Tag Archives: church street

Church Street Festival: July 14

Mark Sunday, July 14 on your calendars! The first Church Street Festival will take place from 1-6 p.m. between 107A Avenue and 111 Avenue. Come and tour some of the historic churches, enjoy some lemonade, listen to strolling minstrels, and get to know the area better. More details will be posted as they become available!

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Consultation on April 3

A summary of the public consultation to date on Church Street will be on display for comment and feedback. If you are interested to review and provide some thoughts on priorities, please feel free to attend the open house at Santa Maria Goretti Centre on April 3, between 7-9 p.m.

A summary of the public consultation can also be found at www.edmonton.ca/churchstreet if you are unable to attend.

A 360 View of Church Street

Local photographer Kyle Giesbrecht has created a very cool 360Degrees view of Church Street – check it out here

Take the Church Street Survey

The City is exploring options, which may cover a variety of initiatives or incentives, that may help revitalize and protect Church Street. As part of this process, the City is looking for feedback on what the community and stakeholders want or envision the street to be in the future and how it can be enhanced and protected. Visit the online Church Street survey to share your feedback.

Public Consultation: October 25

Church Street historical designation planning is under way through Sustainable Development! The first public meeting is taking place on October 25 at Sacred Heart Church at 7:00 p.m. This meeting is open to all community members.

Edmonton Journal Article

Father Jim Holland from Sacred Heart Church was quoted in this article in today’s Edmonton Journal:

Push is on to preserve Edmonton’s Church Street

Metro Article

Friends of Church Street was included in an article in today’s Metro, concerning some exciting plans the City has for Church Street.

Historic recognition considered for Edmonton’s ‘Church Street.’

Introducing Friends of Church Street

Paula, our Communications Director, wrote a blog post about Friends of Church Street:

Introducing Friends of Church Street

Church Street Awarded Plaque

Edmonton Historical Board recognizes 96 Street’s significance

By Wendy Aasen & Rob Stack
Originally published in Boyle McCauley News, December 2010/January 2011

In June, the McCauley Community League was informed that 96 Street, Church Street, had been selected by the Edmonton Historical Board for plaque recognition. That plaque was presented on November 4 at the 36th Annual Recognition and Plaque Awards reception held at the Prince of Wales Armouries and Heritage Centre.

The recognition came about because the McCauley Community League, the media, a few community members, and our former City Councilor Ben Henderson, while working to save St. Stephen’s church, brought Church Street to the attention of City of Edmonton heritage planners and the Historic Board.

As the Edmonton Historical Board has written, “These plaques act as a reminder to the public of the importance a site or building has in our community. A plaque places no restrictions on the building or limitations on renovations, modifications, or development . . . They are purely informational.”

The League Executive asked McCauley Community League Board Oral Historian, Antoinette Grenier, to accept the plaque for the community of McCauley because of her long residence here and in recognition for her individual advocacy work on behalf of the community

The plaque reads (excerpts):

“Stretching from just south of Jasper Avenue northward to 111 Avenue, and spanning some seventy years of Church architecture in Edmonton, Church Street features a remarkable collection of thirteen houses of worship built between the turn of the twentieth century and the early 1970s.

Church Street not only displays the construction that took place during this period, but also represents a wide variety of architectural styles, ranging from the Byzantine and French Gothic revival to the Prairie Church, Asymmetrical Modern, and Modern.

Church Street’s oldest building is the Immaculate Conception Roman Catholic Church, built in 1903 at a cost of $10,000.

Central Baptist (1913), Sacred Heart (1913), Grace Methodist (1913), St. Stephen the Martyr Anglican (1914), and Church of Christ (Disciples) (1914) were all built at the tail end of Edmonton’s first boom, before the outset of World War I. The new churches ministering to several Christian denominations reflect the growing plurality of Edmonton’s religious and spiritual needs.

Through the interwar period, the growing population required new churches. Included among these are St. Peter’s Lutheran Church (1928), and St. Josaphat’s Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral and the Ansgar Lutheran Church, both completed in 1939 following the worst years of the Depression.

Following the Second World War four new churches called 96 Street home. The First Christian Reform Church (1948), the Chinese United Church (1953), St. Barbara’s Russian Orthodox Cathedral (1957), and St. John’s Lutheran Church (1971) illustrate various postwar architectural styles and have collectively lent a distinctively modern look to Church Street.”

The League thanks the following people for helping to save St. Stephen’s and on behalf of Church Street: Robert Geldart, David Holdsworth, Eric Strikwerda, Sonia Caligiuri, Ben Henderson, Paula Simons, Martin Garber-Conrad, Paula Kirman, the Edmonton Historical Board, the fabulous congregations of Church Street, and the wonderful people of McCauley.

Plaque placement will be decided at some point in the future.

Historic Designation for Church Street?

Something we are really hoping for is an official historic designation of Church Street by the City of Edmonton. Here is an article from the Edmonton Journal, which was published on February 27, with some very encouraging news.

Divine intervention: Mayor and councillor hope historic designation may give new life to ‘Church Street’