124 Street Explained

124 Street
Maint:City of Edmonton
Length Km:4.7
Former Names:24th Street
Edward Street (unofficial)[1]
Direction A:South
Terminus A:Jasper Avenue
Junction:102 Avenue, 107 Avenue, 111 Avenue, 118 Avenue, Yellowhead Trail
Direction B:North
Terminus B:CN yards south property line
(north of Yellowhead Trail)
Location:Edmonton

124 Street is an arterial road in north-central Edmonton, Alberta. It is known for being one Edmonton's main shopping districts and historical commercial corridor for the original west end of Edmonton; home to independent restaurants, art galleries, and boutiques, as well as 19th-century heritage houses.[1] [2] Prior to Edmonton adopting its present street numbering system in 1914, it was known as 24th Street with the unofficial name of Edward Street.[1]

Business association

The 124 Street Business Association is a business revitalization zone which includes the 124 Street corridor from 121 Street on Jasper Avenue to 111 Avenue. Considered one of the most sought after in districts Edmonton, the area is home to art galleries, speciality and antique stores, fashion boutiques, coffee houses, and independent restaurants. The wide ranging group of art galleries in the area collaborate to offer a Gallery Walk twice a year, and seasonal exhibits that focus on work by local artists.[3] [4]

Route description

124 Street begins at Jasper Avenue and travels north, forming the boundary between the neighbourhoods of Oliver and Westmount. It functions as the connection between Jasper Avenue and 102 Avenue, the east-west corridor between downtown and west Edmonton; formerly part of Highway 16 (pre-1950s) and Highway 16A (1950s-1980s).[5] [6] 124 Street continues north through mixed commercial and residential and at 109 Avenue it transitions to medium density residential, entering the neighbourhood of Inglewood north of 111 Avenue. At 118 Avenue, 124 Street downgrades to a residential street through the neighbourhood of Prince Charles with various traffic calming measures in place including barrier at 125 Avenue preventing through traffic; north-south commuter traffic is directed west to 127 Street. 124 Street presently has a signalized intersection with Yellowhead Trail, providing access to adjacent industrial areas; however it is slated for closure when the 127 Street interchange is constructed as part of the Yellowhead Trail freeway conversion.[7]

Neighbourhoods

List of neighbourhoods 124 Street runs through, in order from south to north.[8]

See also

External links

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Yanish. Lori. Lowe. Shirley Ann. Edmonton's West Side Story: The History of the Original West End of Edmonton from 1870. 1991. 124th Street and Area Business Association. Edmonton. 9780969565109. 24.
  2. Web site: Lockhart. Jessica Wynne. Seven places to check out on trendy 124 Street, Edmonton. Chatelaine. November 26, 2017. April 1, 2014. en-CA.
  3. Web site: Who We Are. 124th Street Business Association. November 26, 2017. en. 2014.
  4. Web site: 124 Street. Explore Edmonton. Edmonton Tourism. November 27, 2017. en-CA. https://web.archive.org/web/20171201035804/https://exploreedmonton.com/attractions/124-Street. 2017-12-01. dead.
  5. Department of Public Works. 1940. Alberta Official Road Map. Edmonton.
  6. The H.M. Gousha Company. The Shell Oil Company. 1956. Shell Map of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. Edmonton.
  7. Web site: Yellowhead Trail Strategic Plan. City of Edmonton. 2017-10-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171024185829/https://www.edmonton.ca/projects_plans/yellowhead-trail-strategic-plan.aspx. 2017-10-24. en. 2017 . mdy-all.
  8. Web site: City of Edmonton map utility.