kensington, phone: 780-454-6885 kensingtoncommunityleague ... · kensington community league 12130...
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Calder School
Front Yards in Bloom, 2013 Award of Merit Winner
WALK EDMONTON
Printed 2014
Funding for this project provided by Great Neighbourhoods
Cert no. SW-COC-2083
Cert no. XXX-XXX-000
Rosslyn Park
Local ContactsCalder Community League12721 – 120 Street Phone: 780-455-6666
Kensington Community League12130 – 134A Avenue Phone: 780-454-6885 [email protected] KensingtonCommunityLeague.com
Lauderdale Community League12937 – 107 Street Phone: 780-475-8644 [email protected] lauderdale.ca
Rosslyn Community League11015 –134 Avenue Phone: 780-475-4141 [email protected] rosslyncommunity.org
Northwest Edmonton Seniors Society12963 – 120 Street 780-451-1925 [email protected] calderseniors.org
Calder Branch — Edmonton Public Library12522 – 132 Avenue 780-496-7090 EPL.ca
Grand Trunk Fitness & Centre13025 – 112 Street 311 [email protected]
Edmonton Police Service Calder Community Station12540 – 132 Avenue 780-496-8535
Weather780-468-4940
City InformationCall 311
Emergency ContactsPolice/Ambulance/Fire911
Police Complaint Line780-423-4567
Walk Edmonton Walk Edmonton is an initiative bringing Edmontonians together to build a more walkable community by providing grass roots resources and building civic support. Check out our website for links to other walking resources, maps, walking groups and places to walk in Edmonton.
edmonton.ca/walkedmonton 780-944-5339
Other Walking ResourcesAlberta Centre for Active Livingcentre4activeliving.ca 780-427-6949
Canada Walkscanadawalks.ca
UWALKUWALK.ca
Shape (Safe Healthy Active People Everywhere)shapeab.com
Get involved with Walk to School Week and Walking School Bus Programs
[email protected] 780-406-8530
COMMUNITY WALKING MAP
Kensington, Calder, Lauderdale & Rosslyn
The Benefits of WalkingWalking… a healthy journey!Ranked the number one activity of choice among Canadians, walking is a prescription for improved health and wellness. Walk briskly for 30 minutes a day, 5 days a week, and minimize your risk for cardiovascular disease, stroke, Type 2 diabetes and some types of cancer. Additional benefits include weight management, blood pressure control and boosting good cholesterol (HDLs).
Other benefits of walking:
• Releases the body’s tension and stress.
• Refreshes the mind and body, especially when walking outdoors.
• Allows you to connect with your community.
• Offers an excellent way to socialize with family and/or friends.
• Increases “eyes on the street”, enhancing community safety.
Walking with your Dog Edmonton has over 40 locations where you can enjoy your walk while your dog is off-leash. Please remember that all sites where dogs are permitted to be off-leash are multi-use areas used by all. Your dog must be leashed when not in a designated off-leash area. The dog icons show on this map are placed in the approximate location of each off-leash area, but do not show the precise boundaries. For more information, including details on off-leash boundaries, check the Parks for Paws Brochure or go to edmonton.ca (keyword off-leash)
There are 1,440 minutes in a day, schedule 30 of them for walking!
CalderCalder’s history is rooted in railway history and has remained a railway community with CN’s Walker Yard an adjacent neighbour to the south.
In 1909 the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway established a divisional point at Calder and began construction of its round house and repair shops. A.W. Young then built a small general store soon followed by boarding houses and restaurants. Construction workers first lived in tents. The first church also held services in tents. A school district was organized in September 1910 for local children. By October 1910 there were 45 houses, three stores, three churches, a school and a “modern and complete telephone service”.
Calder lots sold for $175 and $225 for corner lots.
Calder amalgamated with Edmonton in 1917. The attractive clinkerbrick craftman cottage built by Frederick S. Jones in 1926 is a reminder of the builders who lived in Calder. Jones was a brick layer and stonemason who lived at 13067 – 115 Street; a Municipal Historic Resource.
