn Frye and AJ Rosales of F |
The replacement | facility was constructed on the site of the previous M |
lanthropist Colonel R. Samuel McLaughlin, the | facility was opened to the public on October 26, 1968. |
s The Fred, the 20,000-square-foot (1,900 m2) | facility was at the time of its construction (1959) th |
The Champagne Bath, a fitness | facility, was named after him. |
The 600-kilowatt | facility was built by the Chinese firm Yunnan Machiner |
The | facility was not completed because of insufficient fun |
During World War II, the | facility was known as Malignano Airfield. |
The ConocoPhillips | facility was formerly the headquarters of Conoco Inc. |
In Spring 2003 a pre-school | facility was opened . |
A new lion | facility was completed in Autumn 2010. |
oochee River where a major Naval Construction | facility was located. |
Ground breaking for the | facility was held in June of 2010, construction is exp |
Before this | facility was erected, high school students had to atte |
The | facility was built by Firmin Construction Corporation. |
The | facility was completed in 2001, and the Army began wea |
That | facility was completed in 1967 and began operation in |
The | facility was founded in 2003, and construction is expe |
the plant in Ormond Beach and the New Jersey | facility was closed. |
The | facility was named after the Knight's former head coac |
The $6 million | facility was created by Albert Ferst in memory and hon |
le school) was constructed in 1983, but a new | facility was built in 2008 off of Deerfoot Parkway in |
At the time, the | facility was using a 50/50 mix of Illinois and West Vi |
The | facility was severely damaged by a 1926 hurricane and |
ground and relocation to a new purpose built | facility was discussed. |
The $68.6 million | facility was completed in the summer of 2007, and open |
The project to create the | facility was sponsored by a partnership of the Caversh |
The | facility was named for Sybil Brand (1899 - 2004), a no |
Following the victory in Japan, the | facility was closed and remained vacant until 1947. |
The | facility was handed back to the West German government |
The Bernard Road | facility was retained as its cranes had higher weight |
The Speedway gates were locked, and the | facility was abandoned. |
The orphanage closed in 1932 and the | facility was de-sanctified in 1968. |
growth of Catholicism was such that a larger | facility was needed. |
Construction on the | facility was completed on February 29, 2004, and it wa |
The jamming | facility was shut off for good in late 1988. |
The | facility was located in a berth of the Mississippi Sta |
The | facility was designed by Skidmore Owings Merrill LLP, |
It was determined that the original | facility was inadequate to serve Valdosta State Univer |
The athletic | facility was originally named De La Salle Gymnasium in |
The | facility was approved for construction in 1993, and op |
Construction at the | facility was completed on May 30, 2004 and it was offi |
In 2006, the | facility was changed-over to handle destruction of mus |
The | facility was the design of World Trade Center architec |
The | facility was closed for major refurbishments at a cost |
The flying boat | facility was merged with the land-based airfield at RC |
At the end of the cold war, the | facility was closed and redeveloped as the Young-Raine |
ice (RCNAS) at the end of World War I and the | facility was renamed HMCS Shearwater. |
The | facility was named after Dempsie Henley, who served as |
This | facility was latterly owned by the privatised Scottish |
In 1989, the | facility was again converted, this time to use Refuse |
The current bus | facility was constructed in 2001 as part of the Pentag |
The | facility was built in the 1930s as a civil airport. |
square feet (16,100 m2) Smith's headquarters | facility was no longer occupied by October 1998; as of |
The | facility was extended in 1897 when a 55 ft (17 m) diam |
d not materialize, as the construction of the | facility was halted by war. |
The | facility was opened in 2000 and cost $9.6 million to b |
The need for a larger | facility was evident and in 1995 a vacant lot adjacent |
The | facility was leased by Coming Attractions Theatres in |
The | facility was officially opened on July 30, 2004. |
The | facility was surrounded by a 10-foot (3 m) wall and fo |
The | facility was built by Israeli mall developer Plaza Cen |
The | facility was renovated in 1946 and local business owne |
ene (Battery Hamiliton), a 270 acre defensive | facility, was constructed part of series of coast defe |
The | facility was known as Gadsden Air Force Station until |
D or N60D, which added a date/time-imprinting | facility was also available. |
By 1950 the | facility was disposed of by the War Assets Administrat |
The 59,000-square-foot (5,500 m2) | facility was opened on December 17, 1998. |
The SwissFEL injector test | facility was officially inaugurated on the 24th of Aug |
stwood High School was demolished after a new | facility was built for Sandy Springs Middle School on |
The | facility was commandeered by the War Department after |
In 2011 a new covered sports | facility was opened to provide improved all weather sp |
The | facility was the first purpose-built, carrier-neutral |
eatre Facade renovation was completed and the | facility was formally dedicated as the Harold K. Smith |
In 2004, the | facility was granted the United States Tennis Associat |
The | facility was closed on December 20, 2002 and productio |
In 2007, the | facility was sold to the Heritage Golf Group, but reta |
The | facility was named for Francis J. Youell (1883-1967), |
ments, the School of Music's greatly expanded | facility was dedicated as the James J. Whalen Center f |
The grand opening of the | facility was on April 12, 2002 with the Houston Auto S |
All development of the | facility was performed by officers and employees of th |
The | facility was a primary (stage 1) pilot training airfie |
This | facility was a major employer in the town until the fa |
In 1958, the Pacific Missile Range | Facility was established to support the growing demand |
ocated in the South Texas Medical Center, the | facility was established by the largest single oncolog |
In 2003, the | facility was renamed Samford Stadium - Hitchcock Field |
The | facility was damaged in a fire in 1873, and some of th |
At the beginning of 2008, the | facility was sold to FC Kharkiv under the condition th |
The $50 million | facility was completed in 2004. |
