<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:googleplay="http://www.google.com/schemas/play-podcasts/1.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[Kelly Doody's Calgary]]></title><description><![CDATA[Stories of doers, dreamers, and their dwellings. Plus, top shops, secret spots, and the very best of Calgary's people and places.]]></description><link>https://calgary.kellydoody.com</link><image><url>https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!wqG5!,w_256,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Ffd7433e4-3512-4e37-acda-0787aed82dcd_1000x1000.png</url><title>Kelly Doody&apos;s Calgary</title><link>https://calgary.kellydoody.com</link></image><generator>Substack</generator><lastBuildDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 06:56:42 GMT</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://calgary.kellydoody.com/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><copyright><![CDATA[Kelly Doody]]></copyright><language><![CDATA[en]]></language><webMaster><![CDATA[kellydoodys@substack.com]]></webMaster><itunes:owner><itunes:email><![CDATA[kellydoodys@substack.com]]></itunes:email><itunes:name><![CDATA[Kelly Doody]]></itunes:name></itunes:owner><itunes:author><![CDATA[Kelly Doody]]></itunes:author><googleplay:owner><![CDATA[kellydoodys@substack.com]]></googleplay:owner><googleplay:email><![CDATA[kellydoodys@substack.com]]></googleplay:email><googleplay:author><![CDATA[Kelly Doody]]></googleplay:author><itunes:block><![CDATA[Yes]]></itunes:block><item><title><![CDATA[Honouring Alberta's Wagon Train, High Above the Elbow]]></title><description><![CDATA[The story of Calgary's hidden Pioneer Memorial &#8211; a hand-hewn log building that quietly remembers the first ranchers, farmers and pioneers of our province]]></description><link>https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/southern-alberta-pioneers-memorial-building</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/southern-alberta-pioneers-memorial-building</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Kelly Doody]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2026 22:11:54 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/193515888/fa5764d0d6e3c117bcc88cd05dde9229.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;d missed it for decades.</p><p>I was heading south on 4th Street SW, looking for a place to watch the sunset, killing time while my kid was at her downtown swim practice. I&#8217;d been this way a thousand times, but never to this particular edge of Erlton.</p><p>I followed the sun, and the views, until a little-known parking lot caught my eye. A low log building. A cliff edge. A view I had no idea existed in the middle of the city.</p><p>What I found was the Southern Alberta Pioneers Memorial Building: one of Calgary&#8217;s most quietly remarkable heritage sites, sitting on a high ridge above the Elbow River on the south tip of Erlton. It commands a sweeping view west toward the Rockies and looks down over the river bend below. I am more than certain that most people who live in this city have never heard of it.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>A Building With a Journey of Its Own</strong></h3><p>The story of this building starts not in Calgary, but at Pigeon Lake in central Alberta.</p><p>Master craftsman Hobart A. Dowler, one of Alberta&#8217;s foremost builders of log structures, first assembled the building on his property there. He used hand-hewn round logs with saddle-notch joints, the same joinery technique used by the earliest settlers of the western prairies. When the Southern Alberta Pioneers and Their Descendants (SAPD) needed a permanent home in Calgary, Dowler&#8217;s building was dismantled, transported, and reassembled log by log on its current ridge above the Elbow &#8211; a feat of craftsmanship and commitment that was completed in 1954.</p><p>On June 8, 1955, the building was officially dedicated as part of Alberta&#8217;s Golden Jubilee, the province&#8217;s 50th anniversary as a member of Confederation. The City of Calgary erected a fieldstone cairn in front of the building, affixing a brass plaque that reads: <em>&#8220;Presented to the Southern Alberta&#8217;s Old Timers by the City of Calgary in the Province&#8217;s Golden Anniversary Year 1955.&#8221;</em></p><p>Step inside, and you&#8217;re inside a different era. Exposed clear-span trusses overhead. A massive fieldstone fireplace at the centre. Handcrafted doors and finishes throughout. The building is a designated City of Calgary Municipal Historic Resource, and it looks every bit the part.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>Who Were the Pioneers?</strong></h3><p>The organization behind the building, the Southern Alberta Pioneers and Their Descendants, was established over a century ago with a clear and specific purpose: to collect, preserve, and honour the memory of early settlement in southern Alberta.</p><p>Membership in the SAPD is defined precisely. A pioneer, by their criteria, is someone who resided in Alberta south of Township 40, roughly the Red Deer line and everything south of it, prior to December 31, 1890.</p><p>Think about what that means. The CPR had only reached Calgary in 1883. The North-West Mounted Police had established Fort Calgary just eight years before that, in 1875. The men and women who arrived in the years that followed, before 1891, came into a landscape that was raw, vast, and largely unmapped by European hands. They built ranches, homesteads, and communities on the open prairie. Many of them became the foundational families of the city and region we live in today.</p><p>The SAPD exists so their stories aren&#8217;t forgotten.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>The Ground Itself Is Historic</strong></h3><p>What strikes me most about this location isn&#8217;t just the building, it&#8217;s the land it sits on.</p><p>That ridge above the Elbow River wasn&#8217;t just a scenic overlook. In the late 1800s, it was a landmark along one of the most travelled corridors in the Canadian West. Bull trains, massive wagon convoys pulled by teams of oxen, hauled freight north from Fort Benton, Montana. Red River carts, those ungainly, squealing wooden wagons of the fur trade era, clattered up from the south. Stagecoaches from Fort Macleod made the journey to the emerging settlement that would become Calgary.</p><p>They all passed below this bluff.</p><p>Standing on that ridge now, looking out over the Elbow and the green of the river valley, it isn&#8217;t hard to imagine the traffic that moved through here&#8230; the sounds, the dust, the sense of a world being built in real time. History has a way of making itself felt in places like this, if you stop long enough to let it.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>What It Is Today</strong></h3><p>The Memorial Building is maintained and operated by the Southern Alberta Pioneers&#8217; Foundation, the charitable arm of the SAPD. It serves as a gathering space for a range of events &#8211; weddings, concerts, lectures and private functions, and is available for public rental.