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An Edmonton apartment building destroyed by fire Saturday was once a haven for generations of artistic tenants.
An average of nearly one pre-1940s house every day has been demolished in the past six years, according to Vancouver statistics. That includes the past year, in which a new recycling bylaw was brought in to deter demolitions. It doesn’t appear to be working.
The doors of the Windsor Armouries have been flung open during construction to reveal the cavernous interior of what will become the University of Windsor’s School of Creative Arts.
Legal action has been launched against a roofing firm after a massive fire destroyed a historic block of businesses in New Westminster, B.C.
The controversy over a proposed 30-storey office tower on the site of the Maison Alcan has brought to light Montreal’s long forgotten role as the birthplace of organized figure skating in Canada.
The 300 residents of Rock Creek, B.C., have been without their favourite watering hole since bailiffs shut down the Prospector Pub and Hotel last month for non-payment of taxes. The storied building in B.C.’s Southern Interior — constructed in 1895 alongside the Kettle River to service gold-rush miners in the area, according to realtor Jennifer Brock — has had a sorry time of late.
Nearly a year after the province ordered the Maritime Museum of B.C. to close without providing new quarters, the NDP MLA for Victoria-Beacon Hill warned in the legislature on Tuesday that the facility’s economic, cultural and tourism contributions hang in the balance.
Hidden murals in Canada’s oldest surviving Acadian building may turn the walls of the museum into windows onto the past.
Saskatoon does not do enough to recognize the history of the region’s indigenous peoples, which shows a wider indifference, according to a new report.
A community group in Lower Bedeque, P.E.I., is looking for ways to attract more visitors to the schoolhouse where Anne of Green Gables author Lucy Maud Montgomery once taught.