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102 Street stop

Alberta building and structure stubsAlberta transport stubsCanadian railway station stubsEdmonton Light Rail Transit stationsRailway stations scheduled to open in 2022
Railway stations under construction in CanadaValley Line (Edmonton)
Edmonton Valley Line
Edmonton Valley Line

102 Street stop is a tram stop under construction in the Edmonton Light Rail Transit network in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. It will serve the Valley Line and will be the terminus station until the line is extended west. It is located on the north side of 102 Avenue between 101 and 102 Streets, in Downtown Edmonton. The stop is scheduled to open in 2022.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article 102 Street stop (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

102 Street stop
102 Avenue NW, Edmonton Central Core

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: 102 Street stopContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.543055555556 ° E -113.49472222222 °
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Address

102 Avenue NW 10131
T5J 3S4 Edmonton, Central Core
Alberta, Canada
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Edmonton Valley Line
Edmonton Valley Line
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Nearby Places

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 It was designated a historic resource in November 1981 but then in a motion from city council that designation was rescinded.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.