</p><p>It&#8217;s also, in my thoroughly unscientific opinion, one of the best places in inner-city Calgary to catch a sunset.</p><p>The ridge faces west. On a clear evening, the Rocky Mountains fill the horizon in a way that stops you cold. The Elbow River catches the last light below. The city hums behind you. It&#8217;s the kind of spot that reminds you how extraordinary the ordinary geography of this place actually is, if you know where to look.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>Why This Matters</strong></h3><p>Calgary is a young city, and we sometimes act like it. We build fast, demolish faster, and move on. The stories underneath our streets &#8211; the trails, the carts, the homesteads, the first families&#8230; can disappear before anyone thinks to document them.</p><p>Places like the Southern Alberta Pioneers Memorial Building exist as a corrective to that amnesia. They say: something happened here. Someone lived here. Someone built something worth remembering.</p><p>As someone who came to real estate through journalism, through a career spent believing that places and the people in them are always worth the story, I find this building quietly thrilling.</p><p>It&#8217;s a hidden gem. It&#8217;s a piece of living history. And it&#8217;s sitting on one of the best ridges in the city, waiting for more Calgarians to find it.</p><p>Go find it.</p><p>&#128205; Southern Alberta Pioneers Memorial Building &#8211; 3625 4 St SW, Calgary, AB</p><p><em>The Southern Alberta Pioneers&#8217; Foundation also accepts event bookings. Learn more at <a href="http://pioneerbuilding.ca/">pioneerbuilding.ca</a>.<br></em></p><div><hr></div><p><em>Kelly Doody is a Calgary-based Realtor serving every corner of the city, owner of Kelly Doody Real Estate Corp, and lead overcommunicator at Kelly Doody&#8217;s Calgary on Substack. Former columnist and writer for the Calgary Sun and Calgary Herald, business owner, marketer, and PR professional, she&#8217;s a fourth-generation Calgarian who can&#8217;t get enough of the people and places that make this city amazing.</em></p><p><em>Find her in her work pants at </em>https://kellydoody.com, and subscribe for more insights and ideas right here:</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://calgary.kellydoody.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://calgary.kellydoody.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><p></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Lori's House]]></title><description><![CDATA[A Beauty Bankview Reno Wrapped in a Perfect Porch]]></description><link>https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/loris-house</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/loris-house</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Kelly Doody]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 01 Apr 2026 02:58:16 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/97842262-3bb3-4655-8fa4-fcf0b33ab554_1536x2048.jpeg" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="image-gallery-embed" data-attrs="{&quot;gallery&quot;:{&quot;images&quot;:[{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/aaa82950-7661-4906-9489-5723e93d516f_2048x1536.jpeg&quot;},{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/369bd463-d800-45c3-8ac9-913ef633b22b_1536x2048.jpeg&quot;},{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/69735922-0dc8-48b4-ada9-71821534bc8a_1536x2048.jpeg&quot;}],&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;alt&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;staticGalleryImage&quot;:{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/png&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/059f12d0-701b-4f5e-96c5-783a7de2c081_1456x474.png&quot;}},&quot;isEditorNode&quot;:true}"></div><h3>I&#8217;ve been sitting in Lori Dixon&#8217;s chair since 2008.</h3><p>She was cutting hair at Influence Salon on 17th Ave, relatively new in her career, and I was a columnist at the Calgary Sun. Eighteen years later, my highlights expertly applied the day prior, I found myself staring up at the gorgeous Bankview home I&#8217;d heard so much about.</p><p>Lori owns her own highly successful hair studio now called Color Theory, tucked inside the Citizen Salon building in Mission. Her daughter Adeline, age 23, runs her own brow business and shares the space. This detail delights me to no end, as Adeline was a toddler when we first met. Now building something of her own, and sure to be as sought-after as her mom.</p><p>And that&#8217;s the thing about Lori Dixon. She has a way of building things that last.</p><div><hr></div><h3>As I temper my enthusiasm and wander through the door, Lori tells me how she walked by the house every morning on her way to work.</h3><p>A yellow two-story home on a corner lot in Bankview, with a veranda that wrapped around the front and a swing hanging from the tree. She doesn&#8217;t remember exactly when she started noticing it, only that she did, for months, including the day she saw the sign go up on the lawn.</p><p>That same afternoon, her husband called.</p><p>&#8220;We&#8217;re going to look at a house tonight in Bankview,&#8221; he said.</p><p>&#8220;Is it yellow?&#8221; she asked.</p><p>It sure was.</p><div class="image-gallery-embed" data-attrs="{&quot;gallery&quot;:{&quot;images&quot;:[{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/b4c454a3-2d71-44bb-ad83-fb9c783ddc9e_1536x2048.jpeg&quot;},{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/49a59ec5-860e-4888-bd35-2f5af625a4a2_1536x2048.jpeg&quot;},{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/c07360b7-cd1c-475e-83b4-ab24a59fea37_1536x2048.jpeg&quot;}],&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;Lori's House. And Billy Senior, Adeline, Billy Boy and Betty's, too.&quot;,&quot;alt&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;staticGalleryImage&quot;:{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/png&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/727aec14-1781-43b2-89cc-9a33e43ac60c_1456x474.png&quot;}},&quot;isEditorNode&quot;:true}"></div><div><hr></div><h3>A word about the husband: his name is Billy. When their son, also Billy, was born in 2014, the household required a solution. </h3><p>New Billy became Billy Boy, and old Billy became Billy Senior, and then just Senior, which has apparently stuck. I have been hearing about Billy Senior for 18 years and have yet to meet him in real life, which at this point makes him somewhat of a myth.</p><p>What I do know: he worked for Parks Canada. As I&#8217;m sure you&#8217;ll agree, this conjures a man in a felt hat and snappy green shirt. Lori has repeatedly assured me this was not the case, and that Senior now holds a director-level role with the feds that involves a desk and real pants. He is also one-fourth of the legendary Calgary-born band Chixdiggit, one of my 1990-something Republik / Night Gallery / Black Lounge faves, and has what Lori considers &#8216;exquisite&#8217; taste in interior design.