BUILTHERITAGE
Stewarded by the City of Edmonton Archives
  • By Time
  • By Place
  • By Story
⌘K
BUILTHERITAGE
Stewarded by the City of Edmonton Archives

Discover the structures, places, and stories that shaped Edmonton's built environment.

Resources

NewsFAQsLinks

Contact

City of Edmonton Archivesarchives@edmonton.ca780-496-8711

We acknowledge that the land on which Edmonton is built is Treaty Six Territory. We thank the diverse Indigenous Peoples whose footsteps have marked this territory for centuries, such as nêhiyaw (Cree), Dené, Anishinaabe (Saulteaux), Nakota Isga (Nakota Sioux), and Niitsitapi (Blackfoot) peoples. We also acknowledge this as the Métis homeland and the home of one of the largest communities of Inuit south of the 60th parallel. It is a welcoming place for all peoples who come from around the world to share Edmonton as a home. It is important that we not only recognize our shared histories, but also each other's contributions to establishing the built heritage of Edmonton and Area.

© 2026 City of Edmonton Archives
Privacy Policy•Terms of Use•Accessibility
  1. Structures

Bard Residence

This grand home was built by Indian Agent, entrepreneur and real estate speculator Delmar Bard and lived in by his family for three generations - over 80 years.

On this record

Connections
14Connections
Photos
6Photos
Bard Residence, 1916

On this page

Details

Built
1912
Neighbourhood
Strathcona
Address
10544-84 Avenue, Edmonton, AB, T6E 2H4
Historic designation
Unknown
Time period
Urban Growth: 1905-1913
People
L. Keith
Architectural styles
Foursquare
Character defining elements
Balcony, Bay Window, Brackets, Brick Structure, Cast Stone, Cedar Shingle, Chimney, Columns, Cornice, Dentil

Location

About

Located on two-and-one-half city lots, the Bard Residence is a 427 square metre (4,600 square foot) brick foursquare home which has an attached conservatory, and a carriage house with second floor living quarters. The solid massing and symmetrically composed front façade with a central entry and full open veranda is a beautiful representation of the elaborate foursquare architectural style that was popular in the privileged classes between about 1910 and 1925. Original features inside the home include oak woodwork, built-in furniture, stained glass windows imported from France, original plumbing fixtures, and the original, intact gas fireplace. Unique to this home is a built-in vacuum system apparently installed by the original owner.

The flat roofed conservatory includes a feature fanlight and sidelights adjoining both front and side entrances. Enduring original features on the large, gable-roofed carriage house include a cupola, feed chutes for the horses in the stables, a cistern, and hinged wooden doors for loading hay in the loft. A turntable was installed in the driveway so that a buggy, and later an automobile could be rotated 180 degrees and drivers could avoid backing out.

Originally from St. Paul, Minnesota, Delmar Bard was a self-made success story. Orphaned as a baby, Bard made his way to Canada and settled in St. Albert in 1896. He worked as an Indian Agent and Farm Instructor at the Alexander Indian Reserve near Riviere Qui Barre, then married his wife Ella and moved to Strathcona in 1907 where he worked as an inspector for the Provincial Government. He ended up purchasing a Whyte Avenue butcher shop, but his major source of wealth came through property investments in the pre-First World War real estate boom. This home is a significant indication of his economic and social success, requiring $6,500 to build when an average home could be erected for less than $1,000 at the time.

Media

Balfour ManorPrevious structure

Structure 14 of 185

Becker ResidenceNext structure