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Routes Canada AlbertaEdmonton
Kinsmen to Little Brick and back
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

Kinsmen to Little Brick and back

Length5.1 mi
Elev. Gain331.3 ft
Est. Steps12000
Trail
Created by Lana

Kinsmen to Little Brick and back Introduction

Kinsmen to Little Brick and back is a 5.1 mile (12,000-step) route located near Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. This route has an elevation gain of about 331.3 ft and is rated as medium. Find the best walking trails near you in Pacer App.

Attractions Near Kinsmen to Little Brick and back

© Wikipedia © OpenStreetMap

Diamond Park

Park
Diamond Park was a 1,500-seat baseball stadium located in Edmonton, Alberta. A covered grandstand provided 500 and bleachers down the first-base line had 1,000 more seats. Constructed by a local businessman Frank Gray, who was also Edmonton's baseball club director, in 1907. Home to the Edmonton Eskimos baseball team (from 1909 to 1914, 1919-1921 and 1922), it was located on the Ross Flats below the Hotel Macdonald.

Louise McKinney Riverfront Park

Park
Louise McKinney Riverfront Park or Louise McKinney Park is a municipal park in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, that is part of the North Saskatchewan River valley parks system, and serves as the gateway park, with paved paths leading from it to everywhere in the parks system. The Cloverdale Pedestrian Bridge crossed the North Saskatchewan River connecting Louise McKinney Park to the Henrietta Muir Edwards Park and the Edmonton Queen attraction.

Alldritt Tower

Place
Alldritt Tower is an approved 80 storey mixed use skyscraper in Edmonton, Alberta. It could be the tallest building in Western Canada and one of the tallest buildings in the country.

Edmonton Convention Centre

Place
The Edmonton Convention Centre (ECC, formerly the Shaw Conference Centre), is a meeting, entertainment, and convention venue located in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Opened in 1983, it is managed by Explore Edmonton, the destination marketing organization of the city of Edmonton.It is located on Jasper Avenue and built into a hill, emerging onto Grierson Hill Road and into the Louise McKinney Riverfront Park.

Chateau Lacombe Hotel

Hotel
The Chateau Lacombe is a hotel in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Edmonton Riverboat

Food
The Edmonton Riverboat, formerly known as the Edmonton Queen, is a riverboat on the North Saskatchewan River in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The riverboat originally started to sail on the river under the name Edmonton Queen in 1995 and has become a unique Edmonton attraction. The Edmonton Riverboat is 52 metres long and configured to carry 399 passengers as of 2020.

Tawatinâ Bridge

Place
The Tawatinâ Bridge ( də-WAH-tin-now) is a dedicated LRT bridge crossing the North Saskatchewan River in Edmonton, Alberta, currently under construction. It will be part of Edmonton Transit Service's Valley Line extension, which is scheduled to open in 2022. The Tawatinâ Bridge will consist of two railway tracks (one northbound towards Downtown Edmonton, one southbound towards Mill Woods) and a multi-use pathway below the bridge's concrete box girder.

Mill Creek Ravine

Place
Mill Creek Ravine is located in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada and is a part of the River Valley parks and trail system. It contains the last stretch of Mill Creek, before it flows into a culvert for its end run to the North Saskatchewan River. The ravine ends where the land opens onto the North Saskatchewan River valley near the west end of Cloverdale on the opposite bank from downtown.

Indigenous Art Park

Place
Indigenous Art Park ᐄᓃᐤ (ÎNÎW) River Lot 11∞ (pronounced EE-nu River Lot 11) is a public park in the Edmonton, Alberta river valley built on the previous site of the Queen Elizabeth Pool. In June 2019, the Americans for the Arts' Public Art Network recognized the park as one of the 50 best international public art projects.

John Ducey Park

Place
John Ducey Park was a 6,500-seat baseball stadium in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Originally built in 1933, it was torn down after sixty years of use in 1995 and replaced by Telus Field on the same site. Beginning in 1981, John Ducey Park was the home field for the AAA Edmonton Trappers of the Pacific Coast League.
Last updated: Jun 1, 2026

Route Details

Length

5.1 mi

Elev. Gain

331.3 ft

Est. Steps

12000
Created by
Lana
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