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 PlaceLocationCategoryDescription
Neatby-Timlin Theatre(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)theatre, cinema, lectureFormer site of Place Riel Theatre, a student union-run movie theatre. The theatre closed down in the 1990s and is now used as a lecture hall. It was renamed in 2005 to honour history professor Hilda Neatby and economics professor
The Centre mall (east)(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)store / shop, shopping mall/centerBuilt in 1977, Wildwood Mall was one of the first major developments in the Wildwood community (after the neighbouring Country Square Plaza). Original anchors were Woolco (later Wal-Mart) and Dominion Grocery Stores. When Dominion closed in the mid-1980s, the mall
Transit terminal(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)One of the Saskatoon Transit's first transit terminals, where a number of bus routes converge. www.saskatoon.ca/org/transit/
Musee Ukraina Museum(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)museumThe Museum Ukraina makes its home in the original St. George’s Parish Hall. The building was officially opened on March 28, 1920 and provided a centre for the educational and cultural events that are so important to the Ukrainian Catholic
White Buffalo Youth Lodge(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)youth organizationThe White Buffalo Youth Lodge is a new building rising out of an old OK Economy store. It was created by a partnership of many groups including the city, the Saskatoon Tribal Council, the Central Urban Métis Federation Inc, and
Brevoort Park(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)neighbourhoodMiddle class neighbourhood, developed mainly in the 1960. Many of the streets here are named after pioneers and early settlers of the Saskatoon area. www.saskatoon.ca/org/city_planning/zam_maps/index.asp
Grosvenor Park(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)neighbourhoodMiddle to upper-income neighbourhood, developed mainly between 1946 and 1960. In the 1950s, residential neighbourhoods began to be built using a more modern system of curving residential streets feeding into collector streets leading to main thoroughfares, the size of the
River Landing(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)theatre, attraction, development, marketplaceMajor downtown redevelopment project underway since 2004. Has seen the construction of the farmers' market, Persephone Theatre, and riverbank park. Planning for River Landing has been ongoing for some 20 years. The site includes the former locations of the A.L.
Firehall No. 1(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)fire serviceBuilt in 1964, Fire Station #1 is not only the oldest existing fire hall in Saskatoon, it is also the largest with four battalions of 16 firefighters, 3 lieutenants and 1 captain staffing the facility 24 hours a day. Fire
Nutana(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)neighbourhoodMiddle to upper-class neighbourhood, developed mainly before 1946. Encompasses most of the original settlement of Saskatoon, shortly thereafter renamed Nutana. Includes the Broadway Avenue commercial district. www.saskatoon.ca/org/city_planning/zam_maps/index.asp
North Park(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)subdivision, neighbourhoodMiddle to lower-middle class neighbourhood, developed mainly between 1946 and 1960. Boundaries are shown by the polygon.
City Park(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)subdivision, neighbourhoodMiddle class neighbourhood, developed mainly prior to 1946 but almost continually redeveloped. ww8.saskatoon.ca/DEPARTMENTS/Community%20Services/Plann...
Robin's Donuts / 2-4-1 Pizza(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)restaurantDonut/coffee shop and pizza place
Pharmasave(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)pharmacy, convenience storePharmacy and convenience store
Sutherland Industrial(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)industrial area, subdivisionIndustrial land, also home to Canadian Pacific Railways' main yards. The streets here are named after CPR employees.
Scotia Centre(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)store / shop, office buildingTwin office towers and small shopping mall/food court built in the late 1980s on the site of the original 1929 Capitol Theatre. Public anger was very high leading up to the theatre's demolition in 1979, so the work was done
Diefenbaker Corner(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)statue, artAccording to legend, future Prime Minister John Diefenbaker once sold a newspaper to then-PM Wilfred Laurier on this spot when he was a child, inspiring him to go into politics. A statue here commemorates this event.
Greystone Heights(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)subdivision, neighbourhoodMiddle income neighbourhood, developed mainly in the 1960s. Many of the streets are named after Canadian universities and professors. ww8.saskatoon.ca/DEPARTMENTS/Community%20Services/Plann...
Haultain(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)subdivision, neighbourhoodMiddle-class neighbourhood, developed mostly between 1946 and 1960. The neighborhood and original school name honoured the Honourable Sir Frederick William Alpin Gordon Haultain K.B., the first premier of the Northwest Territories before Saskatchewan became a province.
Meadowgreen(en)Canada / Saskatchewan / Saskatoon (Saskatoon)subdivision, neighbourhoodLower class neighbourhood, developed mainly in the 1960s and 1970s. Because of its low income and low home ownership rate, it is sometimes disparagingly referred to as "Ghettogreen".
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