Halifax | |||||
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— Regional Municipality — | |||||
Halifax Regional Municipality | |||||
Top - Halifax Skyline, Middle left - Citadel Hill, Bottom left - Metro Transit Ferry, Right - Halifax Town Clock | |||||
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Motto: "E Mari Merces" (Latin) "From the Sea, Wealth" |
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Location of Halifax Regional Municipality | |||||
Coordinates: | |||||
Country | Canada | ||||
Province | Nova Scotia | ||||
Established | April 1, 1996 | ||||
Government | |||||
- Type | Regional Municipality | ||||
- Mayor | Peter Kelly | ||||
- Governing body | Halifax Regional Council | ||||
- MPs |
List of MPs
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- MLAs |
List of MLAs
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Area[1] | |||||
- Land | 5,490.18 km2 (2,119.8 sq mi) | ||||
- Urban | 262.65 km2 (101.4 sq mi) | ||||
- Rural | 5,528.25 km2 (2,134.5 sq mi) | ||||
Highest elevation | 145 m (475.6 ft) | ||||
Lowest elevation | 0 m (0 ft) | ||||
Population (2006)[1] | |||||
- Regional Municipality | 372,679 (13th) | ||||
- Density | 67.9/km2 (175.9/sq mi) | ||||
- Urban | 290,742 | ||||
- Urban density | 1,077.2/km2 (2,789.9/sq mi) | ||||
- Metro | 418,261 (13th) | ||||
- Change 2001-06 | 3.8% | ||||
- Census Ranking | 13 of 5,008 | ||||
Demonym | Haligonian | ||||
Time zone | AST (UTC-4) | ||||
- Summer (DST) | ADT (UTC-3) | ||||
Area code(s) | 902 | ||||
Dwellings | 166,675 | ||||
Median Income* | $54,129 CDN | ||||
Total Coastline | 400 km (250 mi) | ||||
NTS Map | 011D13 | ||||
GNBC Code | CBUCG | ||||
Website | www.halifax.ca | ||||
*Median household income, 2005 (all households) |
Halifax Regional Municipality is the capital of the province of Nova Scotia, Canada. The municipality is commonly called Halifax (pronounced /ˈhælɨfæks/) or HRM.
The population in 2006 was 372,679;[2] the urban area of HRM had a population of 282,924,[3] giving the municipality the largest urban area in Atlantic Canada and largest population centre in Canada east of Quebec City. According to Statistics Canada the census metropolitan area[4] of Halifax reached 398,000 in 2009.[5]
HRM's urban area is a major economic centre in eastern Canada with a large concentration of government services and private sector companies. Major employers and economic generators include the Department of National Defence, various levels of government, and the Port of Halifax. Agriculture, fishing, mining, forestry and natural gas extraction are major resource industries found in the rural areas of HRM.
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The area comprising present day Halifax County was settled for thousands of years by the Mi'kmaq. Those who settled on Halifax Harbour called it Jipugtug (anglicised as "Chebucto"), meaning Great Harbour. The first permanent European settlement in the area was the establishment of the Town of Halifax, named after the British Earl of Halifax, in 1749 when the colonial capital was transferred from Annapolis Royal; other towns and villages were established throughout adjacent areas of what would become Halifax County in the decades that followed.
In 1996 the provincial government amalgamated all municipal governments within Halifax County to create HRM, a regional municipality comprising approximately 200 individual communities or placenames for civic addressing grouped into eighteen planning areas for zoning purposes.
The Halifax Regional Municipality occupies an area of 5,577 square kilometres (2,353 sq mi),[6] (approximately 10% of Nova Scotia) comparable to the province of Prince Edward Island, and measures approximately 165 kilometres (102.5 mi) in length between its eastern and western-most extremities.
The coastline is heavily indented, accounting for its length of approximately 400 kilometres (250 mi), with the northern boundary usually being between 50-60 kilometres (30-37 mi) inland. The coast is mostly rock with small isolated sand beaches in sheltered bays. The largest bays include St. Margarets Bay, Halifax Harbour/Bedford Basin, Cole Harbour, Musquodoboit Harbour, Jeddore Harbour, Ship Harbour, Sheet Harbour, and Ecum Secum Harbour. The municipality's topography spans from lush farmland in the Musquodoboit Valley to rocky and heavily forested rolling hills.
The municipality is large in physical area, centred on the urban core and surrounded by areas of decreasing density the farther the community is from the core.
Unlike most municipalities with a sizable census metropolitan area, Halifax Regional Municipality's suburbs have been completely incorporated into the entire municipality (often by referendum. For example, the community of Spryfield, in the Mainland South area, voted to amalgamate with Halifax in 1968), with the urban area including the urban core, suburban communities and a rural commuter shed that encompasses almost half the municipality's landmass.
