Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[6] [7] Calgary Trail and Gateway Boulevard reach Anthony Henday Drive (Highway 216), Edmonton's ring road, which is the northern extent of both National Highway System and trade corridor designations. [8] It continues past South Edmonton Common and the interchange with 23 Avenue. North of 23 Avenue (around 31 Avenue), the freeway portion of ...
Commerce Place is an office and retail complex in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The complex's skyscraper stands at 125 m (410 ft) or 27 storeys tall and was completed in 1990. [4] Commerce Place has a small selection of shops in the main levels of the mall [5] and is connected to Edmonton City Centre and Manulife Place by pedway. [6]
In 2013 the building was demolished, to be replaced by Enbridge Centre. [4] [5] Enbridge Centre is a 25-storey office building, which recreated the original building facades on the tower's podium. [6] [7] [8] The tower was completed in late 2016 and opened on October 13, 2016, with the original facade incorporated into the new building. [9] [10]
the City of Edmonton: Location: Edmonton, Alberta----Stony Plain Road: Length: 12.3 km (7.6 mi) West end: City Limits / 231 Street continues as Highway 16A: Major junctions: Anthony Henday Drive, 184 Street, 178 Street, 170 Street, 156 Street, 149 Street, 142 Street, 102 Avenue, 124 Street: East end: 121 Street / 104 Avenue----102 Avenue: Length
The original plan for what was then called Eaton Centre, announced in 1980, called for several large office and apartment towers. None of the originally designed five towers was ever built but the multi-level Eaton Centre mall and the Delta Edmonton Centre Suite Hotel were salvaged from the project by heavy civic tax subsidies. [4]
Travel north along 97 Street takes residents to CFB Edmonton while travel south along 97 Street takes residents past the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology and into the downtown core. Housing in the neighbourhood is a mixture of single-family houses (55.7%), walk-up apartment style condominiums (32.6%), and duplexes [ 8 ] (11.7%).
Overall development of the community is guided by the Mill Woods Town Centre Neighbourhood Area Structure Plan (NASP), which was original adopted by Edmonton City Council in 1987. [7] The Mill Woods Town Centre community is bounded by 23 Avenue to the south, 66 Street to the west, 34 Avenue to the north and 50 Street to the east. [6]
In the City of Edmonton's 2019 municipal census, Tamarack had a population of 6,417 living in 1,922 dwellings, [7] a 216% change from its 2009 population of 743. [10] With a land area of 2.6 km 2 (1.0 sq mi), it had a population density of 903.1 people/km 2 in 2012.