Inuvik

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Template:Short description Template:Other uses Template:Use Canadian English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox settlement

InuvikTemplate:Efn is the only town<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> in the Inuvik Region, and the third largest community in Canada's Northwest Territories. Located in the Beaufort Delta Region,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> it serves as the region's administrative and service centre. Inuvik is home to federal, territorial, and Indigenous government offices, along with a regional hospital and airport.

Inuvik is located on the northern edge of a boreal forest just before it begins to transition to tundra. It is on the east side of the enormous Mackenzie River delta. The town lies within the Gwich'in Settlement Region<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and the Inuvialuit Settlement Region.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

History

Inuvik was conceived in 1953 as a replacement administrative centre for the hamlet of Aklavik on the west of the Mackenzie Delta, as the latter was prone to flooding and had no room for expansion. Initially called "New Aklavik", it was renamed Inuvik (from Inuuvik, Inuvialuktun for "living place" Template:Efn) in 1958.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The school was built in 1959 and the hospital, government offices and staff residences in 1960, when people, including Inuvialuit, Gwichʼin (Dene) and Métis, began to live in the community.

A Naval Radio Station, later Canadian Forces Station Inuvik was commissioned on 10 September 1963 after operations had been successfully transferred from NRS Aklavik. As a Canadian Forces Station, it was a communications research/signals intercept facility and part of the SUPRAD (Supplementary Radio) network.<ref name="Proc">Template:Cite web</ref>

Inuvik achieved village status in 1967 and became a full town in 1979 with an elected mayor and council. In 1979, with the completion of the Dempster Highway, Inuvik became connected to Canada's highway system, and simultaneously the most northerly town to which one could drive in Canada.

For decades, the town's economy was supported by CFS Inuvik and by petrochemical companies exploring the Mackenzie Valley and the Beaufort Sea for petroleum. CFS Inuvik closed on 1 April 1986 and the site was transferred to the Department of Transport for use as a telecommunications station. Nothing remains of CFS Inuvik today. The Navy Operations base at the end of Navy Road was completely dismantled and removed. In the early 1990s, local resistance to petroleum exploration and low international oil prices meant the petrochemical industry also moved away. Thereafter, the economy has been based on some minor tourism, along with subsidies provided by the Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC), Health Canada (for the regional hospital) and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

While a winter only ice road through the Mackenzie River delta still connects Inuvik to Aklavik (southwest of Inuvik), the Tuktoyaktuk Winter Road, which ran northeast to Tuktoyaktuk, has not been maintained since the opening of the year-round Inuvik–Tuktoyaktuk Highway (ITH) in November 2017. The Inuvik to Tuktoyaktuk highway, which connects to Canada's highway system at Inuvik via the Dempster Highway, is the first road in history to reach the Arctic Ocean in North America.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

On 6 March 2025, Bill Blair, the Minister of National Defence, announced that Inuvik will be one of three designated Northern Operational Support Hubs, alongside Yellowknife and Iqaluit, to support the Canadian Armed Forces operations in the Arctic.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Demographics

Template:Historical populations Template:Historical populations In the 2021 Canadian census conducted by Statistics Canada, Inuvik had a population of 3,137 living in 1,223 of its 1,464 total private dwellings, a change of Template:Percentage from its 2016 population of 3,243. With a land area of Template:Cvt, it had a population density of Template:Pop density in 2021.<ref name=2021census>Template:Cite web</ref>

Ethnicity

As of the 2021 Canadian census there were 1,990 people who identified as Indigenous. Of these 63.6 per cent were Inuvialuit (Inuit, predominantly Uummarmiut), 26.1 per cent First Nations, 5.8 per cent Métis and 4.8 per cent reported other Indigenous heritage. The non-Indigenous population of Inuvik was 36.6 per cent. Inuvik is home to a diverse immigrant population, making it one of the most cosmopolitan towns in Northern Canada.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Local Gwichʼin are enrolled in the Inuvik Native Band.