The urban area of HRM (2006 pop: 282,924)[3] is located in the western end of the municipality, fronting on Halifax Harbour. The dense urban core is centred on the Halifax Peninsula and the area of Dartmouth inside of the Circumferential Highway. The suburban area stretches beyond Mainland Halifax to the west, Cole Harbour to the east, and Bedford, Lower Sackville and Windsor Junction areas to the north.[7]
This urban area constitutes the most populous urban area on Canada's Atlantic coast, and the second largest coastal population centre in the country, after Vancouver, British Columbia. HRM currently accounts for 40% of Nova Scotia's population, and 15% of that of the Atlantic provinces.
The north eastern area centred on Sheet Harbour and the Musquodoboit Valley is completely rural, with more in common with adjacent rural areas of neighbouring counties.
HRM's boundary includes all of Halifax County except for several First Nation reserves. Statistics Canada identifies HRM as a census subdivision while Halifax County is listed as a census division, despite the fact that both geographic areas differ by only several dozen hectares. Statistics Canada also lists the dissolved municipalities of Bedford, Dartmouth and Halifax, describing them as "Dissolved (municipalities) having undergone an amalgamation/dissolution)."[8]
The Halifax Regional Municipality is an amalgamation of four municipal governments in the urban and rural areas, therefore its composition of neighbourhoods and communities is unlike other municipalities such as a city.
There are over 200[9] official rural and urban communities within Halifax County that have maintained their original geographic names (including the dissolved cities of Halifax and Dartmouth and the town of Bedford). These community names are used on survey and mapping documents, for 9-1-1 service, municipal planning, and postal service.
HRM is divided into eighteen community planning areas which are further divided into neighbourhoods or villages.[10] Several communities or neighbourhoods that were amalgamated by the former constituent municipalities in previous decades are starting to see their names gain increased use. The regional municipality has taken steps to reduce duplicate street names for its 9-1-1 emergency dispatch services; at the time of amalgamation, some street names were duplicated several times throughout HRM.[11]
The urban core of HRM is a term used to roughly describe the urban concentration surrounding Halifax Harbour in the western part of the municipality, and includes the Halifax Metropolitan Area, the Dartmouth Metropolitan Area, and the Bedford-Sackville areas. Rural areas lie to the east, west and north of this urban core. Certain rural communities on the urban fringe function as suburban or exurban areas, with the majority of those residents working in the urban core. Farther away, rural communities in HRM function much as any resource-based area in Nova Scotia, being sparsely populated, with their local economies developing around four major resource industries: agriculture, fishing, mining and forestry. It should be noted that the tourism industry is beginning to change how some rural communities in HRM function, particularly in coastal areas such as Hubbards, Peggys Cove and Lawrencetown.
HRM's climate is heavily influenced by its location on Nova Scotia's Atlantic coast. The weather is usually milder or cooler than that of central Canada, with the temperature remaining (with occasional notable exceptions) between about -15°C and 35°C (5°F to 95°F) inland. Coastal sections have even less range due to strong maritime influence. Precipitation is high year-round; snow, rain and ice mixes are common in the winter, though sometimes it is mild and rainy. Halifax often receives tropical storms, mostly between August and October. They are very rarely in Hurricane form when they make landfall, the most recent exception being when Hurricane Juan, a Category 2 storm, hit in September 2003. Atlantic sea surface temperatures off the coast of Nova Scotia were warmer than normal that year, and the accelerated storm track did not allow for the usual weakening that usually occurs with hurricanes moving over the colder waters of the Nova Scotia coast after passing the Gulfstream.