</p><p>That last part I had also heard a great deal about, and it is quickly confirmed once I&#8217;m inside.</p><div><hr></div><h3>Lori and Senior have now lived in this lovely house for 15 years. They bought it for $525,000 at a moment when the market briefly softened. </h3><p>Lucky timing, though Lori calls it something closer to fate. They&#8217;d been renting in Altadore, working downtown, and growing tired of commuting through a corner of the city they wanted to call home. &#8220;We were not rich,&#8221; she tells me, with a token bluntness I know well by now. &#8220;We were coming from Saskatoon.&#8221;</p><p>What they found was a rare corner lot with two driveways, a front and backyard, and a showstopping veranda with sun on all sides, in the heart of Bankview just up from 17th Ave.</p><h3>The house is not huge, and Lori will say this plainly. But standing in the main floor on a bright spring afternoon, it&#8217;s hard to see what&#8217;s missing. </h3><p>The kitchen is a recently redeveloped horseshoe with cabinetry on all sides, a Samsung range, and stunning tile that Lori, a self-described &#8216;functional&#8217; person, claims as her favourite thing in the room. A round Saarinen Tulip table, a Knoll 1957 original, anchors the space, found secondhand for $1,500 and worth five times more. Around it sit a collection of original Knoll chairs, each one a deliberate find and equally valuable.</p><p>In fact, everything in the house was found, chosen, or meticulously researched by Billy Senior, the rockstar non-Ranger. He found the lights. He discovered the blue couch. He selected the Buster + Punch cabinet hardware and spent hours tracking down the table that Lori can&#8217;t get enough of.</p><p>&#8220;My contribution is the plants and the frilly stuff,&#8221; she adds &#8211; an obvious understatement. The plants are everywhere and nowhere, each one tasteful, trimmed, and potted just right. Her design philosophy is &#8216;Scandinavian-Japandi,&#8217; meaning minimalist, warm, and neutral, she informs me. Lots of wood. No clutter. Not even from her three kids or their millions of kid things. Lori is the definition of meticulous organization and household flow. </p><p>&#8220;I&#8217;m the opposite of a hoarder,&#8221; she says. &#8220;And my kids&#8217; backpacks have to go upstairs on the weekend.&#8221;</p><div><hr></div><h3>The family&#8217;s recently-completed main floor and exterior renovation took a charming but dated home with burgundy walls, textured cupboards, popcorn ceilings, and a glass block wall that broke all flow, and made it into something entirely beautiful. </h3><p>A designer friend came in for a consult, told them the wall had to go, and to stay as simple and uniform as possible &#8211; no jutting islands, no statement floors in random rooms. And boy did they listen. </p><p>&#8220;I&#8217;m so happy he told us to knock down that wall,&#8221; she says. &#8220;He was like, you have this big round centrepiece table. Focus the flow around that.&#8221;</p><p>The kitchen itself was built at a Vancouver factory called SWEDE, with cabinets arriving pre-built and the disruption compressed into a manageable process. They lived upstairs during the work &#8211; makeshift kitchen in the hallway, construction dust settling over everything they owned. The contractor, <a href="https://hyggebuilt.com/">Ryan Heagy from Hygge Built</a> in Calgary, was so good they&#8217;ve already booked him back for the basement and second floor.</p><p>But before gutting and rebuilding the inside of their beloved Bankview home, Lori and Senior tackled the entire exterior last year: new Hardie board siding, a rebuilt composite veranda so they&#8217;d never again need to paint, gemstone lights, new sod and concrete, a full irrigation system wired to Senior&#8217;s phone, and a pear tree to boot. </p><p>The renovation total, inside and out, was somewhere north of $190,000, and worth every penny and years of patient planning. Guests repeatedly comment on the front porch upon arrival, and Lori lines the entire span with flowers and plants in the summer. </p><p>I arrive in gravelly grey late winter, and despite the dirt and snow, the newly blued house is as eye-catching as ever.</p><div class="image-gallery-embed" data-attrs="{&quot;gallery&quot;:{&quot;images&quot;:[{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/81dd7c67-0428-4d51-b491-f6698ca6dbcc_1536x2048.jpeg&quot;},{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/fbc368de-e1df-4d3b-b6e7-55631198937e_1536x2048.jpeg&quot;},{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/15854547-4c43-410c-a37e-cb66ae4157ec_1536x2048.jpeg&quot;}],&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;alt&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;staticGalleryImage&quot;:{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/png&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/dcb9caf5-a944-4cd8-8ff0-b33efc502c1a_1456x474.png&quot;}},&quot;isEditorNode&quot;:true}"></div><div><hr></div><h3>Now, Bankview is not a neighbourhood that announces itself grandly. It doesn&#8217;t boast the highbrows of Scarborough nearby or the pomp of Mount Royal next door. </h3><p>It is a genuine mixed bag, with century homes beside infills, and apartment blocks next to condo towers perched in a bungalow&#8217;s backyard. </p><p>Its narrow, hilly streets aren&#8217;t newly adjusting to rezoning rules and densification development &#8211; it&#8217;s been baked into Bankview&#8217;s DNA since its century-ago beginning. And among its many charms is its walkability in all directions. Lori&#8217;s kids walk to school. The family walks to 17th Ave on warm summer nights &#8211; the same route, past the same parks, to the same popular ice cream shop just a few blocks away.</p><p>&#8220;Bankview is one of the most diverse neighbourhoods in Calgary,&#8221; Lori confirms. &#8220;You have these beautiful multi-million dollar homes, and across the street there&#8217;s... very original apartments.&#8221;</p><p>She laughs, I laugh, and we send them a nostalgic, appreciative nod.</p><div><hr></div><p>The closest the family came to leaving their little yellow gem was when Lori found out she was pregnant with Betty, their youngest, now seven, who bubbled them into a family of five. Suddenly, the math (and main floor bath) proved tighter, and a bigger house seemed smart.</p><h3>They looked around, but most were only slightly bigger and double the price, with interiors that felt no nicer than their own.</h3><p>Lori and Senior had always dreamed of a renovation and of making their home perfectly their own. They could also see further down the road, where Adeline would one day move out, followed by Billy Boy and Betty. The house that felt crowded now would breathe in time, and thus, they decided to stay, renovate, and fall in love with it anew.</p><p>&#8220;Once we do the basement and upstairs, this is our forever home,&#8221; Lori says. &#8220;We&#8217;ll just stay active enough that the stairs don&#8217;t beat us.