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MNP Tower (Edmonton)

Alberta building and structure stubsBuildings and structures in EdmontonEdmonton stubsOffice buildings completed in 1978Oxford Properties
Skyscraper office buildings in CanadaSkyscrapers in EdmontonTowers in Alberta
ATB Financial, Oxford Tower, Edmonton
ATB Financial, Oxford Tower, Edmonton

MNP Tower, formerly known as 101 Street Tower, is an office tower in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. It stands at 118 metres (387 feet) or 29 stories tall and was completed in 1978. Tenants include MNP LLP, Longview Systems, MLT Aikins LLP, Emery Jamieson LLP, and SNC Lavalin.The building was originally developed by Oxford Properties as part of a larger complex with the current Oxford Tower (formerly City Centre Place), Edmonton City Centre (mall), TD Tower and the Delta Edmonton Centre Suite Hotel, all of which are linked by the Edmonton Pedway to each other and to the Edmonton Light Rail Transit system. In 2016 MNP Tower was awarded The Outstanding Building of the Year Award from the Building Owners and Managers Association (BOMA), Edmonton chapter.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article MNP Tower (Edmonton) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

MNP Tower (Edmonton)
101 Street NW, Edmonton Central Core

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Latitude Longitude
N 53.545 ° E -113.49305555556 °
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MNP Tower

101 Street NW 10235
T5J 0G5 Edmonton, Central Core
Alberta, Canada
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ATB Financial, Oxford Tower, Edmonton
ATB Financial, Oxford Tower, Edmonton
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Edmonton International Film Festival

The Edmonton International Film Festival (EIFF) is a nine-day film festival in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, hosted at Landmark Cinemas at Edmonton City Centre. It is supported by and partnered with Telefilm Canada, Government of Alberta, Alberta Foundation for the Arts, Edmonton City Council, and the Edmonton Arts Council.The festival schedule consists of over 150 films of various genres, ranging from short to feature-length, domestic to foreign, studio to independent, and from dramatic work to documentary. The EIFF showcases films that are produced within 20 months of each festival, selected on the basis of story, quality, and originality. The Festival also presents, other films that have garnered a 'buzz' around the festival circuit, along with filmmaker talks, Q&As, gala screenings, spotlights on local filmmakers, and shorts with lunch, among others.EIFF is an Oscar-qualifying festival for short films (live action and animation): winning at this festival can make a film eligible to win an Academy Award. The two short films that win the EIFF Grand Jury Award are chosen by an international jury and of five industry peers, after which they are eligible for Oscar consideration in the accompanying year. Lunchbox Shorts is a series of select EIFF short-film programs (curated from thousands of submissions) that are presented throughout the lunch hour over the festival, with lunch included in its ticket price.: 37 From 2015 through 2017, and in 2019, MovieMaker has listed EIFF as one of "50 film festivals worth the entry fee." The 35th Annual EIFF is scheduled for the week of October 1–10, 2021.

Tegler Building
Tegler Building

The Tegler Building was a historic office building in Edmonton, Alberta. When it was built in 1912, at 15,750 square meters, it was the largest building in western Canada. It was designated a historic resource in November 1981 but then in a motion from city council that designation was rescinded. The building was taken down December 12, 1982.Robert Tegler was an entrepreneur and businessman who came to Edmonton in the early 1900s. He saw opportunity in Edmonton and decided to erect the Tegler Building at the corner of what was then known as Elizabeth Street and First Street (now 102 Avenue and 101 Street). The building site was located at 10189 101 St NW. Herbert Alton Magoon was hired to design a six-storey building, 100 feet (30 m) long, 70 feet (21 m) wide and 80 feet (24 m) high. Construction started in 1911 and was completed in early 1912. An expansion to the Tegler building was needed by 1913 and so Robert Tegler started construction on the third floor over top of the Edmonton Journal building, eventually building down to ground level when the Edmonton Journal moved. While the Tegler Building was taken down in 1982, parts of the historic building live on in The Tegler Foundation and its subsequent buildings. The Tegler Manor – constructed in 1982 – houses many of the original bricks from the building, as well as the mural by Ernest Huber depicting early life in Alberta which once graced the lobby above the elevators in the original building.