Panethnic groups in the Town of Inuvik (2001−2021)
Panethnic group 2021<ref name="2021censusB">Template:Cite web</ref> 2016<ref name="2016censusB">Template:Cite web</ref> 2011<ref name="2011censusB">Template:Cite web</ref> 2006<ref name="2006censusB">Template:Cite web</ref> 2001<ref name="2001censusB">Template:Cite web</ref>
[[Population|Template:Abbr]] Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr
Indigenous 1,990 Template:Percentage 2,080 Template:Percentage 2,485 Template:Percentage 2,175 Template:Percentage 1,690 Template:Percentage
EuropeanTemplate:Efn 765 Template:Percentage 820 Template:Percentage 1,015 Template:Percentage 1,140 Template:Percentage 1,085 Template:Percentage
Southeast AsianTemplate:Efn 115 Template:Percentage 75 Template:Percentage 45 Template:Percentage 10 Template:Percentage 15 Template:Percentage
African 80 Template:Percentage 35 Template:Percentage 45 Template:Percentage 35 Template:Percentage 15 Template:Percentage
South Asian 55 Template:Percentage 50 Template:Percentage 15 Template:Percentage 25 Template:Percentage 15 Template:Percentage
Middle EasternTemplate:Efn 25 Template:Percentage 35 Template:Percentage 35 Template:Percentage 25 Template:Percentage 30 Template:Percentage
East AsianTemplate:Efn 20 Template:Percentage 20 Template:Percentage 10 Template:Percentage 10 Template:Percentage 0 Template:Percentage
Latin American 10 Template:Percentage 10 Template:Percentage 10 Template:Percentage 10 Template:Percentage 10 Template:Percentage
Other / multiracialTemplate:Efn 30 Template:Percentage 0 Template:Percentage 0 Template:Percentage 0 Template:Percentage 10 Template:Percentage
Total responses 3,055 Template:Percentage 3,125 Template:Percentage 3,655 Template:Percentage 3,430 Template:Percentage 2,855 Template:Percentage
Total population 3,137 Template:Percentage 3,243 Template:Percentage 3,463 Template:Percentage 3,484 Template:Percentage 2,894 Template:Percentage
Template:Small

Language

The main language spoken in Inuvik is English, though schools teach and a handful of local people still speak Inuinnaqtun (Inuvialuktun), and Gwichʼin.<ref name="census2016">Template:Cite web</ref> Local CBC Radio, CHAK (AM), broadcasts an hour of programming a day in each of these languages.

Trilingual Stop sign in Inuvik, July 2022

Religion

There are also about 100 Muslims, most of whom came there for economic opportunities. A small mosque (dubbed "Little mosque on the tundra" in reference to the CBC show Little Mosque on the Prairie) was established in 2010.<ref name="thestar">Template:Cite news</ref>

Geography

Aerial view of town in 2021

Inuvik is located on the East Channel of the Mackenzie Delta, approximately Template:Cvt from the Arctic Ocean and approximately Template:Cvt north of the Arctic Circle. The tree line lies north of Inuvik, and the town is surrounded by boreal forest.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Due to its northern location, Inuvik experiences an average of 56 days of midnight sun every summer and 30 days of polar night every winter.

Transportation

Road

Until November 2017, Inuvik was the most northern community in Canada to be accessible by road (now second to Tuktoyaktuk). The Template:Cvt Dempster Highway links Inuvik to the rest of Canada, providing relatively easy access to a wide variety of goods, and greatly reducing their cost. In contrast, many Arctic communities depend on cargo flights for regular goods and summer sealifts for larger freight, making goods expensive and often slow to arrive.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2017, the Inuvik–Tuktoyaktuk Highway was extended north from Inuvik another Template:Cvt to Tuktoyaktuk on the Arctic coast. Inuvik is also connected to Aklavik by an ice road across the Mackenzie Delta from late December until late April each year.<ref name="winter road dates">Template:Cite web</ref>

The Dempster Highway relies on ferries to cross the Peel River near Fort McPherson and the Mackenzie River at Tsiigehtchic during the summer. In winter, ice bridges are constructed to cross the rivers. During the spring the crossings close throughout May as the ice on the rivers breaks up. Similarly, they are impassible for most of November while the rivers freeze.<ref name="winter road dates"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> During these times air travel is the only way for people and goods to reach Inuvik.

Air

The Inuvik (Mike Zubko) Airport is serviced by several regional carriers. The airport is undergoing renovations as part of expansion plans and is scheduled to be completed by 2028.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Canadian North has regular direct flights to Yellowknife and Norman Wells. It further connects to Edmonton, and a number of smaller communities in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Air North connects to points in the Yukon and travels as far south as Vancouver.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Aklak Air flies north to the small communities of Sachs Harbour, Paulatuk, and Ulukhaktok.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Freight services, helicopters, and floatplane charters are also available from Inuvik. Floatplane service operates out of the nearby Inuvik/Shell Lake Water Aerodrome. North-Wright Airways provides services between Aklavik and Inuvik.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Water

When the Mackenzie River is ice-free, Marine Transportation Services provides a commercial barge service from Hay River, on Great Slave Lake to the regional terminal in Inuvik. The annual sealift moves supplies east into the Kitikmeot Region of Nunavut and west to Utqiagvik, Alaska.<ref name="MTS">Template:Cite web</ref> Many locals own small boats with outboard motors which are used to access family hunting and fishing camps or to visit Aklavik. Boat traffic comes to a halt in the winter when the Mackenzie River freezes.

