Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 24, 2013, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013
winnipegfreepress. com A 3
A PLAN to build a 450- stall parkade
to serve new Exchange District
condos has stalled despite
an offer of free provincial land and a
$ 5- million city investment.
In 2011, the Winnipeg Parking Authority
issued a call for private- sector
developers interested in designing,
building and financing a parkade on
a provincially owned surface parking
lot on James Avenue, east of the Centennial
Concert Hall.
The lot is located close to new condo
projects by the Streetside Development
Corporation, Sunstone Resort
Communities and other builders. Condo
developers and arts organizations
alike have been clamouring for years
to increase parking capacity in the
area, where a relatively fast- growing
residential population competes with
theatre audiences for parking stalls.
The province offered up the James
Avenue surface lot, while the city offered
$ 5 million, using a portion of
the proceeds from the $ 23.6- million
sale of the Winnipeg Square Parkade.
A consortium involving Sunstone and
Streetside parent company Qualico
came forward with a plan to build a
mixed- use development with a parkade,
residential units and some form of
commercial development on the site.
That plan is now off the table and
the city is talking to other developers
about building an East Exchange/ Civic
Centre parkade, Winnipeg chief operating
officer Deepak Joshi confirmed
Tuesday.
" Based on the size of the structure
and the cost of construction, the costs
became prohibitive," he said in a statement,
adding Qualico and Sunstone
" would not be proceeding with the
proposed project."
The absence of parking has been
cited as one of the factors in the slow
sale of dozens of new condo units
downtown. New condos repositioned as
rental apartments - such as those in
the Penthouse on Princess Avenue and
H20 on Waterfront Drive - have little
to no vacancy, thanks to Winnipeg's low
rental- apartment vacancy rate.
One explanation is condo owners are
more likely to own cars - hence the
continued drive to build a parkade, especially
after the 2012 closure of the
Civic Centre Parkade,
which was connected
by an underground tunnel
to the Centennial
Concert Hall.
The Winnipeg Parking
Authority originally
set aside $ 10 million
to help build two
downtown parkades.
The first $ 5 million was devoted to the
Longboat Development Corporation's
Centrepointe hotel- office- residential
project on the north side of Portage
Avenue. That contribution took the
form of a low- interest loan.
The city plan for the James Avenue
parkade involved an equity investment
of up to $ 5 million. " For whatever
reason, it hasn't been as easy at
that site as it was on Portage Avenue,"
said Sunstone vice- president and general
manager Bill Coady.
" All we undertook to do was try to
make something happen. Everyone
wants it to happen," he said. " Nobody
wants to see a parking lot there, chewing
up land."
The city is now trying
to see whether
the province is still
interested in the project.
That might mean
building a James Avenue
parkade without
a residential component,
said Point Douglas
Coun. Mike Pagtakhan, council's
downtown, heritage and riverbank
chairman.
The province, however, is waiting
to see a new proposal from the city -
and isn't likely to play ball without a
residential component on its land.
" We would like to see a mixed- use
development and apparently that includes
housing," said Naline Rampersad,
a spokeswoman for Local Government
Minister Ron Lemieux.
The city originally promised residential
property developers it would
develop a parkade in the area in 2009.
Four years later, several have grown
frustrated.
" We need a parking structure down
there," said Charleswood- Tuxedo
Coun. Paula Havixbeck, who is also
dismayed $ 5 million devoted to parking
remains unspent. " Money sits on
the books for years. Meanwhile, we
have crumbling streets."
The provincial surface parking lot
in question, slightly less than half a
hectare in size, sits on James Avenue
between Lily Street and Amy Street.
It's part of a larger parcel of land that
also includes the Royal Manitoba Theatre
Centre's Tom Hendry Warehouse
and a Manitoba Museum storage facility.
The entire parcel - including the
theatre and museum building - has
an assessed value of $ 1.4 million.
bartley. kives@ freepress. mb. ca
No new parkade for Exchange
Planned facility off table despite area condo spurt, free land
By Bartley Kives
' Based on the size of
the structure and the
cost of construction,
the costs became
prohibitive'
JESSICA BURTNICK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
A plan to turn the James Avenue parking lot into a mixed- use development, including a parkade, has fallen apart. No alternative plan is on the table.
A_ 03_ Jul- 24- 13_ FP_ 01. indd A3 7/ 23/ 13 9: 09: 49 PM
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