&#8221;</p><p>At the end of our visit, I tell her the house feels like family member number six.</p><p>Lori thinks about it.</p><p>&#8220;I feel like it appreciates us,&#8221; she quietly adds with her signature grin. &#8220;Because of what we did to it.&#8221;</p><h3>Catchers, restorers, and creators of memories and magic in the happy house that was once yellow, now brimming in blue.</h3><div class="image-gallery-embed" data-attrs="{&quot;gallery&quot;:{&quot;images&quot;:[{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/96d17a23-0cd5-43ad-9dc4-eeaa4593445f_1536x2048.jpeg&quot;},{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/736414ea-66fd-437e-8e67-eaeb425f70e1_1536x2048.jpeg&quot;},{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/fce419d8-faf4-4618-8a11-430583a543f1_1536x2048.jpeg&quot;}],&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;alt&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;staticGalleryImage&quot;:{&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/png&quot;,&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/f86dad84-b04e-44cf-a161-44a6dfc913b5_1456x474.png&quot;}},&quot;isEditorNode&quot;:true}"></div><p><em>Photographs by Kelly Doody. Published with Lori&#8217;s permission.</em></p><div><hr></div><h2 style="text-align: center;">Want more?  </h2><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://calgary.kellydoody.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://calgary.kellydoody.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><div class="captioned-button-wrap" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/loris-house?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email&utm_content=share&action=share&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Share&quot;}" data-component-name="CaptionedButtonToDOM"><div class="preamble"><p class="cta-caption">Thanks for reading Kelly Doody's Calgary. This post is public. Please feel free to share it!</p></div><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/loris-house?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email&utm_content=share&action=share&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Share&quot;}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/loris-house?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email&utm_content=share&action=share"><span>Share</span></a></p></div><p></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[A Tale of 2 Cowtowns]]></title><description><![CDATA[Calgary's Real Estate Market Isn't Cooling, It's Splitting in Two]]></description><link>https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/a-tale-of-2-cowtowns</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/a-tale-of-2-cowtowns</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Kelly Doody]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 30 Mar 2026 23:17:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/192906010/4f6e3c884018f79a2e5774feaa6e1403.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Half of Calgary home buyers are convinced the market is cool and getting colder. </h3><h3>They&#8217;re not necessarily wrong, but it's only half the story.</h3><p><br>Here's what the data shows:<br><br>If you're buying or selling a detached home, it&#8217;s a tight, competitive market, and likely getting hotter as we head deeper into spring.<br><br>But condos? Opposite story. Sales are down and inventory is high, exacerbated by 18,000 additional units currently under construction. Make no mistake, buyers in the attached realm hold the keys. For how long? Only time will tell. But for now, choice and leverage are on their side.<br><br>YYC&#8217;s real estate market is not one cohesive story at the moment. It's two distinct storylines, requiring very different strategies. <br><br><strong>Two markets, one city, and a wild spring ride underway. </strong><br><br>Drop me a line if you want to explore what it means for you and your plans.<br><br>#yychomes</p><div><hr></div><div class="subscription-widget-wrap-editor" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://calgary.kellydoody.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe&quot;,&quot;language&quot;:&quot;en&quot;}" data-component-name="SubscribeWidgetToDOM"><div class="subscription-widget show-subscribe"><div class="preamble"><p class="cta-caption">Thanks for reading Kelly Doody's Calgary! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.</p></div><form class="subscription-widget-subscribe"><input type="email" class="email-input" name="email" placeholder="Type your email&#8230;" tabindex="-1"><input type="submit" class="button primary" value="Subscribe"><div class="fake-input-wrapper"><div class="fake-input"></div><div class="fake-button"></div></div></form></div></div><p></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[The Dreaded Rate Climb, Canadian Headwinds and Calgary’s Positive Perch]]></title><description><![CDATA[A hot take with a hint of rose-coloured optimism]]></description><link>https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/the-dreaded-rate-climb</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/the-dreaded-rate-climb</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Kelly Doody]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 28 Mar 2026 19:10:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/192882949/ddb175344cd503bc6de186f3453acf98.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>The horrifying headline landed in my newsfeed this week, as I&#8217;m sure it did yours if you&#8217;re still willing to read.</h3><p>Canada&#8217;s housing market, it said, has been freshly hit with another ugly headwind. </p><p>Rampant inflation amid the global oil crisis, and a likely Bank of Canada interest rate increase to offset the rise.</p><div><hr></div><h3>No sugarcoating the national story</h3><p>If you&#8217;re watching Canada&#8217;s housing market right now, the data is bleak no matter how hard you squint.</p><p>Sales volumes have fallen for 15 consecutive months. Prices in the country&#8217;s largest markets, most notably Toronto and Vancouver, have dropped 15-20% from their 2022 peaks, and they haven&#8217;t yet found a floor. New listings are piling up, and inventory in some markets is at a 6-year high.</p><p>And now, layered on top of an already fragile recovery, comes an oil shock nobody fully priced in.</p><p>The Iran conflict and the Strait of Hormuz closure have sent Brent crude surging above $110 a barrel, and WTI not far behind. The Bank of Canada, already navigating a delicate balance between cooling inflation and avoiding a crash in the economy, is watching high-flying energy prices feed back into the CPI.</p><p>Rate cuts that were expected by summer are now uncertain. Some economists are whispering about a return to 5+% mortgage rates. Renewals that were already painful but improving will head right back to precarious.</p><p>For most of Canada, this is a not-great story with no obvious upside.