“Cyclepalooza is 10 days of bike events and fun that occurs every summer.”
Category: #Sunnyside365 (Page 37 of 39)
“The bike infrastructure in Calgary is headed in the right direction. I can ride from one end of the city to the other and stay on a bike path the entire time. It’s wonderful to see people advocating to make Calgary more bike friendly. Cyclepalooza? Bike awards? I love it!” – Greg Clark, Alberta Party MLA – Calgary-Elbow.
“The first annual YYC Bicycle Awards celebrate community leaders and champions who encourage cycling in Calgary and contribute to making Calgary a more bicycle friendly city. Each YYC Bicycle Award is given to an individual, group, organization, school, business or employer, depending on the criteria for each award.”
Cyclepalooza kicks off with the annual Bike Prom at the Hillhurst Sunnyside Community Centre! 10 days of bike fun in Calgary. Visit cyclepalooza.ca for more information!
Patrick Burns (July 6, 1856 – February 24, 1937) was a businessman and philanthropist during the founding of Calgary. Having made his fortune in the cattle industry he came to be known as one of the “Big Four” Calgarians.
During the landslide that destroyed the town of Frank in Crows Nest Pass, Burns was the first to send aid, dedicating everything he could in his power to help the victims of the Frank Slide.
When Guy Weadick was developing the idea of the Calgary Stampede, Burns donated $100000.00 of his personal wealth to help the Stampede get on it’s feet – adjusted for inflation, it calculates to over $2 million in money today.
Patrick Burns died in 1937. Shortly after his death, his mansion was torn down to make space for the expanding Colonel Belcher Hospital.
The Senator Patrick Burns Memorial Rock garden was built using over 20000 stones from his demolished mansion.”
“He had the expression of a cherub and the muscle of a stonemason. He could ride from Cochrane to the U.S. border without ever leaving his property.”
“He had the three criteria of what makes a great man — he was a risk taker, he was a hard worker and he gave back generously to his community.”
“He celebrated his 75th birthday by giving a roast to every single family where the household head was unemployed. Then he gave any single unemployed person a ticket for a meal at any restaurant in the city.”
The building at 1126 Kensington Road was constructed in 1926 to be the home of Calgary’s Freemason Lodge (to be fully established in 1927).
The cornerstone (which was placed in 1926) was later relocated in the more recently built Masonic lodge on 12th avenue SW. The site was decommissioned as a meeting hall when the new meeting hall was built in 1984. The building was renovated extensively for retail use in 1995.
These days, the address is home to one of the neighbourhood’s favourite coffee shops, Higher Ground. Naked Leaf Tea Shop has their establishment and small patio (best kept secret!) around the west side.
Next time you’re in the vicinity, see if you can find the 3, 5, and 7 steps of King Solomon which are common in many Masonic structures!









