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More Condos in The Exchange

+3
JT Estoban
grumpy old man
EdWin
7 posters

Go down  Message [Page 1 of 1]

1More Condos in The Exchange Empty More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 12:14 pm

EdWin

EdWin
major-contributor
major-contributor

Exchange makeover creates excitement
By: Murray McNeill

Winnipeg Free Press
November 17, 2009


THE largest residential conversion project in more than 20 years is being planned for the East Exchange District.

The Qualico Group wants to purchase six, multi-storey heritage
buildings on Market and James avenues from Nygard International and
convert them to residential/commercial use.

Spokespeople for both companies confirmed Monday that an offer to purchase has been submitted and negotiations are underway.

"You can confirm there's something cooking," Qualico vice-president
John Daniels said. "Early in the New Year we'll hopefully be in a
position to make an announcement one way or the other."

Daniels also confirmed that the City of Winnipeg may also be planning
to build a 450-stall parkade adjacent to the Qualico development,
although a spokesman for the city said he could neither confirm nor
deny that.

"It certainly would be a plus factor if it did happen," Daniels said.
"But we're looking at other possibilities for parking, as well. So it
(the Qualico development) may be able to go ahead without it."

Daniels didn't reveal how many residential units are being contemplated
or the dollar value of the proposed project. Nor would he say if the
residential units would be condominiums, rental units, or both.

"It's all pretty speculative at this point," he said, adding only that
it will be a mixed-use development with commercial space on the main
floors of the buildings and residential units above.

Nygard officials were also being tight-lipped. A company spokesperson
said the firm wouldn't discuss details while talks are still ongoing.

Sources said three of the buildings are located are on the north side
of Market Avenue, east of Lily Street. They include the former Athletes
Wear building at 145 Market. That building used to house a Nygard
Fashion World store and is now the new home of Brick's Fine Furniture.

The other three buildings are on the south side of James Street, also east of Lily Street, sources said.

Real estate agent Bill Thiessen, of RE/MAX Professional Realty, who
specializes in downtown condominiums, said because of the number of
buildings involved, it would be the largest residential redevelopment
project in the Exchange District since the Ashdown Warehouse conversion
in the late 1980s.

It would rival Red River College's downtown campus as one of the area's
most significant heritage-building conversion projects, he added.

Thiessen said the fact Qualico is the developer may be as significant as the project itself.

"I'm just so excited that the largest residential developer in our
province is saying 'We're going to take a serious look at the
downtown.' They are consummate pros."

He said ideally, the development should include a combination of
condominiums and apartments. And at least half of the condos should be
smaller, more moderately priced units -- maybe 700- or 800-square-feet
priced at less than $200,000.

There's also a need for some two-bedroom units priced in the $225,000-to-$275,000 range, he said.

As for the commercial units, Thiessen said they should be mainly retail with some office space.

Although the condo complexes on nearby Waterfront Drive have had
trouble filling ground-floor retail space, Thiessen said the rents in
retrofitted buildings are usually about a third less than in new
buildings. It should be easier to find retail tenants for the Qualico
development.

Jino Distasio, director of the University of Winnipeg's Institute of
Urban Studies, also called for a mixture of residential and commercial
units. "We want to look at some balance so there's an opportunity for
all different kinds of people to get into this very exciting area," he
said. "And the greater the level of diversity, the easier it is to
market them."

He said it's also great to see a major developer like Qualico trying to
find a new use for some old downtown buildings, noting Winnipeg has one
of North America's largest collections of heritage warehouse buildings.
"We have this great asset and we need to save it."

The executive director of the Exchange District Business Improvement Zone welcomed any new retail or residential development.

Mal Anderson said there are about 1,000 people living in the Exchange
District. There must be at least twice that many to create the demand
needed to attract retailers such as a grocery store.

murray.mcneill@freepress.mb.ca

What is it?

A proposal to purchase six warehouse buildings on Market and James
avenues, and redevelop them as residential and commercial space.


How big are the buildings?

Most are four- or five-storey structures.


Who's behind it?

The Qualico Group, which is the province's largest residential developer.


Who owns the buildings now?

Nygard International, which acquired them for an ill-fated, $80-million
plan to redevelop a large section of the East Exchange District with
covered shopping malls, office space and hundreds of new residential
projects. That project, dubbed Nygard Village, was scrapped in 2007
after the city allowed two new condo projects on Waterfront Drive,
thereby denying the Nygard development the river-front vista the
company said was needed to make it viable.


What's being proposed?

Details are sketchy. Nygard officials are not commenting and a Qualico
official would only say it would be mixed-used development with
commercial space on the main floor of the buildings and residential
units above.


What about parking?

The Qualico official said the city is considering building a 450-stall
parkade on a property adjacent to the development, although a city
spokesperson would neither confirm nor deny that. But the Qualico
official said the company is also looking at other parking options, so
the project could proceed even without the city parkade.


















2More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 12:15 pm

EdWin

EdWin
major-contributor
major-contributor

I am excited about this development, however I pray that it doesn't turn out to become large pink stucco buildings in a historic neighborhood More Condos in The Exchange Icon_silent



Last edited by EdWin on Tue Nov 17, 2009 12:16 pm; edited 1 time in total

3More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 12:16 pm

grumpy old man

grumpy old man
administrator
administrator

Qualico should do a good job...

