The Killarney Aquatic & Recreation Centre is the kind of facility that earns routine rather than special-trip status — regulars have a lane preference and a locker habit, and it fills on weekday evenings. The surrounding streets are tree-lined and residential, with Killarney School sitting mid-neighbourhood and the KILLARNEY off-leash park pulling the morning dog crowd to the west. Bus routes thread north toward the commercial corridor and east toward Chinook Station, so downtown stays commutable without a car being essential. Restaurants are part of the fabric here — the commercial strips to the north lean heavily on dining, and people in the neighbourhood tend to know where to go for lunch on a Tuesday. The proximity to the Beltline adds options without the constant noise of it. Transit connections, a good school, a proper rec centre, a well-worn off-leash park: this is a centre-city neighbourhood that covers its bases without much ceremony.

7,937
Population
59.8%
Owner-Occupied
36
Median Age
$80,320
Avg Income
22.9%
Visible Minority

Census 2021

The Vibe

Beth Ed
501trees per 1,000
498city avg
7parks
13designated
2in community
Holy Name (Bilingual) School (CSSD)
Maksym Shaleyko
5restaurants
3cafes
2bars
Damian Warszawski
1grocery
1pharmacy
2banks
Killarney Aquatic & Recreation Centre
4childcare
3gyms
1dentists
1vets
Holy Name Church
5libraries
5worship

The Economy

$746,637avg assessed
$717,869city avg
detached
1k
semi detached
1k
row
766
apartment
313
9.3xprice-to-income
11.2xcity avg
$1,871avg rent
Here
9.3
City
11.2
94permits (12mo)
94active licenses
Retail
24
Food Service
21
Property Management
17
Personal Service
16

The Infrastructure

21.8crimes per 1,000
18.7city avg
3stops per 1,000
4.5city avg
4.5 kmto downtown
Route 2 — Mount Pleasant/Killarney 17 Av SW
Route 6 — Killarney/26 Av SW
Route 9 — Dalhousie Station/Chinook Station
357per 1,000
296city avg