Edmonton Neighbourhood Profile
Keheewin
Keheewin is an Edmonton neighbourhood of about 1,209 homes — 52.7% houses and 47.3% condos, most homes built around 1983. The typical (median) house is assessed at $442,500, 1% below the citywide median (149th of 277 neighbourhoods); condos around $192,000. Across its established houses — largely the same properties over time — the median assessed value changed +13% from 2012 to 2025. 77% of homes are owner-occupied, median household income is $85,000, and 3 public schools are designated for it. Figures throughout are City assessed values — directional and comparative, not exact sale prices ("typical" means the median).
Total homes
1,209
52.7% houses · 47.3% condos
Typical house
$442,500
1% below citywide · 149th of 277
Typical condo
$192,000
2% above citywide
House $/sq ft
$321
$3,455/m² · 6% above citywide
Condo $/sq ft
$175
$1,884/m² · 8% below citywide
Typical lot
6,340 ft²
589 m² · 18% above citywide
Typical age
1983
median house build year
Where it is
At a glance.Keheewin's location and boundary, with schools marked — green areas are parks and open space.

The homes
What's built here — the housing stock, its age, and the condo & rental supply.
What's here
A mix of houses and condos. 52.7% houses (freehold) · 47.3% condos (condominium-titled).
Building types in detail
Bedrooms — homes here by bedroom count:
6% of homes needed major repairs in 2021, as assessed by their own residents.
Building-type, bedroom and condition figures from the 2021 federal census.
When it was built
Most homes here were built in the 1980s. The median build year is 1983.
Full age breakdown
Condos & multi-family
11 condo developments here — about 572 condo dwellings, plus 1 purpose-built rental / multi-family building.
How condos & rentals are counted
11 condo developments, the largest around 84 units — about 572 condo dwellings in total. Separately-titled parking and storage stalls aren't counted as homes.
1 rental / multi-family building, typically built around 1993 — 1 mid ($1–10M). Purpose-built rentals (assessed as a single parcel each), separate from the owned homes counted above. Unit counts aren't in the open data.
Living here
The people and the day-to-day — who lives here, and the schools, shops, parks and transit around them.
Who lives here
Mostly homeowners. Median household income $85,000.
Resident snapshot from the 2021 federal census.
Median household income
$85,000
42% earn $100k+
Homeowners
77%
23% rent
Bachelor's degree or higher
34%
of residents 15+
Commute to work
84%
drive · 9% transit · 2% walk/bike
Median age 47.2; 31% of households have kids at home; 32% lived at a different address five years earlier.
Residents by age
Median age 47.2.
Household income spread
11% of households reported $200k or more; 23% under $50k.
Government transfers made up 18.6% of residents' 2020 income (including 4.7% pandemic supports — 2020 was a COVID income year); 11.1% of residents were below the low-income measure (LIM-AT).
Household total income, 2020, from the 2021 federal census (income shares and low-income prevalence as reported). Statistics Canada rounds and suppresses small counts, so shares may not sum exactly to 100.
Households & families
Average household size 2.3; families with kids at home average 1.9 children.
What residents do for work
Occupation groups (share of the labour force):
Industries residents work in (top 10; the rest combined):
Unemployment rate in the census reference week (May 2021): 8.8% — a pandemic-period snapshot.
How long people stay
9% of residents had moved within the previous year; 32% lived at a different address five years earlier.
Counts every change of address — moves within Keheewin, into it, owners and renters alike.
Housing costs & affordability
A household earning the local median income would put about 14% of it toward typical owner shelter costs here — or 18% toward the typical rent.
Typical owner shelter cost
$1,000/mo
46.1% of owners hold a mortgage
Typical rent
$1,250/mo
median tenant shelter cost
Affordability in detail
Households spending 30% or more of their own income on their own shelter — the standard affordability-stress measure: 15.7% of owner households · 35.2% of renter households. (Different from the headline above, which compares the median cost against the median income — a typical-household what-if, not a count of stretched households.)
In core housing need (unaffordable, unsuitable or inadequate, with no affordable local alternative): 12% of owners · 19.6% of renters.
Owners' own estimate of their home's value (2021): $340,000 median — self-reported, so it can differ from the assessed medians above.
Owner costs reflect current owners — including long-time, mortgage-free ones — not the cost to buy in today. The income-share figures compare 2020 median household income with shelter costs reported in 2021.
Schools
3 designated public schools. Edmonton Public catchment for Keheewin: Keheewin, D. S. MacKenzie and Harry Ainlay.
