Rundle (Inner East)
Rundle — distinct from the better-known Rundle Heights and Rundle Park to its north — is a mature inner east Edmonton neighbourhood that developed primarily in the 1960s in the area east of 75 Street and south of 118 Avenue. The neighbourhood takes its name from Reverend Robert Terrill Rundle, the Methodist missionary who was among the first Europeans to reach the Edmonton area in the 1840s. The neighbourhood has the working-class residential identity of Edmonton's mature inner east, with a community league that has sustained neighbourhood programming for decades.
What to know about Rundle (Inner East).
Rundle — distinct from the better-known Rundle Heights and Rundle Park to its north — is a mature inner east Edmonton neighbourhood that developed primarily in the 1960s in the area east of 75 Street and south of 118 Avenue. The neighbourhood takes its name from Reverend Robert Terrill Rundle, the Methodist missionary who was among the first Europeans to reach the Edmonton area in the 1840s. The neighbourhood has the working-class residential identity of Edmonton's mature inner east, with a community league that has sustained neighbourhood programming for decades.
The housing stock is predominantly single-family bungalows and raised bungalows from the 1960s on standard lots, with some semi-detached and low-rise apartment buildings providing additional variety. The age and residential character of the neighbourhood mean buyers encounter a range of conditions — from well-maintained and updated homes to those with significant renovation potential at accessible prices. The mature tree canopy on most streets provides the established residential feel that inner east buyers value.
The 118 Avenue BRZ is accessible to the north, providing commercial access and the arts-district energy of that corridor. The northeast Edmonton commercial infrastructure is accessible via major arterials. Transit routes connect the neighbourhood to Downtown and the broader Edmonton network. Schools serve the community across east Edmonton public and Catholic catchments.
For buyers, Rundle is an accessible inner east Edmonton neighbourhood with 1960s character homes at entry-level prices and improving corridor amenities nearby. For sellers, first-time buyers and investors seeking inner Edmonton value at accessible prices create consistent demand for well-maintained properties in this established community.