The last Pershing launch from the | facility was conducted on 21 March 1988. |
This | facility was used afterwards for a variety of prison p |
Construction of the new | facility was projected to cost $200 million and create |
ents, a 5,300-square-foot (490 m2) Art School | facility was built with the support of donors. |
A new sports | facility was built on the site which is available for |
The | facility was the only hospital in the Provo area for m |
Within months of this refurbishment the | facility was experiencing water leakage problems. |
In 2002, the | facility was designated a corporate wildlife habitat b |
After just two years, a larger | facility was needed. |
As of May 2009, employment at this | facility was approximately 800 workers. |
The | facility was also used for many major events and conve |
The most recent expansion of the Library's | facility was opened in 1980 and included a 160-seat au |
A large water treatment | facility was built below the dam, and a cast iron unde |
This | facility was closed by the NYPD and FDNY in 1980 as it |
The | facility was evacuated in 1965 and the nuclear generat |
The construction of the | facility was subcontracted to Sofregaz and Technip. |
The fieldhouse, a modern | facility, was officially dedicated on September 20, 19 |
The | facility was initially manned by 1st Battalion 504th P |
This | facility was opened in 1990 to replace a more spartan |
The | facility was hosted by the 681st Aircraft Control and |
Under Army control, the | facility was incorporated into the Rothwesten Kaserne |
The Indianapolis Juvenile Correctional | Facility was a minimum, medium, and maximum state juve |
The | facility was founded in 1999 by local entrepreneur Ric |
Indiana, where a new Amtrak Mail and Express | facility was built. |
The manufacturing | facility was located near Stone Mountain, Georgia. |
The ST | facility was closed in 1985-6 and several key engineer |
The new | facility was completed and classes began in 2800 East |
During its use as a Boy Scout camp, the | facility was renamed "Camp Hoover." |
The | facility was constructed with many sustainable feature |
The Attack Athletics | facility was the home of the PBL's Chicago Throwbacks |
The industrial | facility was built as the first Heineken brewery in 18 |
The museum | facility was completed in 1998, enlarged in 1999, and |
The | facility was designed by Cornerstone Architects Ltd. i |
In 1942, the | facility was renamed Pinecastle Army Airfield and was |
The new cancer treatment | facility was formally named the Lou and Jack Finney Ca |
This | facility was contaminated with PCBs; cleanup of the sh |
After the war the prison | facility was completely destroyed. |
Bladensburg's old | facility was torn down after school let out for summer |
conference area was expanded and the kitchen | facility was upgraded. |
The building was vacated when a new | facility was constructed in Pontiac, the old structure |
student union until 1964 when a purpose-built | facility was constructed in nearby Queen's Road. |
The | facility was also in use as a post office during that |
Also in 1986, a multi-million dollar medical | facility was opened to provide out-patient services to |
That plan was nixed as the | facility was not well suited to accommodate the progra |
the offseason between 2008 and 2009, the old | facility was demolished and construction on the presen |
The | facility was completed on February 29, 2004 and offici |
The | facility was operated by DuPont, but was placed on sta |
In 2004 the | facility was named for the patron H.P. Constans, who d |
The | facility was dedicated in 1996 and is named after B.W. |
rement, the school's newly built multipurpose | facility was named after him. |
Prior to KLAA, the | facility was used by KYAY Channel 39 from KYAY's sign- |
r further improvement in treatment and supply | facility was undertaken in 2004. |
At the time of its groundbreaking, the final | facility was to have cost $17.6 million with parking f |
The | facility was re-named in Dr. Herrick's honor in 1934. |
The new | facility was opened on January 17, 2006 when the stude |
The prison | facility was previously named the Western Tennessee Pe |
CIS' first Lafayette, Louisiana, | facility was designed by HKS, an architectural firm, a |
The | facility was initially named Camp General Robert Toomb |
The | facility was opened in 1996 and MoD Procurement Execut |
The | facility was built during World War II in 1940, and wa |
In 1961, the | facility was renamed as the Rosewood State Hospital. |
By 1998, the | facility was expanded to include a Convention Center, |
In 2001 while the new | facility was under construction, Elise Haverty and Dr. |
The 300-acre (1.2 km2) | facility was but as a semi-permanent home for the Farm |
The | facility was closed and turned over to civil authoriti |
the site with the Russians and said that the | facility was mostly destroyed. |
In 1931/32 the | facility was increased. |
adt Community School until 1993, when the new | facility was completed. |
The | facility was one of the first geodesic domed facilitie |
This | facility was based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and became |
Work on the dam began in 1969, and the | facility was inaugurated on December 3, 1980. |
T in 1982, and B&M's Westwood, Massachusetts, | facility was closed. |
Before the | facility was transferred to the Air Force, it was firs |
In 1999, the | facility was named the ISA National Complex of the Yea |
The pumped-storage | facility was built in 1967. |
er denied that the opening of the psychiatric | facility was solely in response to detainees' suicide |
a second location with a larger microbrewery | facility was opened in Freeport. |
The | facility was built in the late 1980s. |
In 1930 the | facility was renamed the Central State Prison Farm. |
On 15 November the | facility was completely closed and eventually the Fost |
The | facility was extensively renovated in 2000. |
The | facility was listed as a Superfund site on July 27, 20 |
Originally named the "Junior Museum", the | facility was established in 1937 in an old city jail. |
The $1.5 billion | facility was to have seen its first phase complete and |
At this point, the | facility was conveyed to the State of Texas by the Gen |
By the 1990s the entire | facility was being redeveloped into an industrial area |
mer United States Senator George Smathers the | facility was officially renamed the Smathers Library. |
The former | Facility was acquired by the Mexican Navy on 2 October |
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