Climate

Inuvik has a subarctic climate (Köppen Dfc, Trewartha Eclc/Ecld). Summers are typically wetter and cool, with temperatures varying wildly throughout the months due to its peculiar location near the cold Arctic Ocean. The average hottest month of the year, July, has a mean high of Template:Cvt and mean low of Template:Cvt. Unlike many other North American continental climates, Inuvik warms up very quickly during May and June due to the rapidly increasing day length, and that remaining snow cools down until May. June is a warmer month than August.

Seasonal transitions are extremely short, with mean daily temperatures rising or falling as fast as Template:Cvt per day. Winters are long and cold; the coldest month of the year, January, having a mean high of Template:Cvt and a mean low of Template:Cvt. Freezing temperatures can occur any month of the year. Inuvik has a great variation of temperatures during the year, usually peaking below Template:Cvt in the winter and above Template:Cvt in the summer.<ref name= "ccnYEV"/> The highest temperature ever recorded in Inuvik was Template:Cvt on 7 August 2024.<ref name="August 2024 YEV"/> The coldest temperature ever recorded was Template:Cvt on 4 February 1968.<ref name= "ccnYEV"/>

Snow that falls from October onward usually stays until the spring thaw in mid-May but can sometimes last until June.<ref name= "ccnYEV"/>

Template:Inuvik weatherbox

Tourism

Famous attractions

Our Lady of Victory church

Inuvik's Our Lady of Victory Church, often called Igloo Church, is a famous landmark in the region. It is the most-photographed building in the town Template:Citation needed.

Inuvik has the Midnight Sun Mosque, North America's northernmost, which opened in November 2010 after being built in Winnipeg and moved Template:Cvt by truck and barge.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Some media reports have mistakenly called the mosque "the world's northernmost mosque", but in fact the Nord Kamal Mosque in Norilsk, Russia, and a mosque in Tromsø, Norway, are both slightly further north than Inuvik.<ref name="alnor">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="sptimes">Template:Cite web</ref>

Annual events of note

The Inuvik community greenhouse, converted from an old hockey rink<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Great Northern Arts Festival has been held annually for 10 days in the middle of July since 1989.<ref name="gnaf.">Template:Cite web</ref> The Festival has hosted over 3,000 artists from across Canada's north, and from as far away as Japan and Australia over 31 years and is the largest annual tourism event in the Beaufort Delta. Featuring on-site demonstrations, 50+ arts workshops, a 3,500-piece gallery, an outdoor carving village, an interactive artist studio zone, nightly cultural performances, northern film screenings, family activities and an Arctic fashion show, the Festival attracts visitors from around the world to travel the Dempster Highway to visit Inuvik and the Gwich'in and Inuvialuit Settlement Regions.

The annual Sunrise Festival happens on the second weekend of the new year, when the sun finally breaks the horizon after about thirty days of polar night. The Festival is an all-day community event highlighted by dog sled races, a long-program fireworks show and community bonfire. This Festival was highlighted in the award-winning<ref name="coloribus">Template:Cite web</ref> 2010 national Tropicana Orange Juice commercial Arctic Sun.<ref name="coloribus2">Template:Cite web</ref>

Inuvik celebrates the Muskrat Jamboree each year in late March or early April. Started in 1957, the event brings together thousands of people to participate in traditional games, watch the dog sled and snowmobile races and dance (jig) the night away in town. Most events are held on the Mackenzie River where several community groups operate concessions in stove-heated traditional McPherson tents, preparing hot soup, bannock, baked goods, coffee, Labrador tea, hot chocolate and other traditional refreshments. Many participants and spectators wear traditional clothing and often local artisans will have something to sell. In conjunction with the Muskrat Jamboree, the Town of Inuvik hosts the annual Muskrat Cup 3-on-3 Pond Hockey Tournament on the frozen Mackenzie River, the world's most northerly cash tournament.

The weekend closest to the summer solstice (21 June) each year features the Midnight Sun Fun Run, a 5K, 10K and half marathon that starts at midnight under the 24-hours of sunlight experienced for over 50 days each summer in Inuvik. Runners from around the world make their way north to participate in this unique event under the midnight sun.

