Provincial historic sites of Alberta

Buildings and sites owned by private citizens and companies or other levels or branches of government may gain one of two levels of historic designation, "Registered Historic Resource" or "Provincial Historic Resource".

[2] A concentration of several heritage buildings can be designated a "Provincial Historic Area", and there are two such areas in Alberta: downtown Fort Macleod and Edmonton's Old Strathcona.

[3] The province also lists buildings deemed historically significant by municipal governments on the Alberta Register of Historic Places, which is also part of the larger Canadian Register of Historic Places although this does not imply provincial or federal government status or protection.

[4] The Alberta Main Street Program helps to preserve historic buildings in the downtowns of smaller communities.

[6] The official list as per the government of Alberta is:[7] For a partial list of privately owned buildings or other sites that are designated as "Provincial Historic Resources" see:

Frank Slide, Turtle Mountain, Alberta, Canada
Head Smashed-In Buffalo Jump
Some of the displays inside the Royal Tyrrell Museum
Home Grain Co. wooden cribbed elevator at the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village