Calgary Alberta Temple

Design phase; groundbreaking pending

Location:  Northeast corner of Royal Oak Rd NW and Rocky Ridge Rd NW, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Announcement:  4 October 2008

Construction Status

As described by Elder Richard K. Melchin, Area Seventy in the North America Central Area, the Church has a "beautiful site with a panoramic view of the city" for the recently announced Calgary Alberta Temple. The site, adjacent to the Royal Oak Chapel in northwest Calgary, was purchased about four years prior to the announcement in anticipation of a temple for Calgary where over 18,000 members in 6 stakes live. Designs for the temple will be drawn over the next six months with completion of the building expected in about three years.1

Access to the temple will be greatly facilitated by the recently announced Tuscany/Royal Oak C-Train station. C-Train is Calgary's light rail transit (LRT), which provides public transportation to various sections of the city. The Tuscany/Royal Oak station will be located within short walking distance of the temple at the intersection of Crowchild Trail and Rocky Ridge Road, which borders the temple site to the west. The station was originally planned to be completed after 2023, but on November 7, 2007, the Calgary City Council approved and funded completion of the station by 2011—likely the same year or earlier that the temple will be completed.2

The Calgary Ring Road—a beltway project that is surrounding Calgary with a high-capacity freeway—will also improve access to the temple. The Stoney Trail/Crowchild Trail Interchange, just a couple of blocks from the temple site, is planned to be completed in 2009.3

President Thomas S. Monson announced the temple in the opening session of General Conference on October 4, 2008.4 Once completed, the Calgary Alberta Temple will be Canada's eighth temple and Alberta's third. The other Albertan temples are located in Cardston, Alberta and in Edmonton, Alberta. In the adjoining province of British Columbia, the Vancouver British Columbia Temple is currently under construction.

Mormons first began to settle in southern Alberta in the 1880s as contract workers on the Canadian Pacific Railroad and as farmers in present-day Cardston. By 1895, the first stake in Alberta was established, and membership in the Church has continued to thrive ever since. Today there are over 75,000 members throughout the province.5


Temple Facts

The Calgary Alberta Temple will be the eighth temple built in Canada and the third built in Alberta, following the Cardston Alberta Temple (1923) and the Edmonton Alberta Temple (1999).



1. Sean Myers, "Mormon temple slated for N.W.," Calgary Herald 6 Oct. 2008, 6 Oct. 2008 <http://www.canada.com/calgaryherald/news/city/story.html?id=e916c2c8-4935-4ef1-84e8-659c62749e00>.
2. "Tuscany/Rocky Ridge (C-Train)," Wikipedia, 6 Oct. 2008 <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuscany/Rocky_Ridge_(C-Train)>.
3. "Calgary Ring Road," The City of Calgary, 9 Oct. 2008, 11 Oct. 2008 <http://content.calgary.ca/CCA/City+Transportation/Transportation+Planning/Southwest+Ring+Road/Calgary+Ring+Road.htm>.
4. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, "Church Continues Temple Building Throughout the World," 4 Oct. 2008.
5. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, "New Temple in Calgary Brings Canadian Total to Eight," 4 Oct. 2008.