Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Edo Japan, often known simply as Edo (/ ˈ iː d oʊ /), is a Canadian-founded fast food restaurant chain specializing in Japanese Teppan-style cooking. [2] Founded in 1979 in Calgary, Alberta Canada by Reverend Susumu Ikuta, [3] a Japanese Buddhist minister, Edo Japan was named after the original name of Tokyo. [4]
In the 1950s and 1970s Etobicoke, Scarborough, and other suburban areas in Greater Toronto received ethnic Japanese coming from western Canada. [3] By 2013, there had been an increase in the number of Japanese nationals in Toronto, particularly young people there on working holiday visa wishing to work or live in Canada. [2]
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 .
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).
Japanese Canadians (日系カナダ人, Nikkei Kanadajin, French: Canadiens japonais) are Canadian citizens of Japanese ancestry. Japanese Canadians are mostly concentrated in Western Canada, especially in the province of British Columbia, which hosts the largest Japanese community in the country with the majority of them living in and around Vancouver.
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, the Edmonton metropolitan region recorded a population of 1,418,118 living in 548,624 of its 589,554 total private dwellings, a change of 7.3% from its 2016 population of 1,321,441.
Name Address Coordinates Government recognition (CRHP №) Image Jasper Block (1909) 10514–10520 Jasper Avenue, Edmonton AB Edmonton municipality () Q24040357
Jasper Place, originally named West Jasper Place, is a former town in Alberta, Canada now within the City of Edmonton.Prior to amalgamation with Edmonton, the town was bounded by 149 Street to the east, 118 Avenue to the north, 170 Street to the west and the North Saskatchewan River to the south.