</p><div><hr></div><h3>However, if we&#8217;re searching for a silver lining, Calgary&#8217;s story reads slightly different.</h3><p>Here&#8217;s what the national housing narrative consistently misses: the mechanism that&#8217;s hurting real estate in Toronto is the same mechanism that&#8217;s been quietly supercharging Alberta&#8217;s economy.</p><p>Oil at $110 is a headwind for mortgage rates in Mississauga, but it&#8217;s a tailwind for energy hiring in Calgary.</p><p>When crude surges, Alberta&#8217;s energy windfall follows. Capital spending among major producers goes up. Supply chain contracts get signed. Engineers and tradespeople relocate. New arrivals need somewhere to live. Existing Calgarians who were sitting on the housing sideline suddenly have more job security, more equity, and more confidence to move.</p><p>This is not a theory. It&#8217;s a pattern we&#8217;ve watched play out before, and the data is starting to show it again.</p><p>Calgary&#8217;s detached market under $700K currently shows less than 2.7 months of supply. That is not a buyer&#8217;s market, or even a balanced market. In most conditions, 3 months is the threshold between balanced and sellers&#8217; territory, and we&#8217;re below it in the segment where the majority of Calgarians are buying.</p><p>Meanwhile, the interprovincial migration numbers that started climbing in 2021 haven&#8217;t reversed. If anything, economic uncertainty in Central Canada tends to accelerate the move west as people follow jobs, opportunity, and economic momentum.</p><div><hr></div><h3>Re-reading the headlines</h3><p>The next few months will continue to produce alarming national housing headlines. Prices down. Sales sluggish. Affordability worsening. Economists cautious.</p><p>Most of them will be accurate descriptions of someone else&#8217;s market.</p><p>Our job, whether we&#8217;re buying, selling, or just trying to understand what our homes are worth, is to try to read through the national lens to the local reality underneath.</p><p>Calgary is not immune to everything, and a severe enough recession would hurt us, too. A sustained period of historically high rates would slow activity, while the cost of living is already egregiously high. Not everyone here is a homeowner or has the means or plans to become one, and won&#8217;t directly benefit from some of the silver linings I&#8217;m attempting to propose.</p><p>But the specific pressures driving the national story right now: oil price shocks feeding into monetary policy and eroding affordability in markets that were already  overpriced, are, in Calgary&#8217;s case, pointing in a different direction than the headlines suggest.</p><div><hr></div><h3>The takeaway</h3><p>I wrote the <a href="https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/calgary-real-estate-rising">full version of this argument earlier this week</a>, pointing to 10 signs that Calgary&#8217;s economy is about to move, despite the challenges the national market faces.</p><p>This is a tighter, follow-up take, and a reminder that every time a scary national headline lands, it&#8217;s worth asking one question first:</p><p><strong>Whose story is this, exactly?</strong></p><p>Because increasingly, the answer might just be: not ours. Not this time, anyway.</p><div><hr></div><p><em>Kelly Doody is a Calgary realtor and the writer behind Kelly Doody&#8217;s Calgary. She covers real estate, neighbourhood life, and the stories that make this city worth living in.</em></p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://calgary.kellydoody.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://calgary.kellydoody.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><p></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[The $50,000 Housing Rebate Nobody’s Shouting About]]></title><description><![CDATA[If you're buying a new home in Calgary for the first time, you may be leaving serious money on the table]]></description><link>https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/the-quiet-50k-rebate</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/the-quiet-50k-rebate</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Kelly Doody]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 26 Mar 2026 18:56:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/192881479/3619cba4e133a37f5683ae782d635764.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m going to tell you something that most first-time home buyers in Calgary don&#8217;t know &#8212; and that a lot of agents aren&#8217;t talking about either.</p><p>The federal government has launched a rebate program that can put up to <strong>$50,000 back in your pocket</strong> when you buy a brand new home. It&#8217;s called the First-Time Home Buyers&#8217; GST/HST Rebate, and it&#8217;s one of the most significant financial incentives for new home buyers in recent memory.</p><p>The catch? Few buyers know it exists.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>Here&#8217;s the story.</strong></h3><p>The program was introduced as part of a federal push to make new housing more accessible. The idea is straightforward: when you buy a newly built home, you pay GST on the purchase price. Under this rebate, first-time buyers can get a significant portion of that GST back &#8212; potentially the full amount, up to $50,000.</p><p>It&#8217;s not a loan. It&#8217;s not a credit. It&#8217;s your money returned to you.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>Who qualifies?</strong></h3><p>There are a few boxes you need to check.</p><p><strong>You&#8217;re a first-time buyer.</strong> This means you haven&#8217;t owned a home in the four calendar years before your purchase. If you and a partner are buying together, neither of you can have owned a home in that window. It also means neither of you can have previously claimed this specific rebate.</p><p><strong>You&#8217;re buying new construction.</strong> This isn&#8217;t for resale homes, only brand new builds. We&#8217;re talking detached homes, semi-detached, condos, townhouses, duplexes, and even modular or floating homes, as long as they&#8217;re newly built. It also applies to substantial renovations where developers layer GST onto the price.</p><p><strong>It&#8217;s going to be your primary residence.</strong> You intend to live there as your main home.</p><p><strong>The price matters.</strong> Here&#8217;s where it gets interesting:</p><ul><li><p><strong>$1 million or less:</strong> You&#8217;re eligible for the full rebate &#8212; up to $50,000.</p></li><li><p><strong>$1 million to $1.5 million:</strong> The rebate phases out gradually.</p></li><li><p><strong>Above $1.5 million:</strong> No rebate.</p></li></ul><p>And one more thing: you need to be at least 18, a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, and your purchase agreement needs to have been signed on or after <strong>May 27, 2025</strong>.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>Let&#8217;s talk about what $50,000 actually means.