Climate data for Halifax, Nova Scotia (Halifax Citadel, 1971-2000) | |||||||||||||
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Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Record high °C (°F) | 14 (57) |
16 (61) |
23.5 (74.3) |
26.1 (79) |
33.3 (91.9) |
34 (93) |
33 (91) |
33.9 (93) |
32.2 (90) |
24 (75) |
20 (68) |
16.7 (62.1) |
34 (93) |
Average high °C (°F) | -0.2 (31.6) |
-0.1 (31.8) |
3.5 (38.3) |
8.4 (47.1) |
14.1 (57.4) |
19.4 (66.9) |
22.9 (73.2) |
23 (73) |
19 (66) |
13.1 (55.6) |
7.9 (46.2) |
2.6 (36.7) |
11.2 (52.2) |
Average low °C (°F) | -8.6 (16.5) |
-8.1 (17.4) |
-4.2 (24.4) |
0.8 (33.4) |
5.5 (41.9) |
10.5 (50.9) |
14.2 (57.6) |
14.8 (58.6) |
11.4 (52.5) |
5.9 (42.6) |
1.2 (34.2) |
-5.1 (22.8) |
3.2 (37.8) |
Record low °C (°F) | -26.1 (-15) |
-25 (-13) |
-21 (-6) |
-12 (10) |
-2.8 (27) |
1.7 (35.1) |
7.2 (45) |
6.1 (43) |
1 (34) |
-5 (23) |
-13.9 (7) |
-23.3 (-9.9) |
-26.1 (-15) |
Wind chill | -40.4 | -41.1 | -33.9 | -24.4 | -10.9 | -5.6 | 3.7 | 0.7 | -3.6 | -10.1 | -23.9 | -35.6 | -41.1 |
Precipitation mm (inches) | 150.7 (5.933) |
113.8 (4.48) |
134.4 (5.291) |
121.1 (4.768) |
119.4 (4.701) |
108 (4.25) |
105.9 (4.169) |
98.3 (3.87) |
107.1 (4.217) |
135.4 (5.331) |
153.7 (6.051) |
160.2 (6.307) |
1,508 (59.37) |
Rainfall mm (inches) | 112.3 (4.421) |
76.2 (3) |
106 (4.17) |
111.3 (4.382) |
118.1 (4.65) |
108 (4.25) |
105.9 (4.169) |
98.3 (3.87) |
107.1 (4.217) |
134.4 (5.291) |
146.8 (5.78) |
131.7 (5.185) |
1,356.1 (53.39) |
Snowfall cm (inches) | 38.4 (15.12) |
37.7 (14.84) |
28.4 (11.18) |
9.8 (3.86) |
1.2 (0.47) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
1.0 (0.39) |
6.9 (2.72) |
28.5 (11.22) |
151.8 (59.76) |
Avg. precipitation days | 13.1 | 10.5 | 12.5 | 14.3 | 14.4 | 12.6 | 11 | 10.3 | 10.9 | 13.5 | 14.3 | 14.2 | 151.6 |
Avg. rainy days | 8.3 | 5.8 | 9.6 | 12.9 | 14.3 | 12.6 | 11.0 | 10.3 | 10.9 | 13.3 | 13.6 | 10.8 | 133.4 |
Avg. snowy days | 6.1 | 5.6 | 4.1 | 1.9 | 0.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.2 | 1.1 | 4.9 | 24.1 |
Source: Environment Canada [12] |
Census | Population |
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County | |
1851 | 39,914 |
1861 | 49,021 |
1871 | 56,963 |
1881 | 67,917 |
1891 | 71,358 |
1901 | 74,662 |
1911 | 80,257 |
1921 | 97,228 |
1931 | 100,204 |
1941 | 122,656 |
1951 | 162,217 |
1961 | 225,723 |
1971 | 261,461 |
1981 | 288,126 |
1991 | 332,518 |
Regional | Municipality |
2001 | 359,111 |
2006 | 372,679 |
Population trend[13]
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Mother tongue language (2006)[1]
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Ethnic Groups (2006)[1]
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The Halifax Regional Municipality comprise 372,679 residents (2006 census). Approximately 18% of the population is under the age of 14, while 11% are 65 and older.
Ethnic Origin | Population | % of Total |
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Canadian | 139,035 | 37.7 |
English | 126,210 | 34.2 |
Scottish | 110,065 | 29.8 |
Irish | 90,650 | 24.5 |
French | 66,400 | 18.0 |
German | 44,615 | 12.1 |
Dutch | 14,640 | 4.0 |
First Nations | 12,650 | 3.4 |
Welsh | 8,220 | 2.2 |
Other British Isles | 7,045 | 1.9 |
Italian | 6,700 | 1.8 |
Polish | 5,375 | 1.5 |
Acadian | 5,270 | 1.4 |
Ukrainian | 4,030 | 1.1 |
Lebanese | 3,895 | 1.1 |
Chinese | 3,720 | 1 |
Other African | 3,480 | 0.9 |
Black | 3,205 | 0.8 |
The urban area of Halifax Regional Municipality is a major economic centre in eastern Canada with a large concentration of government services and private sector companies. Halifax serves as the business, banking, government and cultural centre for the Maritime region. Major employers and economic generators include the Department of National Defence, as well as the Port of Halifax. The municipality has a growing concentration of manufacturing industries and is becoming a major multi-modal transportation hub through growth at the port, the Halifax Stanfield International Airport, and improving rail and highway connections. A real estate boom in recent years has led to numerous new property developments, including the gentrification of some former working-class areas.
