Alberta is our home market. Every town, county, and dispatch area in the province is within our same-week service range.
The Bottom Line: If you're in Alberta, we're your local installer. Edmonton to Calgary, Peace Country to the US border. Transparent pricing on the homepage, no quote forms.
Our home turf. Edmonton, Sherwood Park, Leduc, Spruce Grove, St. Albert, Stony Plain, Beaumont, and the surrounding counties. Same-day or next-day start. Travel costs zero — this is crew-territory.
Calgary, Airdrie, Okotoks, High River, Nanton, Claresholm, Fort Macleod, Pincher Creek, Crowsnest Pass. We run these as 1-day or 2-day jobs depending on size. Pincher Creek and Crowsnest are some of the windiest places in Canada — we've installed there, including buildings now standing through 12+ years of chinook events.
Southeast Alberta grain country. Lethbridge (506 km from Edmonton), Medicine Hat (541 km), Taber, Brooks, Bow Island. Overnight jobs typically; we stage crew in Lethbridge for multi-day builds.
Red Deer, Ponoka, Lacombe, Stettler, Rocky Mountain House. Central Alberta is roughly halfway between our Edmonton base and the Calgary corridor. Same-day service for anything Red Deer-north; overnight for anything Red Deer-south depending on schedule.
Grande Prairie, Fairview, Peace River, High Level, Rainbow Lake. Grande Prairie is 456 km northwest of Edmonton; we route crews up Highway 43. Peace Country is one of our highest-volume regions — grain farms, oil-and-gas service operations, and ranches all regular customers.
Fort McMurray (439 km from Edmonton, via Highway 63). Industrial applications — camp storage, equipment cover, waste transfer shelters. We've worked with several Fort Mac operators; the road up is paved, plowed year-round, and regularly-travelled.
Southern Alberta chinook events can shift temperatures 30°C in six hours and bring sustained 100+ km/h winds. Every Alberta install gets chinook-rated hardware — locking bolts that don't creep loose under thermal cycling, tension adjustments that account for PVC cover expansion and contraction. This is baseline, not an upgrade.
Edmonton-north is heavy clay loam that holds water but anchors beautifully. Red Deer-south transitions to lighter sand and gravel soils that drain fast but sometimes need longer anchors. We adjust anchor spec on-site based on actual soil at your address.
Ag-zoned farms usually don't need building permits for fabric structures under the Alberta Safety Codes Act exemption. Urban and peri-urban installs need a Development Permit and a Building Permit — we provide the structural engineering documentation. Every Alberta municipality we've worked with recognizes our P.Eng-stamped drawings.
For specific routes see Alberta interior routes or our Edmonton crew base.
No base rate upcharge. Installation pricing is the same across Alberta — the homepage price table is what you pay. Calgary is a 3-hour drive from Edmonton, which we absorb. For sites more than 500 km from Edmonton (Lethbridge, Grande Prairie, Fort McMurray) we'll add a transparent travel line item, shown on the quote before you commit.
Yes. Steel frames assemble the same at -40 as at +20. The only real cold-weather concern is PVC cover stiffness below -30°C, which adds 1–2 hours to the cover-tensioning step. We schedule cold-weather installs for 2-day builds instead of 1-day, no upcharge.
In descending order of volume: Strathcona, Sturgeon, Parkland, Red Deer, Rocky View, Ponoka, County of Grande Prairie, MD of Foothills, Kneehill, Wheatland, Lacombe, Clearwater. We've worked with essentially every Alberta county and municipal district at least once.
Occasionally, with Parks Canada permitting. The park sets specific rules about commercial vehicle access and construction activity windows. We handle the permit coordination but the timeline stretches to 8–12 weeks total for park deliveries.
Alberta is our home market and represents roughly 70% of our annual build volume. Install patterns we see:
Top 10 by build volume over the last 3 years (approximate):
No. We've worked in essentially every Alberta county and MD. Some remote northern areas require overnight travel but we take the jobs.
Mid-size grain farmer (2,000–5,000 acres) buying a 40'×80' or 50'×100' for equipment and hay storage. Second most common: acreage owner buying 30'×40' or 30'×60' for RV/boat/equipment shelter.
April–October. Winter (November–March) is typically 30% lower volume and scheduling is easier.