4More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 12:17 pm

EdWin

EdWin
major-contributor
major-contributor

grumpy old man wrote:Qualico should do a good job...

I hope so. They are doing a great job to date with the new EPCOR skyscraper being built here in Edmonton.

5More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 12:57 pm

JT Estoban

JT Estoban
major-contributor
major-contributor

What about the old pump house on James Ave? That isn't slated for demo, is it?

By and large, if they want to build it, and turn all those ugly buildings in need of some TLC into something, by all means.

I'm just surprised they can find folks with that kind of cash who actually WANT to buy a condo in that area...but hey, if you build it....

But yeah, I second the no pink stucco! lol

6More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 12:58 pm

usedtoliveinstb

usedtoliveinstb
newbie

JT Estoban wrote:What about the old pump house on James Ave? That isn't slated for demo, is it?

By and large, if they want to build it, and turn all those ugly buildings in need of some TLC into something, by all means.

I'm just surprised they can find folks with that kind of cash who actually WANT to buy a condo in that area...but hey, if you build it....

But yeah, I second the no pink stucco! lol

Wealthy YUPy's will buy them. Then they will spend money in the neighbourhood and it will be gentrified.

7More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 2:16 pm

Guest

Anonymous
Guest

Gentification implies that there are people living there now...other than some riverbank customers, I don't think there are any people living there to displace.

8More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 2:52 pm

grumpy old man

grumpy old man
administrator
administrator

We need this type of initiative. I sure hope the bozo bureaucracy does not get in the way...

9More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 2:56 pm

Riverman

Riverman
newbie

Right adjacent to the Sally Ann flophouse? Prices better be pretty low...

10More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 2:59 pm

usedtoliveinstb

usedtoliveinstb
newbie

grumpy old man wrote:We need this type of initiative. I sure hope the bozo bureaucracy does not get in the way...

Yea, core growth is great. Hopefully within time we can get more of a safe student ghetto around the RRC and U of W campuses. If the prices are driven up the area will get nicer and crime will be reduced.

11More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 3:01 pm

usedtoliveinstb

usedtoliveinstb
newbie

Riverman wrote:Right adjacent to the Sally Ann flophouse? Prices better be pretty low...

High prices are needed to bring in wealthy people into the downtown. That will push the poverty out.

12More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 3:15 pm

Mantha

Mantha
contributor plus
contributor plus

usedtoliveinstb wrote:High prices are needed to bring in wealthy people into the downtown. That will push the poverty out.

Or give them more people to panhandle!

http://yaciuk.blogspot.com

13More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Tue Nov 17, 2009 3:45 pm

Riverman

Riverman
newbie

Sally Ann is in a new building and isn't going anywhere. The path is well beaten between there (free bed) and the Siloam Mission (free food). The area is purely a bum's paradise.

14More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Thu Nov 19, 2009 5:17 pm

Guest

Anonymous
Guest

Qualico is a exciting thing from an insiders veiw.

15More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Thu Nov 19, 2009 5:19 pm

Freeman

Freeman
uber-contributor
uber-contributor

Pavolo wrote:Qualico is a exciting thing from an insiders veiw.

You're an insider at Qualico??

16More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Thu Nov 19, 2009 5:21 pm

Guest

Anonymous
Guest

No just have an inside track

17More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Thu Nov 19, 2009 5:22 pm

Guest

Anonymous
Guest

To bad the city did not support Nygard

18More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Fri Nov 20, 2009 6:41 pm

Guest

Anonymous
Guest

This is great news for the city. Perhaps the best thing to happen to Winnipeg since the Centreport plan was announced.

19More Condos in The Exchange Empty Re: More Condos in The Exchange Fri Nov 20, 2009 6:47 pm

Guest

Anonymous
Guest

Riverman wrote:Sally Ann is in a new building and isn't going anywhere. The path is well beaten between there (free bed) and the Siloam Mission (free food). The area is purely a bum's paradise.

It's similiar to calgary. Very similiar. The Sally Ann is relatively new in the Calgary Downtown East side. Three blocks away, you have the Calgary Drop-In Centre, which is the mother of all homeless shelters, built in 2001 is a gigantic 6 stories tall. Until recently, you had to cross the 'cul-de-sac of crack' to move from one shelter to another.

The area surrounding the Shelters has been completely razed, as it once was home to three of the city's most sketchy hotels (the Cecil, the King Edward, and the St.Louis). I've noticed on google maps that they are even fencing off the parkland near the river, since it was a haven for crack addicts and criminals. In fact the whole east side industrial warehouses,right up to the historic Fort Calgary, have all been razed since I left the city in late 2007.

Hopefully they will replace some of the abandoned lots with low income housing, or I forsee the problem moving across the river to Bridgeland.

This is what has really suprised me about Winnipeg. When some of those seedy hotels on Main St were razed in order to build a WRHA complex, and that white-elephant tipi, I was sure the homeless population would make like Calgary, and converge in droves to Stephen Juba park. For the most part this hasn't happened, as (unlike calgary's rivertrail), I can still enjoy a peaceful bikeride through the trails from the Forks to The Armstrong Docks without fear of being harassed by drug addicts.

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