</strong></h3><p>In Calgary, the median price of a new condo is sitting somewhere between $350,000 and $600,000 depending on the neighbourhood and product type. New townhouses and detached homes in communities like Ambleton, Livingston, Glacier Ridge, or Belmont are often landing in the $500,000&#8211;$900,000 range, right in the sweet spot for this rebate.</p><p>At those price points, you&#8217;re looking at real money. <strong>Fifty thousand dollars is a down payment.</strong> It&#8217;s a year of mortgage payments. It&#8217;s the renovation budget for your first kitchen update. It materially changes what &#8220;affordable&#8221; looks like for a first-time buyer who&#8217;s been watching the market and wondering if they can make the numbers work.</p><p>And yet, mortgage brokers are reporting that thousands of Alberta first-time buyers who qualify for this rebate have not yet heard of it.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>How long do you have?</strong></h3><p>The program is available for purchase agreements signed between <strong>May 27, 2025 and the end of 2030</strong>, with construction needing to begin before 2031 and substantial completion before 2036. So there&#8217;s runway, but the earlier you understand it, the better you can factor it into your buying strategy.</p><p>The rebate is claimed when you close on your home, typically with the CRA. In many cases, your builder may even credit the rebate amount directly at closing, but that&#8217;s a detail to confirm with your builder and your accountant or mortgage professional.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>Why aren&#8217;t more people talking about this?</strong></h3><p>Honestly speaking, government programs are easily confused and/or easy to bury. They get announced in budget documents, rolled out through the Canada Revenue Agency, and then... people go about their lives not knowing. Even a billboard campaign and TV ads will fall on deaf ears.</p><p>This is exactly the kind of thing a trusted local guide should be translating for buyers. Not because I want to sell you a home (although I do love that part of the job), but because this is the kind of information that changes decisions. It changes timelines. It changes whether someone believes that now is the right time to buy.</p><p>If you&#8217;re a first-time buyer in Calgary who&#8217;s been thinking about a new build, or you know someone who is, this is worth a conversation.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>Let&#8217;s talk about it.</strong></h3><p>If you have questions about how this works in Calgary specifically, AND where the greatest hidden new build opportunities lie in this city right now, drop me a line or leave a comment <br><br>Whether you&#8217;re six months from buying or six weeks, understanding this now will make you a smarter buyer when it&#8217;s time.</p><p>And if you found this useful, share it with someone who&#8217;s been talking about buying their first home. You might just save them $50,000.</p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>Sources &amp; Further Reading</strong></h3><ul><li><p><strong>Canada Revenue Agency &#8212; First-Time Home Buyers&#8217; GST/HST Rebate (Official Program Page)</strong><a href="https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/businesses/topics/gst-hst-businesses/gst-hst-rebates/first-time-home-buyers-gst-hst-rebate.html"> https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/businesses/topics/gst-hst-businesses/gst-hst-rebates/first-time-home-buyers-gst-hst-rebate.html</a></p></li><li><p><strong>Canada Revenue Agency &#8212; GST/HST New Housing Rebate (General Program)</strong><a href="https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/businesses/topics/gst-hst-businesses/gst-hst-rebates/new-housing-rebate.html"> https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/businesses/topics/gst-hst-businesses/gst-hst-rebates/new-housing-rebate.html</a></p></li><li><p><strong>CRA Publication RC4028 &#8212; GST/HST New Housing Rebate (Full Details)</strong><a href="https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/forms-publications/publications/rc4028/gst-hst-new-housing-rebate.html"> https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/forms-publications/publications/rc4028/gst-hst-new-housing-rebate.html</a></p></li><li><p><strong>PwC Canada Tax Insights &#8212; GST Relief for First-Time Home Buyers (2025)</strong><a href="https://www.pwc.com/ca/en/services/tax/publications/tax-insights/gst-relief-first-time-home-buyers-2025.html"> https://www.pwc.com/ca/en/services/tax/publications/tax-insights/gst-relief-first-time-home-buyers-2025.html</a></p></li><li><p><strong>Mortgages for Less &#8212; Thousands of Alberta First-Time Buyers May Qualify But Many Don&#8217;t Know It Yet (March 2026)</strong><a href="https://mortgagesforless.ca/blog/2026-03/thousands-of-alberta-first-time-buyers-may-qualify-for-a-new-gst-rebate-but-many-dont-know-it-yet/"> https://mortgagesforless.ca/blog/2026-03/thousands-of-alberta-first-time-buyers-may-qualify-for-a-new-gst-rebate-but-many-dont-know-it-yet/</a></p></li></ul><div><hr></div><p><em>Kelly Doody is a Calgary-based Realtor serving every corner of the city, owner of Kelly Doody Real Estate Corp, and lead overcommunicator at Kelly Doody&#8217;s Calgary on Substack. </em></p><p><em>Former columnist and writer for the Calgary Sun and Calgary Herald, business owner, marketer, and PR professional, she&#8217;s a fourth-generation Calgarian who can&#8217;t get enough of the people and places that make this city amazing.</em></p><p><em>Find her in her work pants at </em><a href="https://kellydoody.com">https://kellydoody.com</a>, <em>and subscribe for more insights and ideas right here:</em></p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://calgary.kellydoody.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://calgary.kellydoody.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><p></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Ten Reasons Calgary Real Estate Is Majorly About to Move]]></title><description><![CDATA[While every other city in Canada is watching its market stall, here's why I think ours is about to do the opposite.]]></description><link>https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/calgary-real-estate-rising</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://calgary.kellydoody.com/p/calgary-real-estate-rising</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Kelly Doody]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 24 Mar 2026 19:22:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/192265486/2d48100edd6413e6bc40c1e82d6f20f3.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>First, I&#8217;m not an economist, financial analyst or energy sector insider, and I don&#8217;t claim to predict the future.