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Telus Sky, (also stylized as TELUS Sky) is a 60-storey, 222.3 m (729 ft) [1] mixed-use skyscraper in downtown Calgary, Alberta, Canada. At completion in 2019, the structure building became the third-tallest building in Calgary behind Brookfield Place East and The Bow . [ 1 ]
This is a list of tallest buildings in Calgary, Alberta, namely buildings that are at least 400 feet (120 meters) tall. Calgary is both the largest city and largest metropolitan area in the Canadian province of Alberta , with a municipal population of 1,267,344 [ 1 ] as of April 1, 2018, and a metropolitan population of 1,469,300 [ 2 ] as of ...
The original site, located on 11 Street SW in Calgary's Downtown West End, closed on June 27, 2011, and was replaced by a new science centre called Telus Spark. The new science centre is located on a 15-acre (61,000 m 2 ) site at 220 St. Georges Drive NE in Nose Creek Valley, north of the Wilder Institute/Calgary Zoo .
Calgary Telus Convention Centre (CTCC) is a convention centre in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Opened in 1974 as the Calgary Convention Centre, it is operated by the Calgary Convention Centre Authority on behalf of the City of Calgary. The facility offers 122,000 square feet of convention space, over 47,000 square feet of exhibit space, five pre ...
The Bow is a 158,000-square-metre (1,700,000 sq ft) skyscraper in downtown Calgary, Alberta, Canada.The 236 metre (774 ft) building was the tallest in Calgary between July 8, 2010, when it surpassed the Suncor Energy Centre, and May 11, 2016, when it was exceeded by Brookfield Place.
C. Calgary Central Library; Calgary Courts Centre; Calgary Municipal Building; Calgary Remand Centre; Calgary Telus Convention Centre; Canterra Tower; Canyon Meadows station
Contemporary Calgary is a public contemporary art gallery located in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Located in the former Centennial Planetarium/Telus World of Science in the city's downtown core, the gallery offers contemporary art programming by local, national, and international artists. It launched its inaugural season in 2020.
Opening in 1970, the Plus 15 network has expanded to include 86 enclosed bridges connecting 130 downtown Calgary buildings. The central core of the system is a series of enclosed shopping centres, and the city's flagship department stores .