Facilities

Inuvik Regional Hospital

A new hospital opened in early 2003, providing service to an area extending from Sachs Harbour on Banks Island, to Ulukhaktok on Victoria Island, and from Paulatuk into the Sahtu Region including Norman Wells, Tulita, Délı̨nę, Fort Good Hope, and Colville Lake.

The Midnight Sun Complex, a stage-built multi-use facility, was completed in 2006. Featuring the Roy 'Sugloo' Ipana Memorial Arena, with an NHL-sized ice surface; the Inuvik Curling Club with three sheets and a well-situated licensed lounge/viewing area; the Inuvik Pool, an award-winning Class B recreational pool with lane swimming, waterpark features including a two-story waterslide, hot tub, sauna and steam room; two squash courts; a multi-use community hall with stage; on-site business centre/production office; full building wireless; video-conferencing facility; on-site catering/kitchen; and meeting rooms for groups of 5 to 500. At full-building use, the Complex can host conferences, conventions and trade shows with up to 1200 delegates/exhibitors.<ref name="inuvik">Template:Cite web</ref>

The community has a state-of-the-art school called East 3. The construction budget for the school exceeded $110 million, and it features modern technologies such as 'smartboards' and videoconferencing facilities as well as a large gym.

A distinct feature of Inuvik is the use of "utilidors" – above-ground utility conduits carrying water and sewage – which are covered by corrugated steel. They run throughout town connecting most buildings, and as a result there are many small bridges and underpasses. The utilidors are necessary because of the permafrost underlying the town.

Media

Print

The town is served by the Inuvik Drum, a community newspaper published weekly by Northern News Services.

Television

OTA channel Call sign Network Notes
13 (VHF) CH4221 Aboriginal Peoples Television Network

Inuvik was previously served by CHAK-TV, VHF channel 6, a CBC North television repeater of CFYK-DT (Yellowknife). That station closed on 31 July 2012 due to budget cuts affecting the CBC.<ref name="radio-canada">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="crtc">Template:Cite web</ref>

Radio

Frequency Call sign Branding Format Owner Notes
AM 860 CHAK CBC Radio One Talk radio, public radio Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Part of CBC North; broadcasts programming in English, Gwichʼin, and Inuvialuktun
FM 98.7 CKRW-FM-2 The Rush Hot adult contemporary Klondike Broadcasting Rebroadcaster of CKRW-FM (Whitehorse)
FM 101.9 VF2082 CKLB Radio: The Voice of Denendeh Community radio Native Communications Society of the Northwest Territories First Nations community radio; rebroadcaster of CKLB-FM (Yellowknife)

Communications

Landline telephone service is provided by Northwestel, and cellular service by Ice Wireless and Arctic Digital (Bell Mobility). Cable television is also offered in Inuvik by New North Networks.

Fibre optic communications were added in Inuvik in June 2017 with the completion of the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link; the $82 million Template:Cvt line adds new capability to the town. However, the dependence on this single trunk line occasionally caused widespread Internet outages during Dempster or Alaska Highway maintenance or construction.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

5G network services became available in Inuvik as of July 2025, marking a significant advancement in the region's telecommunications infrastructure.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Dempster Fibre Line, a Template:Cvt fibre optic line, that runs along the Dempster Highway from Dawson City and connects to the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link from Inuvik was completed 12 September 2024. The line, which was brought into operation 26 November 2024, brings backup to the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The federal government supported the project financially through two programs contributing nearly $60 million. Combined with the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Line, the new connection will close the Canada North Fibre Loop and provide service redundancies for the Template:Cvt network.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Planetary nomenclature

In 1988, the International Astronomical Union's Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (IAU / WGPSN) officially adopted the name Inuvik for a crater on Mars, at 78.7° north latitude and 28.6° west longitude. The crater's diameter is Template:Cvt.<ref name="usgs">Template:Cite web</ref>

Notable people

  • Leona Aglukkaq, former member of Parliament for the electoral district of Nunavut and former Minister of Health
  • Roger Allen, former member of the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories and Olympian
  • Zac Boyer, former National Hockey League right winger
  • Tom Butters, former member of the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories
  • Jason Elliott, former professional ice hockey player
  • Fred Koe, former member of the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories
  • Floyd Roland, former mayor of Inuvik and former Premier and member of the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories
  • Richard Nerysoo, former chief of the Gwich'in Tribal Council, former member of the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories, former Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories, and former Premier of the Northwest Territories
  • Eric Schweig, Inuvialuit / Chippewa / Dene actor
  • Willow Allen, model

See also

Notes

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References

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