Calgary

With its picturesque prairie landscapes, spectacular mountain views and vibrant urban centre, dynamic blend of warm western hospitality and big-city energy, Calgary is an excellent choice to host IGC 2028. With a population of over 1.4 million, Calgary is the 4th largest city in Canada. Known as the “Greatest Outdoor Show”, the Calgary Stampede welcomes one million spectators during ten days in July, celebrating our western heritage which can also be explored year round at Heritage Park. 2024’s stampede drew in crowds of 1.4 million! Calgary’s energy is a reflection of its entrepreneurial history, cowboy spirit, and cosmopolitan attitude.

Calgary’s energy exhilarates, invigorates, and motivates; it is a place of big ideas, big skies, and welcoming, friendly people. There is always something to do whether trying a new restaurant or attending one of the many festivals or attractions. Calgary is gaining global recognition for its architecture, young and energized population, and celebrated arts and culinary scenes.

Images (top to bottom): Calgary Stampede (image by Colin Way), Busker + Calgary Tower (image by Colin Way), Calgary Marathon 2023 (image by Emily Miles), Calgary Airport (image by Colin Way). Header image by Emily Miles.

Day Trips from Calgary

There are five UNESCO World Heritage Sites with geological significance within an easy day trip from Calgary, as well as other accessible day trips.

Dinosaur Provincial Park
UNESCO World Heritage (and Geoheritage) Site

Showing the greatest known concentration of Late Cretaceous dinosaur fossils (44 species).

Image credit: Jenni Scott

Head Smashed In Buffalo Jump
UNESCO World Heritage Site

Known world-wide for its remarkable testimony of prehistoric life. The site bears witness to a custom practiced by native people of the North American plains at HSIBJ for nearly 6,000 years.

Image credit: Andrew Penner/ Travel Alberta

The Burgess Shale

The first observed evidence for the “Cambrian Explosion of Life” can be found in the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks.

Image credit: Murdoch McKinnon

Writing on the Stone Provincial Park
UNESCO World Heritage Site

The unusual landforms here are where significant things happened to the ancestors of the Blackfoot. It is a place where the ancient stories took place and has thousands of petroglyphs that date back over 5,000 years.

Image credit: Alberta Parks

Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology

Internationally renowned museum dedicated exclusively to the study of ancient life, featuring one of the world’s largest displays of dinosaurs.

Image credit: Royal Tyrrell Museum

Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park
UNESCO Biosphere Reserve

Discover high mountains and deep canyons, forest belts and prairie grasslands, deep glacial-trough lakes and rivers that feed three oceans.

Image credit: Christina Skeith @flygirrrl/ Travel Alberta

Drumheller badlands and hoodoos

Explore the badlands landscapes with its hoodoos and burning coal beds.

Image credit: Travel Alberta

Blackfoot Crossing

Visit the location of the Treaty 7 signing and immerse yourself in elder story-teller, dancing performances, whilst sampling traditional Bannock (Indigenous bread). Overnight stays in tepees are possible.

Image credit: K Boggs