Tuesday, December 30, 2014

"Beneath veneer of scientific neutrality
traffic engineering operates to prejudice
of anyone on foot" @CityLab



Monday, December 29, 2014

From PlaceSpeak — Building a sustainable and prosperous waterfront @GeorgiaStraitBC

Georgia Strait Alliance's Waterfront Initiative is a collaborative effort to build a vision for a sustainable and prosperous urban shoreline in Vancouver and to develop an action plan to make this vision a reality. We are inviting all those with an interest in the future of the city's waterfront to work together—First Nations and all other levels of government, businesses, civil society, and citizens.  More at: PlaceSpeak - Building a sustainable and prosperous waterfront

#Montreal to transform expressway into multi-modal urban boulevard @archpaper


Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Which BC cities are growing fastest? @bcbusiness


Monday, December 22, 2014

"Urban affordability and parking policy are closely connected" @CityLab



Friday, December 19, 2014

From Mother Jones — Which Kills More Americans: Guns or Cars?


Wednesday, December 17, 2014

From Project for Public Spaces — Walkability, Quality Public Space Can Be Created in Communities of Any Size

It is true that larger communities often have greater financial resources than smaller communities to mitigate challenges, but there still are appropriate solutions for each and every community. Take Golden, Colorado – Population: 19,186. You probably think Golden, Colorado is either a resort community or a suburb of Denver. It’s actually neither. A mountain community with its own vibrant, local economy, Golden, Colorado has made a commitment to creating places that are designed for people – not cars. And their economy has benefited greatly from this commitment. Read more: Project for Public Spaces | Walkability, Quality Public Spaces Can Be Created in Communities of Any Size

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

From Sustainable Cities Collective
Sydney Harbor Development
Barangaroo Comes Together


After nearly ten years of planning and development, Barangaroo, a 22-hectare port on the Sydney waterfront, is coming together as a rich, $6 billion, mixed-use development that will fill in missing gaps in the city’s waterfront promenade and offer a stunning, one-of-a-kind park with an embedded Aboriginal cultural center. As Peter Walker, FASLA, PWP Landscape Architecture, described at the ASLA 2014 Annual Meeting in Denver, “it’s the most amazing project I’ve ever worked on.” Throughout Barangaroo, there will be a 50/5o split between buildings and parks. Headland Park, in the north, will be entirely green public space, while Barangaroo South will be entirely developed... offering a mix of residential, commercial, and retail space. 

Read more: Sydney Harbor Development | Sustainable Cities Collective

Friday, December 5, 2014

From Next City — New San Diego Park Reconnects City and Waterfront

When San Diego laid out a vision for its waterfront in 1998, the North Embarcadero could have been any city’s under-utilized bayside space. Once a throughway for Navy and fishing traffic, it had been “cut off from downtown with large expanses of asphalt,” according to one document, including roads, large parking lots and superblocks that literally isolated the city from what had once been its front door. Read more: New San Diego Park Reconnects City and Waterfront

From Nanaimo Bulletin — Video chat
with Nanaimo Councillor Bill Yoachim



Wednesday, December 3, 2014

From StrongTowns.org
Just another pedestrian killed

CHARLES MAROHN I’m fed up with people being killed because my profession contains a bunch of dogmatic idiots. I’m sure the response of some will be: But Chuck, the driver was drunk, this isn’t the engineer’s fault. Ridiculous. If I had a $100 for every time I heard an engineer recommend some stupid tree removal or curve widening because “some drunk is going to come through here and get killed” I would be fully funding Strong Towns with the interest off my latent wealth. We consider the drunk when it suits our purposes -- the free flow of traffic -- and ignore them when it doesn't. That's the sign of a broken moral compass.
The right thing to do here is pretty obvious: SLOW DOWN THE CARS! When you enter into an urban environment, the expectation must be that travel speeds are very slow (I think a 20 mph design speed is too fast – 15 mph would be the top in my opinion) because we need to FORGIVE the common mistakes of humans, both in their cars and out. In a complex urban environment, the only way to do that is to slow down the speed of travel. We must lower the cost of a mistake. Read more: JUST ANOTHER PEDESTRIAN KILLED

Downtown San Diego "Portland Loo" celebrated @GirlsThinkTank



Saturday, November 29, 2014

Narrower streets/slower speeds =
pedestrian safety @jen_keesmaat


Presentation House $4million closer to new home on ‪#‎NorthVan‬ ‪#‎waterfront‬ @straightarts


Friday, November 28, 2014

#Nanaimo Bastion named one of the top 100 buildings in BC @NanaimoMuseum


Thursday, November 27, 2014

From Vancouver Public Space Network
50 Ideas for Improving Public Space

The Vancouver Public Space Network is a volunteer-run non-profit doing advocacy, education and outreach on Vancouver’s public realm. Since 2008, the VPSN has produced Last Candidate Standing and simultaneously released a series of policy recommendations for improving the state of Vancouver’s public spaces. Here are the VPSN’s priorities for the consideration of candidates for local government to take action on from 2014 to 2018: –  you can read more here: http://bit.ly/1zq9y7Y And on Facebook.