Lauderdale Lauderdale dates back to James Lauder who farmed on land he owned near by the area.
By 1918 the Williamson Brothers owned most of Lauderdale but the area was put into the city tax sale at the end of the First World War,
despite requests from the owners to have Lauderdale taken off the lists. The City Solicitor ruled that the City Commissions had no power to do this. Many of the first residents worked in the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway yards.
Grand Trunk Park developed in the Northwest corner with the southern portion locally called Onion Park due to a farmer growing onions. It was also considered a crash zone for the City Airport.
Planner Noel Dant announced in February, 1951 that progress was being made on designing and completing new post-war residential neighbourhoods. Plans were designed to route traffic around the new neighbourhoods and not through them.
In 1955 Lauderdale was ready for development. Residential streets were laid out on a modified crescent system with parks and school grounds included in the layout.
Kensington Kensington was first subdivided in 1911 and amalgamated by greater Edmonton in 1913.
The original subdivision was abandoned before any development occurred and was not replotted until the Noel Dant plan for post-war residential development. The earlier grid pattern was replaced in the 1950s by a model in which services were centrally located with enclosed road access. This is evidenced today by the shopping centres across
from the Elementary School and at the intersection of 132 Avenue and 127 Street.
For many years Kensington was home to the “Kensington Queen”.
Rosslyn Rosslyn was annexed by Edmonton before the First World War but it was not until the late 1950s that Rosslyn was subdivided with the area filled up by the late 1960s. Rosslyn is mostly residential with commercial development along 134 Avenue and in the Northeast Corner the Rosslyn Shopping Centre that opened in July of 1962.
Kensington, Calder, Lauderdale, Rosslyn
About the Community Walking Maps This Community Walking Map is part of a series of walking guides. Each map is created as a joint project of Walk Edmonton and local Community groups to promote walkable communities. Contact us to find out if your community has an edition of this map series or to find out more about creating a map.
[email protected] 780-944-5339
Funding for this project provided by Great Neighbourhoods
137 Avenue137 Avenue 137 Avenue
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Yellowhead Trail
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KENSINGTON, CALDER, LAUDERDALE & ROSSLYNLegend
Accessible
Bakery
Coffee Shop
Community Hall
Convenience Store
Fire/Ambulance
Grocery Store
Hotel
Liquor Store
Off-Lease Area
Pharmacy
Place of Worship
Playground
Pub
Public Art/ Monument/Statue
Restaurant
School
Skating Rink
Sports Fields
Spray Deck
Tennis Court
Toboggan Hill
Sample walking routes
0.2 km Meadow’s Loop1.2 km Kensington School1.9 km Grand Trunk Walk2.0 km Shepherd’s Walk2.0 km Calder Old Towne Walk2.5 km Garden Walk3.1 km Ardith’s Walk3.8 km Olive’s Walk
0.5 Kilometres = About 4.5 minutes walking About 660 Steps About 2 minutes cycling
Scale
Kilometres
0.00 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5
Commercial
Parkland
Residential Area
Crosswalk with Signal
Bus Stop
On Street Bike Route
Paved Shared Use Pathway
Roadway
Alleys
SidewalkWALK EDMONTONWALK EDMONTON
CALDER
KENSINGTON
LAUDERDALE
ROSSLYN
Kensington Park
Kensington Community League Hall
Kensington Elementary
School
Miwasin ParkChalmers Park
Keyano Park
Kensington Court
Touchdown Park
Northwest Edmonton
Seniors Society
Calder Community League Hall
Calder School
St. Edmund School
Ecole Pere Lacombe
Grand Trunk Fitness and
Leisure CentreLauderdale Community League Hall
Lauderdale School
Horseshoe Pits
Rosslyn Junior High School
Reservoir
Rosslyn Community League Hall
Grand Trunk Park
Rosslyn Park
Lauderdale Park
J. Dean Whittaker
Park
Milton Jevning Park
Kensington Shopping
Centre
Scott Robertson Elementary School
Elk’s Hall
Ventar Care
Centre
Northgate Centre
The Africa Centre
Shared Use Path