Top 13. Best Tourist Attractions in Kitchener - Travel Ontario, Canada
Top 13. Best Tourist Attractions and Beautiful Places in Kitchener - Travel Ontario, Canada: Victoria Park, Waterloo Region Museum, Doon Heritage Village, Joseph Schneider Haus, Bingemans Big Splash, Huron Natural Area, Themuseum, McLennan Park, Kitchener City Hall, Chicopee Ski & Summer Resort, Waterloo Pioneers Memorial, St. Mary Our Lady of the Seven Sorrows Church, Woodside National Historic Site
Kitchener Tourist Attractions: 10 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Kitchener? Check out our Kitchener Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Kitchener.
Top Places to visit in Kitchener:
Waterloo Region Museum, Victoria Park, Huron Natural Area, Doon Heritage Village, Schneider Haus National Historic Site, McLennan Park, Kitchener City Hall, The Museum, Woodside National Historic Site, Bingemans Big Splash
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Ontario travel, Ontario attorney general, top 47 best places to visit in Ontario Canada
Ontario one of the 13 provinces and territories of Canada, is located in east-central Canada. It is Canada's most populous province by a large margin, accounting for nearly 40 percent of the country's population, and is the second-largest province in total area. Ontario is fourth-largest in total area when the territories of the Northwest Territories and Nunavut are included.It is home to the nation's capital city, Ottawa, and the nation's most populous city, Toronto.
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Ontario most beautifule places we're visiting lists bellow:
Toronto,
Niagara Falls,
Ottawa,
Niagara River,
Algonquin Provincial Park,
Regional Municipality of Niagara,
Niagara-on-the-Lake,
Lake Erie,
Lake Ontario,
Kingston,
Hamilton,
Georgian Bay,
Bruce Peninsula National Park,
Windsor,
London,
The Blue Mountains,
Mississauga,
Tobermory,
Niagara, Toronto,
Barrie,
Greater Sudbury,
Sault Ste. Marie,
Collingwood,
Thunder Bay,
Peterborough,
Burlington,
Manitoulin Island,
Fathom Five National Marine Park,
St. Catharines,
Killarney Provincial Park,
Killarney,
North Bay,
Oakville,
Guelph,
Kitchener,
Wasaga Beach,
Killbear Provincial Park,
Markham,
Waterloo,
Orillia,
Fort Erie,
Casa Loma,
Thousand Islands National Park,
Brampton,
Gananoque,
Lake Superior Provincial Park,
Huntsville
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11 Cheapest Places to Live in Canada
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11 Cheapest Places to Live in Canada.
Deciding on a place to live can be a difficult choice, particularly if finances are an important factor. Before deciding where to settle down, it often pays to consider cost of living as well as the different opportunities that certain locations can offer. Climate, population, job access, ease of transportation, culture and amenities may be among your considerations as well. Fortunately, there are some great low priced options in Canada which we found to offer a lot of value for your investment. With that in mind, here are 11 of the cheapest places to live in Canada.
1: Hamilton
2: Kitchener
3: Guelph
4: Surrey
5: Moncton
6: Kelowna
7: Quebec City
8: Ottawa
9: Kingston
10: Montreal
11: Toronto
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Discover Kitchener, Canada | JustFly
The city of Kitchener is located in Southern Ontario, Canada. It is a part of the Regional Municipality of Waterloo. Kitchener is home to a number of galleries, museums, and hosts cultural events. Visitors may attend the Centre In The Square, participate in the annual Kitchener-Waterloo Oktoberfest, and visit Kitchener’s oldest outdoor park, Victoria Park!
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5 Worst Places To Live in Canada
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Just a few short months into Donald Trump's reign, Canada was already saying that, “In the event of a mass exodus of American citizens, Canada will always be a hospitable country.” Of course, the Great White North isn’t all sunshine and sparkles. So here are the Top 5 Canadian cities you’re going to want to avoid.
At Number 5. Kitchener-Waterloo, Ontario
If you're fleeing the States to avoid the tidal wave of racial abuse, best avoid Canada’s hate crime capital, Kitchener-Waterloo. Verbal and physical attacks on minority ethnic, religious, and LGBT communities happen here on a higher per capita rate than anywhere else in the country.