Friday, November 21, 2014

#Nanaimo #GeorgiaPark lease:
where's City Parks Dept? Parks Commission?



Thursday, November 20, 2014

Privately owned public space.
What could possibly go wrong?


—@VIUniversity launches Master of
Community Planning Degree Program


This is the pedestrian experience in our cities


Tuesday, November 18, 2014

NYC lowered speed limit to 25.
Other cities should do it too.


Monday, November 17, 2014

Downtown surface parking
doesn't leave much actual city


Saturday, November 15, 2014

#Nanaimo municipal election #VoteNanaimo



Thursday, November 13, 2014

Don't say you weren't warned #Nanaimo #nanelxn14



Monday, November 10, 2014

These are the concerns of #Nanaimo voters and in this exact order of importance...


Vancouver Courier: Voting is about you, your community and your money 

Friday, November 7, 2014

New @WaterfrontTO + Port Lands video
Via @GraphicMatt


Wednesday, November 5, 2014

We've shifted city building away from #publicspace @jen_keesmaat


Monday, November 3, 2014

What are the #nanelxn14 issues for residents in #Nanaimo? @ShawTV_CVI


Saturday, November 1, 2014

From Price Tags — Arthur Erickson on
False Creek development – 1983


Fascinating Jack Webster interview with Arthur Erickson in 1983, discussing the development of B.C. Place (when it was a proposed megaproject to be developed by the Province) for which he was the consulting architect. Renderings start at 9.45. (A very-80s Dave Podmore, head of planning for B.C. Place, shows up – that’s him pictured.) Full post at: Arthur Erickson on False Creek development – 1983 | Price Tags

Thursday, October 30, 2014

From Project for Public Spaces
How to Restore Walking as a Way of Life

The bias in our national philosophy towards high speed mobility has long been a topic that PPS has advocated against. In addition to stifling Placemaking, forcing people into cars has contributed to a host of growing national problems. Most compelling of those problems is the incredible pedestrian carnage. Yet until recently public outcry was minimal and government investment in transportation paid only lip service to annual fatalities that amount to the equivalent of one major airplane crash each month. Read more: Project for Public Spaces | How to Restore Walking as a Way of Life

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Privately owned public space. What could go wrong? RT @CBC_Aboriginal


Jeff Speck's Albuquerque New Mexico
Downtown Walkability Analysis





Albuquerque, New Mexico Downtown Walkability Analysis. This project focuses on walkability and connectivity in downtown, with special attention to the area surrounding the Convention Center and Innovate ABQ site as well as the railroad track at Central Avenue. Jeff Speck's final report submitted Sept 2014 here. More from the City of Albuquerque's website here.

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

From Voting Helps — How a boarded up building became the heart of a community

Lisa Helps I was talking with a downtown business owner yesterday evening. She, like many, is concerned about the increased number of vacancies downtown over the past few years. We see this every day in the for lease signs that have become all too common in downtown storefronts. “We need to do downtown what you did in Fernwood,” she said to me. And she pointed to the creativity, innovation and bold action that me and others at Fernwood NRG took to address a big vacancy in the heart of our village centre and to revitalize the neighbourhood. It was early 2005... 

Read more: How a boarded up building became the heart of a community: The Cornerstone Story - Voting Helps

Thursday, October 23, 2014

From Better! Cities & Towns
A low-cost approach to walkability

Making downtown Albuquerque, New Mexico, more walkable doesn’t have to cost a bundle, according to consultant Jeff Speck. The author of Walkable City delivered a report to the city, which included the following recommendations:.
Replace 19 low-volume traffic lights with stop signs.
Narrow standard 12-foot travel lanes lanes to 10 feet. “This extra (lane) width does nothing except to encourage speeding,” he said. “It doesn’t improve the flow.”
Convert two streets to two-way traffic from one-way.
• Provide more green space.
Reduce the number of travel lanes on a few streets.
• Provide more on-street parking, which buffers pedestrians, and bicycle lanes. Reduction in lanes and lane widths will provide the space.
Reduce the size of a major public space, Civic Plaza, which Speck says is too big to feel comfortable for pedestrians.
Read more: A low-cost approach to walkability | Better! Cities & Towns Online

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

#SD68 First for all the wrong reasons @jeffsd68 #nanelxn14


Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Your Waterfront —
Where Aukland City Meets the Sea

"A world-class destination that excites the senses and celebrates our sea loving pacific culture and maritime history. It supports commercially successful and innovative businesses and is a place for all people, an area rich in character and activities that link people to the city and the sea".  