</p><p>But I am a fourth-generation Calgarian who&#8217;s worked in journalism, oil and gas, marketing, and real estate. I&#8217;ve spent my entire professional career watching for signs and sentiments that motivate people to act, react, take a leap, or fear the worst, and </p><p>I&#8217;ve launched companies and campaigns by reading the room before the room knew it was shifting. I&#8217;ve watched Calgary&#8217;s real estate market through countless booms and corrections, and tracked the signals that something is about to move.</p><div><hr></div><h3>Right now, I bring you a storm of 10 major signs.</h3><h4>1. The attack on Iran and the closure of the Gulf&#8217;s economic lifeline</h4><p>On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran, targeting military infrastructure, nuclear sites, and leadership. Iran&#8217;s response was swift: retaliatory missile and drone attacks across the region, followed on March 4 by what Iranian forces declared a full closure of the Strait of Hormuz &#8211; a narrow waterway between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula through which roughly 20% of the world&#8217;s oil and gas supply transits every day. When Iran declared it closed, tanker traffic dropped approximately 70%. Ships anchored outside the strait rather than risk passage (Kpler, March 1, 2026).</p><h4>2. The largest energy disruption in 50 years</h4><p>By March 8, Brent crude surpassed $100 per barrel for the first time in four years, peaking at $126. The Dallas Federal Reserve, in a research note published March 20, called it &#8220;the largest disruption to the global energy supply since the 1970s oil crisis.&#8221; Larger, in scale and consequence, than anything the market has absorbed in half a century.</p><p>The immediate casualties: Southeast Asian manufacturing economies whose refineries run on Gulf crude, and European nations still scrambling after Russia&#8217;s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Global shipping routes are being rerouted, renegotiated, or suspended entirely (Dallas Federal Reserve, March 20, 2026; Al Jazeera, March 2026).</p><h4>3. Asia and Europe are urgently looking to Canada</h4><p>For the first time in a long time, Canada is seriously in the conversation. The Canada Energy Regulator&#8217;s 2026 outlook projects natural gas production growing from roughly 19 billion cubic feet per day today to as much as 32 billion by 2050. LNG exports could represent a full quarter of Canada&#8217;s total gas production within 25 years (Canada Energy Regulator, Canada&#8217;s Energy Future 2026). That is not a marginal projection. That is a structural realignment of where Canadian energy goes and who buys it.</p><h4>4. The world has been reminded that it still runs on oil</h4><p>Here&#8217;s something no press release or industry PR campaign ever managed to accomplish: the Hormuz crisis made the case for Canadian energy in about 72 hours. Ordinary people &#8211; not energy analysts, not Bay Street types &#8211; watched oil tankers being threatened in the Gulf in real time. They watched what happens when a single chokepoint closes and everything gets more expensive. The abstract argument that the world is not ready to run without oil, and that our transition to renewables and fossil-free energy is far from complete, became viscerally, undeniably concrete.</p><h4>5. Fifteen years of ill-fated oil and gas industry PR campaigns became near irrelevant</h4><p>For well over a decade, Canada&#8217;s oil and gas sector spent enormous resources on image rehabilitation amidst pipeline protests, public distrust, and environmental concerns. But try as they might, they largely continued to lose the battle in the court of public opinion.</p><p>Not necessarily because the arguments were wrong, but because most Canadians had the comfortable luxury of not fully comprehending the depth of the discussion, and what Canada&#8217;s oil and gas industry has afforded us economically and beyond.</p><p>The Hormuz crisis laid bare that luxury. The argument that if the world is going to produce and consume oil, it may as well come from a democratic, regulated, accountable country like Canada, rather than Iran, Russia, China, Venezuela and the Gulf, is landing differently now than it did 18 months ago. Sentiment shifts are slow, then sudden. This one has become starkly sudden.</p><h4>6. Canadian sovereignty has become a dinner table conversation</h4><p>Add Donald Trump&#8217;s repeated suggestions that Canada become the 51st state, and you have a political moment unlike any in recent memory. Energy security, economic independence, and diversification away from dependence on America are now mainstream priorities, not policy abstractions. The political climate in this country is now barrelling toward ambitious, expedited resource development for the first time in years. That is a real tailwind.</p><h4>7. Canada holds the world&#8217;s third-largest proven oil reserves</h4><p>This one is worth its own headline.</p><p>Canada holds approximately 168 billion barrels of proven oil reserves &#8211; the third largest supply on the planet. The only countries with larger deposits are Venezuela and Saudi Arabia, with Iran sitting in fourth. So make no mistake, we are not a small player in this story. We are one of three countries on earth with the energy reserves to matter at scale. But alas, the question has never been whether Canada has the resource, but rather, whether we have the will to develop it. And that sentiment is quickly shifting.</p><h4>8. Canada didn&#8217;t meet the moment when asked, but those conditions have changed</h4><p>When Europe sought Canadian LNG (natural gas that is liquified for nautical transport before warming back into its useful gaseous state for home heating and beyond) in 2022 to replace its Russian supply, Canada&#8217;s response was slow and politically complicated. That became a flashpoint for Alberta&#8217;s frustration with federal energy policy, and fairly so.</p><p>The difference now lies in a collision of political will, global demand, and advancing infrastructure in a way we haven&#8217;t seen before. The conversation that was stalled or iced has been resurrected by events nobody could have engineered &#8211; or expected.</p><h4>9. The Montney Formation is Canada&#8217;s most important underdeveloped resource asset</h4><p>Underneath northeastern BC and northwestern Alberta lies the Montney Formation, containing an estimated 449 trillion cubic feet of marketable natural gas, 45 years of drilling inventory at current production rates, and some of the lowest breakeven costs on the continent. The Montney has been called Canada&#8217;s crown jewel, and it remains largely underdeveloped relative to its potential. That gap between what the Montney holds and what we currently draw from it is not a failure, but an enormous opportunity. One that the current moment makes more accessible and more urgent than at any prior point in history.