All schools, levels & catchment notes
Designated public schools (Edmonton Public Schools catchment for Keheewin):
- ElementaryKeheewinK to Gr 6
- Junior HighD. S. MacKenzieGr 7-9
- Senior HighHarry AinlayGr 10-12
Catchments are set by the school board and can change — and the City's published catchment data can lag new schools and boundary updates — so confirm the current designated school with Edmonton Public Schools before relying on it.
Schools located in Keheewin:
- PublicKeheewinElementary
Independent / private schools aren't in the City's open data, so they aren't listed here. School-quality ratings are published separately by the Fraser Institute (not affiliated with this site).
Shopping & amenities
About 89 businesses in Keheewin, employing roughly 1,484 people.
Business mix & how this is counted
From the City's business census (2025 survey).
The mix of what's here, from currently-licensed businesses:
Counts come from City of Edmonton business licences and the City's business census — a licence means a business is registered at an address here, not a guarantee it's open today , and includes home-based businesses (about 25% of licences here). Landlord rental licences are excluded, and a listing isn't an endorsement.
Parks & green space
4 parks (31 hectares) and 1 playground in Keheewin — includes a district activity park and a greenway (trail corridor).
Parks
4
31 hectares total
Playgrounds
1
Green-space types & notes
Types of green space:
- Greenway2
- District activity park1
- School & community park1
Counts come from the City of Edmonton's parks and playgrounds open data. A park is attributed to the neighbourhood its centre point falls in, so a large park or greenway that spans several areas is counted once — treat boundaries as approximate. Trail corridors appear here as greenways; off-street bike routes aren't included.
Transit & connectivity
No LRT line in Keheewin today. The nearest station is Century Park (Capital Line), about 1.1 km away (straight-line). The neighbourhood is served by 12 bus routes.
Looking ahead, the nearest future stop is Twin Brooks on the Capital Line South, about 2.3 km from the centre — under construction, targeted to open later this decade. Timelines can slip, and a nearby line doesn't imply any change in property values.
Nearest LRT
1.1 km
to Century Park
Bus routes
12
serving the area
Future LRT
2.3 km
Twin Brooks · under construction
Bus routes & notes
12 bus routes serve Keheewin: 56, 518, 519, 521, 667, 712, 713, 718, 719, 721, 722 and 729. They run from 19 boardable stops inside the neighbourhood.
No route here meets the frequent-service bar (≈ 15-minute weekday headway).
Bus routes and frequency come from the City's ETS GTFS schedule — the routes whose trips call at stops inside Keheewin, with “frequent” meaning at least 100 weekday trips through the neighbourhood (about a bus every 15 minutes or better, counting both directions). Distances are straight-line (“as the crow flies”) from the neighbourhood centre — the actual walking or driving route is longer. Future stations are under construction; their locations and timelines come from City of Edmonton project pages and can change. Day-to-day commute mode (drive / transit / walk) is shown under “Who lives here.” Source: City of Edmonton LRT & ETS (GTFS) Open Data.
The market
Assessed value over time, and recent building activity.
Assessed value over time
Median assessed value changed +13% from 2012 to 2025.
That tracks Keheewin's houses — largely the same homes throughout — so it's a real value change, not a shifting mix.
Building activity
Since 2015: 134 building permits, about 133 net new homes, and 3 secondary-suite permits.
Of those new units, roughly 1% are individually-owned (houses + condos), 99% purpose-built rental, and 0% in mixed-use buildings.
Split by building type (a strong proxy, not a guarantee of final tenure).
Permits year by year
Permits count every new home built — including purpose-built rental apartments and mixed-use buildings — so this can run well above the "total homes" figure above, which counts only individually-owned houses and condos.
Source
City of Edmonton Open Data — assessment, property info, building permits; Statistics Canada 2021 Census of Population (City of Edmonton neighbourhood tabulation). Contains information licensed under the Open Government Licence – City of Edmonton.
About these figures. They use the City of Edmonton's annual property assessment — its mass-appraisal estimate of value as of July 1 the prior year, informed by that year's sales but applied across the whole roll at once. That makes it a reliable directional and comparative signal (ideal for "how does this neighbourhood compare"), but not the exact price a specific home would sell for today — for that you need a comparative market analysis. Resident demographics and housing-cost figures (income and its distribution, age, education, commute, tenure, household types, shelter costs, occupations and industries, mobility) and the building-type, bedroom and condition mix are from the 2021 federal census — the most recent neighbourhood-level vintage; the City notes it fell during the pandemic, so treat these figures as directional. Census figures are adapted from Statistics Canada, 2021 Census of Population; this does not constitute an endorsement by Statistics Canada. Trevor Tardif is a licensed REALTOR® with REAL Broker AB Ltd, Edmonton, Alberta. Content on this site does not constitute financial or investment advice.
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