TCL + WA present … Auckland Waterfront – North Wharf Promenade & Silo Park from TCL on Vimeo.

Monday, October 20, 2014

Why are candidates afraid to discuss this during the current #Nanaimo campaign?


#Minneapolis' Downtown Transit Hub @archpaper



Sunday, October 19, 2014

@BrentToderian on #Aukland's waterfront @WaterfrontAKL


Friday, October 17, 2014

South Downtown Waterfront, Georgia Park
On Monday Council Agenda

South Downtown Waterfront CommitteeRevised Mandate and Objectives To obtain Council support for the continuation of the South Downtown Waterfront Committee.
Minutes of the Georgia Park / Insight Developments Public Hearing. Adopt the amended minutes.
100+ in attendance, a large majority of the delegations were opposed. Councillor Brennan's motion to defer the Staff Report back for further work, clarification, defeated. Councillor Brennan, Kipp, Pattje in favour. Motion to approve the height and square footage increases approved, Councillors Brennan, Kipp, Pattje opposed. Council now to decide on method of "elector  assent".
There is every indication that Senior Staff and most Councillors want to ensure that the lease of the waterfront park is not an issue for public discussion during the current election campaign. We can each draw our own conclusion as to why they fear its proper public airing.
Written submissions to the hearing (minutes state there were 36 written submissions and 20 delegations) here.

Thursday, October 16, 2014

@Helijet to launch flights between ‪#‎Nanaimo‬, Vancouver


Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Squamish Oceanfront Development



From Squamish Oceanfront Development Corporation website — 
Impressive in scale and inspiring in spirit, Squamish Oceanfront is a new master-planned community that brings together the best British Columbia has to offer for living, working, learning and playing. This is a community in the truest sense of the word, incorporating residential, professional, commercial, educational, cultural and recreational elements in an area already world-renowned for its unparalleled beauty and outdoor recreation opportunities. 

Monday, October 13, 2014

RT @DenverWWAD @SFUPublicSquare
Video on Civic Engagement


Sunday, October 12, 2014

Hashtag #nanelxn14 #Nanaimo election 2014


Saturday, October 11, 2014

In honour of #InternationalWalkToSchoolDay @BrentToderian


Tuesday, October 7, 2014

"Empire Days" an international embarrassment for #Nanaimo @CBC_Aboriginal


Monday, October 6, 2014

Audain Whistler museum takes shape with major E.J. Hughes loan @bcbusiness


New fast acting "Lout" spray —
Politician remover


Georgia Park should stay a park and not be part of a hotel. @BuccaneerInn


Remind me — Why do we fight to get
big box retail? @StrongTowns


Thursday, October 2, 2014

From YourWaterfront.co.nz
Where Auckland City Meets the Sea


"A world-class destination that excites the senses and celebrates our sea loving pacific culture and maritime history. It supports commercially successful and innovative businesses and is a place for all people, an area rich in character and activities that link people to the city and the sea". Read more: Your Waterfront, Auckland | Events, Activities, Marinas, Arts, Restaurants & Bars, Things to Do | Home

Seaspan Marine railway barge connecting Nanaimo to all of NA Class 1 Railways @ICF_IslandRail


"But there may be changes to the
[#Nanaimo Georgia Park] lease area"
— City Mgr @TedSwabey


Tuesday, September 30, 2014

From Architect Magazine
Design Competition Winners
Snøhetta and Dialog Release
Calgary Central Library Designs


Snøhetta and Dialog have released final designs (and video) for a new Central Library in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, following a lengthy stage of community engagement to develop their competition-winning proposal from 2013. Working with Canadian firm Dialog—which has offices in Vancouver, Edmonton, Toronto and Calgary—as executive architect, Snøhetta designed a 236,000-square-foot library that covers an existing light rail station, and incorporates gradual elevation changes within the landscape topography to lift the building above the station. Read more: Snøhetta and Dialog Release Calgary Central Library Designs - Architect Magazine

Monday, September 29, 2014

“The younger generation is using #Placemaking as a rallying cry.” — @Fred_Kent @NextCityOrg @PPS_Placemaking


Friday, September 26, 2014

New Masters of Community Planning Program at @VIUniversity approved
by the province!


