Grand Forks, British Columbia

E1033868

Grand Forks, British Columbia is a small city in south-central British Columbia near the U.S. border, known for its agricultural roots, Doukhobor heritage, and location at the confluence of the Kettle and Granby Rivers.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Grand Forks, British Columbia canonical 2

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf city
adjacentTo Washington State NERFINISHED
climateType humid continental climate
country Canada
governingBody Grand Forks City Council NERFINISHED
hasAreaCode 236
250
672
778
hasCulturalCommunity Doukhobors NERFINISHED
hasHeritage Doukhobor heritage
hasHeritageSite Doukhobor-related historic sites
hasHighwayAccess British Columbia Highway 3 NERFINISHED
Crowsnest Highway NERFINISHED
hasIndustry agriculture
forestry
tourism
hasLocalNewspaper Grand Forks Gazette NERFINISHED
hasNeighbourhood North Fork area NERFINISHED
South Ruckle NERFINISHED
Valley Heights NERFINISHED
hasPostalCodePrefix V0H
hasRecreation cycling
hiking
river sports
historicalEconomicBase agriculture
mining
smelting
knownFor Doukhobor culture
agricultural roots
fruit growing
historic downtown
locatedAtConfluenceOf Granby River NERFINISHED
Kettle River NERFINISHED
locatedIn south-central British Columbia NERFINISHED
locatedInTimeZone Pacific Time Zone
locatedNear Canada–United States border NERFINISHED
locatedOnRiver Granby River NERFINISHED
Kettle River NERFINISHED
municipalStatus city
near Christina Lake, British Columbia NERFINISHED
Greenwood, British Columbia NERFINISHED
nearbyBorderCrossing Danville–Grand Forks Border Crossing NERFINISHED
partOf Kootenay Boundary Regional District NERFINISHED
province British Columbia
region Boundary Country NERFINISHED

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Kootenay Boundary Regional District hasCity Grand Forks, British Columbia
British Columbia Highway 3 connects Grand Forks, British Columbia