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Nikka Yuko Japanese Garden (officially Nikka Yuko Centennial Garden) is a 3.75-acre (15,200 m 2) traditional Japanese garden located in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada. The garden was designed by Dr. Masami Sugimoto and Dr. Tadashi Kubo of Osaka Prefecture University in Japan .
Prior to being absorbed by the City of Edmonton on April 17, 1917, [14] the Village of West Edmonton, also known as Calder, [15] comprised one quarter section [16] at the northeast corner of 127 Street and 127 Avenue [14] near the northwest corner of Edmonton's mature area sector. [1]
Distribution of Alberta's 80 villages. A village is an urban municipality status type used in the Canadian province of Alberta.Alberta villages are created when communities with populations of at least 300 people, where a majority of their buildings are on parcels of land smaller than 1,850 m 2, apply to Alberta Municipal Affairs for village status under the authority of the Municipal ...
Name Specialized / rural municipality Incorporation date (town) Municipal census population (year) Population (2016) Population (2011) Change (%) Land area (km 2) Population density (per km 2) Athabasca Athabasca County Sep 19, 1911 2,965 2,990 −0.8% 17.65 168.0 Banff Improvement District No. 9 (Banff) Jan 1, 1990 8,875 (2017) 7,851 7,584 +3.5% 4.77 1,645.9 Barrhead Barrhead No. 11, County ...
Calgary: City Beverly Edmonton: Town City: December 31, 1961 [3] Edmonton: City Calgary Montgomery: City Village: August 15, 1963 [11] [12] Calgary: City Bowness Calgary: Town City: August 15, 1964 [13] [14] Calgary: City Edmonton Jasper Place: City Town: December 17, 1964 [3] Edmonton: City Bellevue Blairmore Coleman Frank Improvement District ...
Sister cities sign in Victoria Map of Canada. This is a list of municipalities in Canada which have standing links to local communities in other countries known as "town twinning" (usually in Europe) or "sister cities" (usually in the rest of the world).
In the City of Calgary's 2016 municipal census, Downtown East Village had a population of 3,242 living in 1,897 dwellings, a 14.2% increase from its 2015 population of 2,838. [7] With a land area of 0.5 km 2 (0.19 sq mi), it had a population density of 6,500/km 2 (16,800/sq mi) in 2016.
The original Capital Region Board (CRB) was established with 25 participating or member municipalities, [18] differing slightly from the municipalities that Statistics Canada included in the Edmonton CMA as the CRB excluded entities which did not take active involvement in the greater regional planning activity (four Indian reserves, eight ...