Number 4. Miramichi, New Brunswick
The city of Miramichi however, banded together to craft a symbol of the town’s growing support for the LGBT community. Shortly afterwards, the stamps were defaced twice. What’s more, residents have responded with outright homophobia.
Number 3. Sarnia, Ontario
This might look like a boring little town, with a decent cost of living and good enough schools. That's if you ignore the fact that the view is densely populated with pollution-spewing factories. Also, ecumenic stagnation has caused Sarnia’s downtown area to become a ghost town.
Number 2. Saint John, New Brunswick
Saint John is very close to an idyllic little town of resplendent natural beauty named St. John’s. So unless you want to work in a paper mill or a nuclear power plant, you should definitely shoot for St. John’s NOT St. John.
And at number 1. Thetford Mines, Quebec
Did you know people still mine asbestos? It’s got to come from somewhere; at least, that’s the philosophy in Thetford Mines, a place so dedicated to extracting the exceptionally unhealthy substance that they named the town after it.
Where do you think the worst place to live in Canada is?
Worst Canadian Cities by Crime Rate
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Worst Canadian Cities by Crime Rate
5. . Edmonton
4. Regina
3. Saskatoon
2. Thunder Bay
1. Winnipeg
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As any Law and Order addict knows, there are two groups that protect and represent the people, “the police who investigate crimes, and the district attorneys who prosecute the offenders.” These are not their stories, however.
Instead, we’re here to focus on the nastier side of that story, namely, the cities where these crimes occur. Violent crime rates are a huge factor when determining where you want to move or visit, and understandably so. Washington D.C., Chicago and Detroit years had to fight against their public image as some of the most violent and crime-ridden areas in the United States, with notable improvements in several areas.
As the say, the first step in solving a problem is admitting you have one, so let this serve less as a list for public province shaming as a rehabilitative one.
That being said, let’s dive in and take a look at “the most violent cities in Canada,” according to the crime severity index.
Edmonton: Edmonton has been seeing some tough times as of late—and we’re not just talking about the Oilers. (Really, how many first round draft picks are they going to get?) Unfortunately, Edmonton’s crime rate is about as stagnant as their hockey team. The city has had a persistent problem with violent crime, especially sex-based crimes such as sexual assault, aggravated sexual assault, and sexual violations against children. That being said, Edmonton’s overall crime index rating is “only” 89.7—far lower than the others on this list.
Regina: Regina, ranks rather highly (or lowly, depending on how you look at it) when it comes to overall violent crime in Canada. It’s been trading places with Saskatoon the past few years, checking in with a 105.8 crime index rating. On the one hand, that’s definitely far too high, and hurts what is otherwise one of the more underrated settlement destinations in Canada. On the other hand, however, as Regina ranks just below Saskatoon this year, the latter’s loss is the former’s gain, as it can now report a “drop” in crime, at least in that context. Let’s hope that continues into the future, rather than the rumours of potential spikes that have been reported in the last year.
Saskatoon: Saskatoon’s placement on this list is something of a good news/bad news situation…let’s get the latter out of the way first, so we can end this section on a good note. To begin with, yes, with a violent crime index rating of 109.9. The city has flipped back and forth with Regina (see above) in the overall rankings, and has sometimes even found itself at the ignominious “top” of the standings. In the NHL, that wins you the Presidents’ Trophy. In the war on crime, that wins you an incredible amount of scrutiny. Thankfully, however, there are signs that Saskatoon is trying hard indeed to improve its record and reputation. In 2013, the mayor announced that overall violent crime in Saskatoon had dropped 9%, and there are hopes that that trend can continue.
Cost Of Living In Kitchener, Canada In 2019, Rank 202nd In The World
These data are based on 675 entries in the past 18 months from 73 different contributors. Please help us to update the data, thank you.
