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TD Tower is an office tower in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.It stands at 117 metres (384 feet) or 29 storeys tall and was completed in 1976. It was designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill LLP and is connected to the Edmonton City Centre retail complex.
TD Canada Trust branch in Edmonton, Alberta. The Bank of Toronto (founded in 1855) and The Dominion Bank (founded in 1869) merged on 1 February 1955 to form TD Bank. Canada Trust, founded in 1864 in London, Ontario as Huron and Erie Savings and Loan Society, was acquired by TD Bank in 2000, after which TD adopted the new brand name "TD Bank Financial Group".
[11] [4] Free-standing locations of TD Bank and McDonald's were also constructed on the mall's east parking lot. [11] With this, 2 full McDonald's locations operated in the mall area, until 2013-2014 when the McDonald's located in the mall food court closed, leaving the outparcel as the only one located at Westmount. [citation needed]
The TD Bank shield logo was unveiled to the public near the end of the decade, in 1969. [10] In 1976, TD Bank piloted its first automated teller machine (ATM), the TD 360, which was renamed the Green Machine, a name it continues to carry. [12] In 1987, Toronto Dominion Securities Inc. was established by the bank. [10]
In 1974, the City Centre Place office tower (Oxford Tower) was completed within the larger Edmonton Centre development; TD Tower was added in 1976. [3] In 1978, Oxford Tower (now MNP Tower) and the Four Seasons Hotel (now Sandman Signature Edmonton) were built on the north edge of the site.
Riverbend is a residential area in the southwest portion of the City of Edmonton in Alberta, Canada.It was established in 1972 through Edmonton City Council's adoption of the Riverbend-Terwillegar Heights District Outline Plan, which originally guided the overall development of Riverbend and Terwillegar Heights to the south, and the Riverbend Implementation Plan. [4]
Edmonton's first true skyscraper, and the tallest building in Western Canada for five years, was the CN Tower, built in 1966. A building boom did not really begin until the oil shocks of 1973 and 1979 , which prompted construction of many of the city's current tall buildings (17 of the top 20, as of 2019).
Edmonton was created as a separate settlement from Fort Edmonton by the HBC on October 29, 1881. [1] Edmonton was incorporated as a town in 1892 and became a city in 1904. On May 13, 1912, the HBC put the 1,600-acre (650 ha) Hudson's Bay Company Reserve on the market, prompting a land rush.