Agriculture, fishing, mining, forestry and natural gas extraction are major resource industries found in the rural areas of HRM. HRM's largest agricultural district is in the Musquodoboit Valley; the total number of farms in HRM is 150, of which 110 are family-owned. Fishing harbours are located along all coastal areas with some having an independent harbour authority, and others being managed as small craft harbours under the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans.
Other resource industries in HRM include the natural gas fields off the coast of Sable Island, as well as clay, shale, gold, limestone, and gypsum extraction in rural areas of the mainland portion of the municipality.
The Halifax Regional Municipality is governed by a mayor (elected at large) and a twenty-three person council, who are elected by geographic district; municipal elections occur every four years. HRM has established community councils where three or more councillors agree to form these councils to deal primarily with local development issues. Most community council decisions are subject to final approval by regional council. The current Mayor of the Halifax Regional Municipality is Peter J. Kelly.
The Halifax Regional Council is responsible for all facets of municipal government, including the Halifax Regional Police, Halifax Public Libraries, Halifax Fire and Emergency, Halifax Regional Water Commission, parks and recreation, civic addressing, public works, waste management, and planning and development.
The Halifax Regional Municipality has a well-developed network of public and private schools, providing instruction from primary to grade twelve; one hundred and thirty seven public schools are administered by the Halifax Regional School Board, as well as three public schools administered by the Conseil Scolaire Acadien Provincial, whereas the fourteen private schools are operated independently.
The municipality is also home to the following post-secondary educational institutions: Dalhousie University, Saint Mary's University, Mount Saint Vincent University, the Halifax campus of Université Sainte-Anne, University of King's College, Atlantic School of Theology, NSCAD University, the Centre for Arts and Technology, and the Nova Scotia Community College. The presence of so many university and college students contributes to a vibrant youth culture in the region, as well as making it a major centre for university education in eastern Canada.
The urban area of Halifax Regional Municipality is a major cultural centre within the Atlantic provinces. The municipality's urban core also benefits from a large population of post-secondary students who strongly influence the local cultural scene. HRM has a number of art galleries, theatres and museums, as well as most of the region's national-quality sports and entertainment facilities. The municipality is home to many performance venues, namely the Rebecca Cohn Auditorium, the Neptune Theatre, and The Music Room. HRM also is the home to many of the region's major cultural attractions, such as Symphony Nova Scotia, the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, The Khyber ICA, the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic and the Neptune Theatre. On special occasions, the city will put on a fireworks display which is best viewed from a boat. The region is noted for the strength of its music scene and nightlife, especially in the central urban core. See List of musical groups from Halifax, Nova Scotia for a partial list.
HRM plays host to a wide variety of festivals that take place throughout the year, including: The Atlantic Film Festival, The Royal Nova Scotia International Tattoo, The Halifax Busker Festival, Greekfest, The Atlantic Jazz Festival, The Multicultural Festival, periodic Tall Ship events, and Shakespeare by the Sea, to name a few. Many of these celebrations have become world renowned over the past several years.
HRM has also become a significant film-production centre, with many American and Canadian filmmakers using the streetscapes, often to stand in for other cities that are more expensive to work in. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation has its Atlantic Canada production centres (radio and television) based in Halifax, and quite a number of radio and television programs are made in the region for national broadcast.
HRM is considered by many to be the cultural centre of the Maritimes. The municipality has been able to maintain many of its maritime and military traditions, while opening itself to a growing multicultural population.
The Halifax Regional Municipality is home to a number of outdoor recreational opportunities, including numerous ocean and lake beaches, as well as rural and urban parks. The municipality has a host of organised community intramural sports, as well as varsity and intramural sports offered by public schools and post-secondary institutions and has extensive facilities.
The region is home to several professional and semi-professional sport franchises, such as the Halifax Mooseheads of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (see also Sports teams in the Halifax Regional Municipality).
The region has also hosted several major sporting events, including the 2003 World Junior Hockey Championship, 2003 Nokia Brier, the 2004 Women's World Ice Hockey Championships, and 2007 World Indoor Lacrosse Championship. From 1984 to 2007, the region had been home to the CIS Men's Basketball Championship, however the tournament was moved to Ottawa, Ontario starting in 2008. The 72nd Ice Hockey World Championship was held between May 2 and May 18, 2008 in Halifax, Nova Scotia and Quebec City, Canada.
Halifax was selected as Canada's bid for the 2014 Commonwealth Games in 2006 but withdrew from the international competition in advance of the November 9, 2007 selection date on March 8.
