Heritage buildings in Edmonton

As of 2008[update] there are currently ten sites in Edmonton with plaques erected by Parks Canada and listed in the Directory of Designations of National Historic Significance of Canada, and one recommendation to create a new plaque in Edmonton.

The two Provincial Historic Sites in Edmonton are the Royal Alberta Museum, and Rutherford House.

However the owner must be notified and city council must vote to approve designating a building as a Municipal Historic Resources.

In addition to this the City publishes a list of historic resources that were demolished after being added to the register.

As an appendix to the Register, the City also lists all buildings at the municipal Fort Edmonton Park museum, and historically significant landscapes, cemeteries and monuments, street furnishings, and architectural fragments.

First Presbyterian Church was completed in 1912 and designated a Provincial Historic Resource in 1978.
This plaque from the McLeod Building , signifies a Provincial Historic Resource.
The Hotel Macdonald opened in 1915 and became a Municipal Historic Resource in 1984.