</p><h4>10. It&#8217;s already underway</h4><p>LNG Canada, the first large-scale liquefied natural gas export terminal on Canada&#8217;s coastline (located in Kitimat, BC), is now operational. Additional facilities, terminals and expansions are in active development. Pipeline discussions that were politically dead 18 months ago are back at the table with new urgency. Capital is beginning to move in ways it did not during the 2022&#8211;24 oil run, when producers took their profits without reinvesting substantially in future production capacity because of the uncertainty and wobbly outlook for the landlocked, policy-restricted, PR-challenged industry. <br><br>Today, things are looking very different. Every day brings news of production increases, stakeholder buy-in and investment players returning to the table. This isn&#8217;t just groundwork or hearsay, it&#8217;s action. Taking place in a different political environment, amidst different global conditions, and a whole new set of stakes.</p><div><hr></div><h3>What this means for Calgary</h3><p>Now, energy booms don&#8217;t arrive in Calgary real estate overnight. They never have.</p><p>They show up in major projects and jobs afield. Then, in migration, both to remote job sites and urban centres. Then, in trickle-through infrastructure spend and downstream commercial activity. And then, compoundingly, in housing demand that outpaces supply.</p><p>Alberta is already seeing the early indicators: GDP growth projected at 2.3% for 2026 (TD Economics), and oil output now surpassing four million barrels per day for the first time in the province&#8217;s history (Alberta Economic Outlook). Current numbers show interprovincial migration has moderated from its 2022&#8211;2024 peak, but the fundamentals that drove 80,000 new Albertans per year haven&#8217;t disappeared, they&#8217;ve simply paused. And the writing is on the wall for the next wave of energy sector activity, exacerbated when opportunity and jobs are lacking in other areas of the country, which, sadly, they are.</p><p>Calgary&#8217;s real estate market today is, for the most part, balanced. Depending on what area of the city and home type you&#8217;re watching, prices are steady or down, and inventory is decent, leaving buyers with negotiating power they haven&#8217;t had in years (CREB 2026 Forecast). But that&#8217;s the entry point, not the warning sign.</p><p>One of Calgary&#8217;s most consistent stories is that it moves on its own clock, largely independent of national trends. When Toronto and Vancouver were flying in 2020-21, Calgary barely budged. When those centres entered a downswing in 2023, Calgary barely flinched. Supply and demand here respond to our city&#8217;s own signals &#8211; employment, migration, energy capital, not Bay Street anxiety or west coast-driven demand.</p><div><hr></div><h3>The reality check</h3><p>Higher global energy prices are not free. They mean higher input costs, higher transportation costs, and higher prices for everything &#8211; including the cost of living here. The short-term picture for Calgary households is genuinely complicated, and I can&#8217;t pretend otherwise.</p><p>But this is not a story about everything being fine. It&#8217;s about where Alberta sits relative to everywhere else when a generational disruption like this appears.</p><p>I&#8217;m not a fortune teller, but I&#8217;ve lived in this city my entire life and watched it through a professional lens for twenty years. I know it has a habit of surprising people &#8211; myself included. Right now, the signals are here, and unlike most boardroom-driven energy booms, this time they are far from hidden. What happens next is not a matter of if or when, but how fast, how major, and for how long.</p><p><strong>If I were a betting girl, I&#8217;d go big on all three.</strong></p><div><hr></div><p><em>Kelly Doody is a Calgary-based Realtor serving every corner of the city, owner of Kelly Doody Real Estate Corp, and lead overcommunicator at Kelly Doody&#8217;s Calgary on Substack. Former columnist and writer for the Calgary Sun and Calgary Herald, business owner, marketer, and PR professional, she&#8217;s a fourth-generation Calgarian who can&#8217;t get enough of the people and places that make this city amazing.</em></p><p><em>Find her in her work pants at <a href="https://kellydoody.com">https://kellydoody.com</a>, and subscribe for more insights and ideas right here:</em></p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://calgary.kellydoody.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://calgary.kellydoody.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><p>&#8211;&#8211;&#8211;</p><h3>Sources</h3><p>2026 Strait of Hormuz Crisis &#8212; Wikipedia -<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Strait_of_Hormuz_crisis">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Strait_of_Hormuz_crisis</a></p><p>US-Iran Conflict: Strait of Hormuz Crisis Reshapes Global Oil Markets &#8212; Kpler, March 1, 2026 - <a href="https://www.kpler.com/blog/us-iran-conflict-strait-of-hormuz-crisis-reshapes-global-oil-markets">https://www.kpler.com/blog/us-iran-conflict-strait-of-hormuz-crisis-reshapes-global-oil-markets</a></p><p>How US-Israel Attacks on Iran Threaten the Strait of Hormuz &#8212; Al Jazeera, March 2026 - <a href="https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/1/how-us-israel-attacks-on-iran-threaten-the-strait-of-hormuz-oil-markets">https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/1/how-us-israel-attacks-on-iran-threaten-the-strait-of-hormuz-oil-markets</a></p><p>What the Closure of the Strait of Hormuz Means for the Global Economy &#8212; Dallas Federal Reserve, March 20, 2026 -<a href="https://www.dallasfed.org/research/economics/2026/0320">https://www.dallasfed.org/research/economics/2026/0320</a></p><p>Canada&#8217;s Energy Future 2026 &#8212; Canada Energy Regulator - <a href="https://www.cer-rec.gc.ca/en/data-analysis/canada-energy-future/index.html">https://www.cer-rec.gc.ca/en/data-analysis/canada-energy-future/index.html</a></p><p>Statistical Review of World Energy &#8212; BP -<a href="https://www.bp.com/en/global/corporate/energy-economics/statistical-review-of-world-energy.html">https://www.bp.com/en/global/corporate/energy-economics/statistical-review-of-world-energy.html</a></p><p>Provincial Economic Forecast &#8212; TD Economics - <a href="https://www.bp.com/en/global/corporate/energy-economics/statistical-review-of-world-energy.html">https://economics.td.com/provincial-economic-forecast</a></p><p>Economic Outlook &#8212; Alberta.ca - <a href="https://www.alberta.ca/economic-outlook">https://www.alberta.ca/economic-outlook</a></p><p>2026 Calgary and Region Yearly Outlook &#8212; CREB -<a href="https://www.creb.com/News/CREBNow/2026/January/forecast_2026/">https://www.creb.com/News/CREBNow/2026/January/forecast_2026/</a></p><p>2026 Economic Outlook &#8212; Calgary Economic Development - <a href="https://www.calgaryeconomicdevelopment.com/newsroom/2026-economic-outlook-diversification-and-innovation-chart-calgarys-path-through-global-turbulence/">https://www.calgaryeconomicdevelopment.com/newsroom/2026-economic-outlook-diversification-and-innovation-chart-calgarys-path-through-global-turbulence/</a></p>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>