In February 2007, the municipality was selected as the host community for the 2011 Canada Winter Games.
HRM is the Maritimes' centre for broadcast and print media. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation(CBC), CTV Television Network (CTV), and Global Television all have regional television hubs in the municipality. CBC Radio has a major regional studio and there are also regional hubs for Rogers Radio and various private broadcast franchises, as well as a regional bureau for The Canadian Press/Broadcast News.
HRM's print media is centred on its single daily newspaper, the broadsheet Halifax Chronicle-Herald as well as two free newspapers, the daily commuter-oriented edition of Metro International and the free alternative arts weekly The Coast. Frank provides HRM with a bi-weekly satirical and gossip magazine.
From 1974-2008, HRM had a second daily newspaper, the tabloid The Daily News which still publishes several neighbourhood weekly papers such as The Bedford-Sackville Weekly News, The Halifax West-Clayton Park Weekly News and the Dartmouth-Cole Harbour Weekly News. These weekly papers compete with The Chronicle-Herald's weekly Community Heralds HRM West, HRM East, and HRM North.
Halifax Harbour is a major port used by numerous shipping lines, administered by the Halifax Port Authority. The navy and coast guard have major installations along prominent sections of coastline in both Halifax and Dartmouth. The harbour is also home to a public ferry service connecting downtown Halifax to two locations in Dartmouth. Sheet Harbour is the other major port in the municipality and serves industrial shippers on the Eastern Shore.
The Halifax Port Authority's various shipping terminals constitute the eastern terminus of Canadian National Railway's transcontinental network. VIA Rail Canada provides overnight passenger rail service six days a week to Montreal with the Ocean, a train equipped with sleeper cars that stops in major centres along the way, such as Moncton.
Halifax Stanfield International Airport serves HRM and most of the province, providing scheduled flights to domestic and international destinations. CFB Shearwater, an air force base, is located on the eastern side of Halifax Harbour.
The municipality's urban core is linked by the Angus L. Macdonald and A. Murray MacKay suspension bridges, as well as the network of 100-series highways which function as expressways. The Armdale traffic circle is an infamous choke point for vehicle movement in the western part of the urban core, especially at rush hour.
The urban core of HRM is served by Metro Transit, which operates standard bus routes, bus-rapid transit routes, as well as the pedestrian-only harbour ferries. Established in 1752 , the municipality's ferry service is the oldest continuously running salt water ferry service in North America.[16]
Halifax Harbour and Ferry |
Driving in the Halifax Urban Area during winter on Windmill Road in Dartmouth. Cars heading toward the MacKay Bridge. |
Name | Height | Floors |
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Fenwick Tower | 322 feet (98 m) | 32 |
Purdy's Wharf Tower 2 | 289 feet (88 m) | 22 |
1801 Hollis Street | 285 feet (87 m) | 22 |
Barrington Tower | 276 feet (84 m) | 20 |
Cogswell Tower | 259 feet (79 m) | 20 |
Maritime Centre | 256 feet (78 m) | 21 |
Queen Square | 246 feet (75 m) | 19 |
Purdy's Wharf Tower 1 | 243 feet (74 m) | 18 |
Bank of Montreal Building | 240 feet (73 m) | 18 |
TD Tower | 240 feet (73 m) | 18 |
HRM's urban core is home to a number of regional landmark buildings and retains some significant historic buildings. The downtown's mid level office towers are overlooked by the fortress of Citadel Hill with its iconic Halifax Town Clock.
The architecture of Halifax's South End is renowned for its grand Victorian houses while the West End and North End, Halifax have many blocks of well preserved wooden residential houses with notable features such as the "Halifax Porch". Dalhousie University's campus is often featured in films and documentaries. Dartmouth also has its share of historic neighbourhoods.
The urban core is home to several blocks of typical North American high-rise office buildings, however segments of the downtown is governed by height restrictions which prevent buildings from obstructing certain sight lines between Citadel Hill and Halifax Harbour. This has resulted in some modern high rises being built at unusual angles or locations.
In recent decades there has been a good deal of conflict between those in favour of modern development and heritage preservationists. The former has been occasionally seen as threatening the historic character of certain areas of the city, while the latter has been accused of stifling growth in the city and contributing to the economic stagnation of certain districts. Much municipal consultation in recent years, such as the HRM by Design project, has focused on how to allow modernization and development to encourage repatriation and renewed community diversification, while preserving the remaining heritage structures and character.
Hants County / Colchester County | ||||
Lunenburg County | Guysborough County | |||
Halifax Regional Municipality | ||||
Atlantic Ocean |
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