Alberta gives you fourteen weeks of summer. People who live here know this — and they build their lives around making the most of every one of them.
That urgency shows up in how we use our homes. The backyard isn't a backdrop. The deck isn't a nice-to-have. The triple garage isn't just storage — it's where the bikes live, the kayaks hang, and the cooler waits by the door. In the Parkland Region, a home that works in summer is a home that gets lived in fully.
The Deck Is No Longer a Bonus Feature
Buyers have reprioritized — and so have the rest of us. Outdoor space has moved from "nice to have" to something people genuinely build their summers around. A large backyard, a functional deck, and mature trees are features that photographs can barely capture and that you feel the moment you step outside.
In Spruce Grove, Stony Plain, and Parkland County, where lots run larger than Edmonton and acreage is genuinely within reach, that plays out in real life every weekend. Homes with landscaped yards, multi-level decks, and established outdoor entertaining areas get used — hard — from May through September.
The homes that stand out treat the deck like a room. Furniture arrangement, overhead lighting, a defined dining area. It extends the home outward and makes those fourteen weeks feel a little longer.
What a Home Feels Like When It's Made for This
Walk into a home built for summer and you feel it immediately. The kitchen faces the deck. The back door is wide. The living room opens onto the yard rather than closing it off.
Open-concept main floors, large kitchen islands that double as serving space, walk-out basements to patios — these are the layouts that make a long July weekend with family feel effortless. Not aspirational. Immediate.
"The homes I love showing in summer are the ones where you walk out the back door and think: I could have twenty people here tonight. That feeling is hard to put into a listing — but you know it when you're standing in it."
The Homes That Are Built for How You Actually Live
Room for Everything
Summer accumulates — bikes, paddleboards, ATVs, camping gear, the kayak that only comes out twice a year but still needs somewhere to live. Homes with real storage, real garage space, and room to spread out make the season feel effortless instead of cluttered.
A Place to Land
The best homes have a transition zone — somewhere between outside and in where the boots come off, the wet dog gets dried, and the gear gets dropped without taking over the whole house. Once you've lived with a proper entryway, going back feels impossible.
Space to Breathe
This one's hard to photograph. It's the yard that doesn't feel borrowed, the neighbour who isn't ten feet away, the evening light that lingers longer than you expect. It's the feeling of actually having room — and once you've had it, you notice when it's gone.
Summer is the reason people move here — and the reason they stay. If you've been thinking about what a home like this could look like for your family, I'd love to show you around.
Deanalee Dressler · Associate, REALTOR®
RE/MAX Preferred Choice
(780) 718-1052 · ddressler@remax.net · deanaleedressler.ca