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Port Alberta was inspired by the Port of Houston, a one-stop shop for customs and security with a free trade zone and with air, rail and trucking connections in one place. [citation needed] In 2007, Edmonton Airports, the EEDC, and the Edmonton Chamber of Commerce signed a memorandum of understanding to create an inland port at the EIA. [2]
In the early 1990s, the City of Edmonton formed an organization named Communities for Controlled Prostitution, which was later renamed Communities for Changing Prostitution. [9] Because of widespread prostitution in the Edmonton neighborhoods of Boyle Street and McCauley , the police chief of the City of Edmonton declared 1992 "The Year of The ...
Traditionally there is a distinction in the Canada between convention centres for meetings and those for exhibitions/trade shows. Over the past decades this distinction has become blurred, as exhibition facilities have added meeting rooms and meeting centred venues have opened exhibition halls.
Structures on the grounds of the Sherritt complex in Fort Saskatchewan. Alberta's Industrial Heartland (also known as Upgrader Alley or the Heartland) is the largest industrial area in Western Canada and a joint land-use planning and development initiative between five municipalities in the Edmonton Capital Region to attract investment in the chemical, petrochemical, oil, and gas industries to ...
Blatchford is a community being developed on the site of the decommissioned City Centre Airport in Edmonton, Alberta. [1] With an area of 2.17 km 2 (0.84 sq mi), Blatchford is approximately the size of Edmonton's downtown core. [1]
The facility was built in 1984 on the site of the old Edmonton Gardens, the first home of the Edmonton Oilers. The Oilers moved across 118 Avenue in 1974 to the new Northlands Coliseum. Prior to 2009, the EXPO Centre was known as the Northlands AgriCom, or simply The Agricom, from the agricultural and commercial trade shows which it was built ...
Edmonton Northlands, [2] operating as Northlands, was a non-profit volunteer organization in Edmonton, Alberta.The organization owned exhibition grounds in northeast Edmonton collectively known as the Edmonton Northlands, which included venues such as the Northlands Park raceway, the Edmonton Expo Centre, and Northlands Coliseum–the former home of the Edmonton Oilers.
The mall was also re-branded as North Town Centre to coincide with the project. [18] The mall's redevelopment was completed in the summer of 2009 with the opening of Edmonton's first Bed Bath & Beyond (at the space formerly occupied by Save-On-Foods ) in June 2009, [ 19 ] [ 20 ] following by the city's second T&T Supermarket location and an ...