Fort Edmonton Park reopens to public on Thursday, after nearly three years

Popular attraction features new entrance plaza, Indigenous Peoples Experience

Image | Fort Edmonton Park

Caption: Fort Edmonton Park reopens to the public Thursday after being closed for nearly three years to undergo renovations. (Art Raham/CBC)

Fort Edmonton Park will reopen to the public the same day Alberta begins Stage 3 of its reopening plan.
The popular attraction in southwest Edmonton has been shut for nearly three years to undergo a $165-million upgrade. The park's long-awaited reopening will happen Thursday, coinciding with the loosening of most provincial public health restrictions.
"It feels like we finally arrived after a long, long period of work and creativity and ups and downs but we are finally here today," Darren Dalgleish, president and CEO of Fort Edmonton Management Company, told CBC Radio's Edmonton AM(external link).
Construction at the park began in fall 2018. Some rental events and weddings didn't go ahead in 2020 due to construction, but the pandemic put an end to all rental events and the park's annual Halloween event.
LISTEN | Fort Edmonton Park Reopens:
As of Thursday, park visitors will be greeted with a new front entry plaza. They can then board a 1919 steam-engine train that will transport them through the park.
The park features new attractions at the Johnny J. Jones Exposition and a brand new Indigenous Peoples Experience.
The exhibit is the biggest addition to the park and is meant to give visitors an opportunity to learn about First Nations and Métis peoples.

Image | Fort Edmonton Park

Caption: One of the features of the new Indigenous Peoples Experience exhibit at Fort Edmonton Park is animations projecting onto tipis that depict oral stories told by elders. (Tara McCarthy/CBC)

The northern lights dancing along the walls, the rumble of a bison herd going by, and animations projected onto teepees depicting oral stories told by elders are among the sounds and lighting that shift as one peruses the exhibit.
Visitors will also see tools, clothing and animals that explain the Indigenous guiding principles of the 13 Moons, the traditional Indigenous calendar. The exhibit also includes a Métis cabin and a theatre-like space that tells the history of residential schools and outlines the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's 94 calls to action.
"First time I walked through it, I was just in awe," said Vernon Watchmaker, grand chief of the Confederacy of Treaty 6 First Nations.
"This is a good thing moving forward."
Watchmaker is looking forward to people experiencing the First Nation and Métis content. He said the space is a good starting point for creating awareness for non-Indigenous peoples, and offers an experience a lot of Indigenous peoples haven't had.
LISTEN | Treaty 6 Grand Chief on new Fort Edmonton Park
The park also expanded its 1920s midway, which features a new giant ferris wheel and the familiar old-timey buildings such as the Capitol cinema, drug store, bank and bazaar.
The upgrades to Fort Edmonton Park were completed with funding from the three levels of government, as well as the Fort Edmonton Foundation. In January, city council approved a $1.7 million loan to park to help it reopen.
Fort Edmonton hopes to return the money over the next two years, said Dalgleish.

Image | Fort Edmonton Park

Caption: The Capitol Cinema building in the 1920s midway at Fort Edmonton Park. (Kashmala Fida/CBC)