
Kitchener • Waterloo Region • Waterloo Regional Tourism Area
Doon Heritage Village in Kitchener is a living history museum that recreates rural life in Waterloo Region during the early 20th century, allowing visitors to explore historic farm buildings, homes, and village structures that reflect the agricultural traditions of the region.
Visitor Information
📍 Location: Doon Heritage Village, Kitchener, Ontario
🎟 Experience: Living History Village / Rural Heritage Museum
👨👩👧👦 Best For: Families, history enthusiasts, and educational visits
🌾 Season: Open seasonally with special heritage programs and events
Plan Your Visit
🕒 Time Needed: Plan to spend several hours exploring the historic village and exhibits.
👟 What to Expect: Historic homes, barns, gardens, and demonstrations of traditional rural trades and farming practices.
🏛 Village Experience: Visitors can walk through a recreated rural community representing life in Waterloo Region around 1914.
📅 Special Events: Seasonal heritage festivals and educational programs highlight the traditions of early farming communities.
🚗 Parking: On-site parking available
🌐 Official Website: Waterloo Region Museums
Doon Heritage Village: Experience Rural Waterloo Region in 1914
Doon Heritage Village offers visitors an immersive look at the agricultural and rural life of Waterloo Region during the early 20th century. The village includes a collection of carefully restored buildings that represent homes, farms, and businesses typical of the period.
Through demonstrations, costumed interpreters, and historic exhibits, visitors can learn how farming families lived, worked, and supported their communities. The preserved structures and agricultural displays help illustrate the important role farming played in shaping the region’s development.
Did You Know?
Doon Heritage Village is part of the Waterloo Region Museum and features more than twenty historic buildings representing rural life in the region around 1914.
Many of the buildings were relocated to the site in order to preserve examples of early architecture and agricultural life in Waterloo Region.

The Heritage Attraction at a Glance & the Story Behind the Site
Doon Heritage Village is a scenic 60-acre living history museum that interprets rural life in the Waterloo Region as it existed around 1914, just before the transformative impact of the First World War. It is part of the Ken Seiling Waterloo Region Museum campus, a larger cultural complex that preserves and shares the history and heritage of the region.

The village was originally established in 1957 (as Doon Pioneer Village) and has since grown into one of southwestern Ontario’s most immersive heritage sites. Visitors explore more than 22 historic buildings, including homes, barns, shops, churches, a sawmill, and community spaces, all furnished and interpreted to reflect life in a flourishing rural crossroads community. Costumed interpreters help bring the past to life through demonstrations, storytelling, and craftsmanship.

Although the Village is undergoing infrastructure renewal and interpretive reimagining through 2025, with full reopening anticipated Spring 2026, consultation work through 2024–25 has helped shape enhanced programming that responds to community input and broadens the Village’s historical narrative before it re-opens for regular visitation.

Doon Heritage Village stands on lands with deep Indigenous and settler histories. While the interpretive village focuses on early 20th-century rural life, it is situated in territory with longstanding Indigenous connections, and future programming will continue to integrate broader perspectives on the region’s human and cultural history.






