15 Top Tourist Attractions in Ontario (Canada)
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15 Top Tourist Attractions in Ontario (Canada): Art Gallery of Ontario, Canada's Wonderland, Fort William Historical Park, MarineLand, National Gallery of Canada, Niagara Falls, Ontario's Provincial and National Parks, Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Royal Ontario Museum, Sainte-Marie Among the Hurons, Thousand Islands, Toronto's CN Tower, Blue Mountain Resort
TOP 8 WORST PLACES TO MOVE IN CANADA (2013)
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We’ve told you about some of the underrated immigration destinations in Canada, now check out our list of places prospective Canadians should avoid: the poor places, the racist places, the isolated places, the depressing places, the worst of the worst! Naturally, the tiny towns in the woods of Northern Ontario or the southern shore of Newfoundland would be the worst of the worst, but let’s be reasonable. Here are list of towns and cities with a substantial population (at least 5000 residents) that might seem like a decent idea to a prospective immigrant interested in a slower pace of living.
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1. New Glasgow, Nova Scotia
Photo by Verne Equinox, via Wikimedia Commons
Photo by JBarta via Wikimedia Commons
High crime rate? Check.
High unemployment? Check.
High cost of living? Check.
Limited access to services? Check.
High property taxes? Check.
Bad weather? Check.
Despite being a small, quaint city just a few hours from Halifax, New Glasgow tops polls of the worst places to live in Canada. How could those 10,000 people stand it? They must have all been born there.
In 2009 New Glasgow ranked 36th out of 208 in StatsCan's crime severity index. The crime rate increased from 2011 to 2012, and was significantly higher than the provincial average.
In 2006, New Glasgow had an unemployment rate of 7.7%. It has decreased since then and, as of the 2011 census, it was 5.7%, or slightly lower than the provincial average.
The cost of living in New Glasgow was estimated by one website to be 4% higher than the cost of living in New York City, but only 30.3% of those reporting say their households earn more than $60,000 Canadian per year (after taxes).
Property tax in New Glasgow was higher than the average in Nova Scotia and significantly higher than Halifax up to and including 2013.
Climate
New Glasgow receives 1212 cm of precipitation per year (that's more than Vancouver).
2. Kitchener - Waterloo, Ontario
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Congratulations, Kitchener / Waterloo, you are the hate crime capital of Canada! Despite hosting two universities and a massive tech company campus, the Kitchener-Waterloo-Cambridge tri-city area experiences a high per capita rate of verbal and physical assaults on ethnic, religious and gay minorities. Despite its location in the highly diverse Southern Ontario region, Kitchener has inherited the mantle from the previous main offender, Calgary.
In 2011 Kitchener-Waterloo was surpassed by Peterborough, Hamilton and Ottawa in police-reported hate crimes, however the rate remained at nearly double the national average.
3. Thetford Mines, Quebec
The third of the three rogues’ gallery dwellers is poor Thetford Mines, the heart of Quebec’s asbestos mining region and the winner of the title Most Polluted City in Canada. Despite the overwhelming evidence of the dangerous health effects of asbestos, Canada still mines the dangerous mineral, and the biggest mine in a populated area is in Thetford Mines.
4. Bay Roberts, Newfoundland
Photos by Werner Koehler, via Wikimedia Commons
Many, many other rural communities on the east coast could make this list, but Bay Roberts appears because it has the highest unemployment rate in Canada, at 17%. Despite the oil, gas, mining and hydro-power booms in Newfoundland, Bay Roberts has somehow managed to avoid the job benefits. This wouldn’t seem so peculiar if Bay Roberts wasn’t just an hour’s drive from money-drunk St. John’s and other rapidly expanding bedroom communities like Conception Bay South.
The unemployment rate has improved as it was 20.7% in 2006
5. Sarnia, Ontario
Photo by P199, via Wikimedia
Sarnia itself may not be so bad, but its view of and proximity to American heavy industry helps to reinforce the fact that this border town is polluted. It also has an empty downtown and a shrinking population.
6. Saint John, New Brunswick
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Long known as the unglamourous milltown cousin to its apostrophic neighbour to the east, St. John’s, Saint John is a dirty, stinky pulp and paper port on the Bay of Fundy. Despite the natural beauty nearby, the city has a declining population and few economic opportunities outside of the paper mills, nuclear power plant, and small university satellite campus. Don’t end up in Saint John when you want to live in St. John’s!
7. Nanaimo, BC
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8. Thunder Bay, Ontario
Photo by Derek Hatfield, via Wikimedia
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