Heritage Community Foundation Presents
Alberta Online Encyclopedia

Search the Landmarks Database

New Search

Browsing Region

Subcategories:
Calgary
Crowsnest Pass
Edmonton and Area
Fort Macleod
Grande Prairie
High River
Lacombe
Lethbridge
Medicine Hat
Others
Red Deer
Turner Valley District
Victoria Trail


  Total Records Found: 587   -   Page 4 of 59  First [ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ] Next 10 Pages Last
  • AULL BLOCK
    The Aull Block, among the oldest commercial buildings on Atlantic Avenue, was the first to be conserved by the Inglewood Business Revitalization Zone and the Alberta Main Street Programme.
  • BAKER BLOCK AND BEFUS BLOCK
    The Baker Block was constructed in 1907 to house a grocery store owned by Thomas Baker.
  • BAKER RESIDENCE
    Herbert Baker was born in Yorkshire, England on December 10, 1866. He came to Canada in 1882 and worked for the Massey Manufacturing Co., later Massey-Harris, in Toronto.
  • BANK MANAGER'S RESIDENCE/MANSE
    This residence was built in 1906 by the Canadian Bank of Commerce for its Red Deer bank managers.
  • BANK OF MONTREAL
    This second Bank of Montreal building was born of more mature period in the history of an established city.
  • BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA
    This exceptional building was designed by the famous Canadian architect, John Lyle.
  • BARRACK SQUARE, 1885
    In 1885 an area two blocks square was set aside as parade grounds for the North-West Mounted Police.
  • BARRON BUILDING
    Not only was the Barron Building the first major development in downtown Calgary since the Depression, but it is perhaps the single reason why Calgary, and not Edmonton, is the hub of the Alberta oil patch.
  • BASILIAN MONASTERY
    Constructed in 1922, this is the oldest Basilian monastery in Canada.
  • BATES ELECTRIC WELDING
    Wilfred Bates arrived in Calgary in 1914 after working as a welder and boilermaker on the construction of the Panama Canal.

Albertasource.ca | Contact Us | Partnerships
            For more on the real estate industry in Alberta, visit Peel’s Prairie Provinces.

Copyright © Heritage Community Foundation All Rights Reserved