Royal Gardens is a residential neighbourhood in south west Edmonton , Alberta , Canada . The neighbourhood is bounded on the north by Whitemud Drive , on the east by 111 Street , on the south by 40 Avenue, and on the west by 119 Street/121 Street.
13-655: Royal Gardens may refer to: Royal Gardens, Edmonton , a residential neighbourhood in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada Royal Botanic Gardens (disambiguation) , several places Royal Gardens (nightclub) , a former nightclub in Chicago Royal Gardens, a former residential subdivision of Kalapana, Hawaii , U.S. Royal Gardens, a fictional location in A Series of Unfortunate Events See also [ edit ] King's Garden (disambiguation) Royal Garden ,
26-516: A building in Maringá, Paraná, Brazil Royal Garden Hotel , London Royal Garden Plaza , a shopping mall in Pattaya, Thailand Category:Botanical gardens by country Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Royal Gardens . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to
39-596: A cafeteria, and several administrative areas." From September 25–28, 2018, the school hosted the Canadian Student Leadership Conference 2018. Speakers such as Chris Hadfield , Michel Chikwanine (a child soldier), Keith Hawkins, and Phil Boyte attended. Harry Ainlay is one of three high schools in the Edmonton Public School System that offers full French Immersion for all core courses. Harry Ainlay
52-420: A land area of 1.22 km (0.47 sq mi), it had a population density of 2,853.3 people/km in 2012. Most of the residential development in the neighbourhood occurred during the 1960s when, according to the 2001 federal census, two out of every three (66.2%) of the residences were built. Another one in four (23.3%) of residences were built during the 1970s. According to the 2005 municipal census,
65-462: Is comparatively mobile. According to the 2005 municipal census, one in five residents (20.7%) had moved within the previous 12 months. Another one in four residents (23.6%) had moved within the previous one to three years. At the same time, two out of every five residents (43.9%) had lived at the same address for at least five years. There are four schools in the neighbourhood. Richard Secord School and Harry Ainlay High School are both operated by
78-747: Is the Petrolia Shopping Centre in the neighbourhood of Greenfield to the south. Harry Ainlay Composite High School Harry Ainlay High School is a high school located in Edmonton , Alberta , Canada, in the Royal Gardens neighbourhood, south of Whitemud Drive on 111 Street. The school is operated by the Edmonton Public School System and has a wide variety of educational opportunities for students, including full French Immersion instruction,
91-527: The Edmonton Public School System . St. Bonifice Catholic Elementary School and Louis St. Laurent School are operated by the Edmonton Catholic School System . The Confederation Pool is located in the neighbourhood. Residents of Royal Gardens have good access to shopping. Southgate Centre , a major shopping mall, is located to the immediate north east. Whitemud Drive provides access to West Edmonton Mall . In addition, there
104-592: The International Baccalaureate Program (designated an IB school since June 1, 1980, current IB coordinator: Dean Zuberbühler), Career and Technology Studies, and Registered Apprenticeship programs. The school has an enrollment of 2,722 students The school sports teams are the Titans . The school is named after former Edmonton mayor Harry Dean Ainlay . The engineers at Harry Ainlay High School were T. H. Newton Engineering Ltd., and
117-604: The LRT system at Southgate Station . The community is represented by the Royal Gardens Community League , established in 1968, which maintains a community hall , outdoor rink and tennis courts located at 117 Street and 40 Avenue. In the City of Edmonton's 2012 municipal census, Royal Gardens had a population of 3,481 living in 1,461 dwellings, a -1.9% change from its 2009 population of 3,550 . With
130-419: The architect was Donald Bittorf of the firm of Annett and Bittorf. The building was constructed in 1965. A notable element of the design of the school is the unusual lack of windows. This design feature has led to a local myth that the school was a repurposed bomb shelter . "The school has several classrooms, science labs, a library, computer rooms, music room, industrial shops, two gymnasiums, an auditorium,
143-416: The intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Royal_Gardens&oldid=1125393306 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Royal Gardens, Edmonton The residents of the community have public transportation access to
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#1732765364952156-571: The neighbourhood has a mixture of dwelling types with the most common type of residence being the single-family dwelling . Single-family dwellings account for two out of every five (43%) of all residences in the neighbourhood. Another one in three residences (34%) are rented apartments and apartment style condominiums . One in five (19%) of residences are row houses . The remaining 4% are duplexes, triplexes, or quadruplexes . Three out of five residences (57%) are owner-occupied while two out of five (43%) are rented. The population of Royal Gardens
169-1124: Was the second school in Alberta to introduce the International Baccalaureate program and is one of eight schools in the Edmonton Public School System offering an International Baccalaureate diploma program. However, this is often attributed to the large population base of the school, with about 450 students enrolled in the diploma program and 200 students enrolled in the certificate program each year. Harry Ainlay currently offers IB courses in Biology (HL), English Literature (A1)(HL), History (HL), Physics (SL, HL), Visual Arts (SL, HL), Chemistry (SL), French (B), Spanish (B), German (A1 or ab initio ), Japanese (B or ab initio ), Mathematics (SL), Mathematical Studies (SL), Music (SL), and Theatre Arts (SL). There have been several students who write A1 examinations in their native languages, including German, Arabic, and Japanese. On July 6, 2016, at approximately 2 AM, two people were hospitalized for
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