Thursday, September 25, 2014

Leasing parkland would be lasting mistake — @NanaimoBulletin


Wednesday, September 24, 2014

From Urban Planner Ryan J. Gilmore — Lessons Learned from Winnipeg’s
Waterford Green

Waterford Green is a new subdivision in the City of Winnipeg and is one of the first developments to complete the new collaborative approach. This development stands as an example of the enhanced outcomes that are possible through a collaborative planning process and exemplifies the policies of Complete Communities. Read more: Case-in-Point – Implementing ‘Complete Communities’ Collaboratively: Lessons learned from Winnipeg’s Waterford Green | Ryan J. Gilmore

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

2014 #UBCM Annual Convention Whistler


Saturday, September 20, 2014

PARK(ing) Day in #Nanaimo. Parking spots temporary "park lets." @DowntownNanaimo


Wednesday, September 17, 2014

#trans_form Speaker Series #3 —
Creating a City for Everyone
@Penalosa_G @kteschke


‪#‎Nanaimo‬ "Georgia Park lease deserves referendum” @NanaimoBulletin editorial @tamaracunning


Saturday, September 13, 2014

#Nanaimo waterfront park needs an independent open design competition.


From March 16 City of Vancouver — Georgia and Dunsmuir Viaducts Study

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

From @archpaper —
Finalists reveal plans for SF Parklands project


Monday, September 8, 2014

#Vancouver Seawall "Canada's best public place" - it's also a neighbourhood & multi-modal corridor. @BrentToderian

Nanaimo’s seawall parks and neighbourhoods are first rate and our best asset. Our City Hall has just passed an upzoning for a pie-in-the-sky “Hilton” hotel development on the waterfront and our City Hall is considering privatizing large portions of our waterfront Georgia Park.
This stealth privatization is being done on 3 fronts: 
• an outright “lease” turning parkland over to the developer for a loading zone area (semi’s and delivery vans servicing a 330+ room hotel, patio areas for hotel cafes and lounges and a “grand staircase” creating a flow from the hotel lobby directly down to the waterfront promenade).
• portraying the aggressive extension of its lobby into and onto our parkland by a “grand staircase” connecting to the harbour side promenade as a community benefit. “Connectivity” between Front Street through the hotel to the staircase. This staircase is to be included in lands under their control by a 60 year lease agreement.
• perhaps most objectionably of all, the agreement with Staff to apply the very modest Community Amenity Contribution created by the huge uplift in value created by City concessions to be spent only on areas immediately surrounding their property and in concert with their landscape architects.
Staff report to Council here
Up-zoning to 114.3 m height and FAR of 12 approved Sept 3 at a well attended public hearing, a large majority of delegates speaking against the height and massing application and the park give-away . Sale of land currently designated lane-way that runs the property perimeter on the north and east sides (which alternatively could have been added to this park area which has been overdue for a redesign for at least 15 years). If there was a strong evidence based argument on which the City made these decisions, I didn’t hear it expressed by Council, it wasn’t made by the proponent at the public hearing and I see no sign of it in the Staff report.
The park lease provision, if the idea itself isn’t pulled off the table now just weeks before the municipal election, will require a referendum. Opposition to the loss of control over parkland, especially a much-loved and popular waterfront park, is strong, broad and spreading.
More background and further thoughts here

Thursday, September 4, 2014

emails to Councillors Bestwick, Kipp re #Nanaimo waterfront hotel public hearing

Subject: Fwd: Georgia Park
Date: September 4, 2014 at 1:45:33 PM PDT

To: Jim Kipp  jim.kipp@nanaimo.ca

Hi Jim, forwarding to you this this note to Bill Bestwick. I can tell you that from my chats with people at the park each morning over the last couple of weeks there is very broad opposition to the loss of control of this precious parkland, essentially its privatization. This is hitting a nerve very much like the one that inflamed the Harewood neighbourhood over the Colliery Dam Park crisis.
There may be a win / win scenario achievable here, but clearly, this isn’t it. I hope you’ll vote to send this back to the drawing board.

Frank Murphy


Subject: Georgia Park
Date: September 4, 2014 at 1:31:09 PM PDT

To: Bill Bestwick  bill.bestwick@nanaimo.ca
Hi Bill, I was sorry to hear you won’t be running for Mayor but glad to hear you will run again for a Council seat.
I was particularly impressed with how you were able to offer level-headed leadership throughout the Colliery Dam Park crisis. Two things you said, after Council had no other choice but to reverse course, stood out for me: “Nanaimo, I’m glad to see you still have it in you.” and I paraphrase — you said that if you had to choose between this park and its lakes and a beloved hockey rink, you would not hesitate to choose saving the park.
And speaking of hockey, consider the “suicide pass”. A teammate gets out of trouble passing the puck to another teammate who is not in a position to do anything productive with it, but will loose possession and get knocked flying in the process. Strikes me that is what Staff has passed to Council by recommending that sections of Georgia Park on our waterfront be leased out to a hotel development.
My morning walk takes me along our fine harbour-front promenades and I’ve had the chance to talk to strollers and people enjoying the park each day. The thought of loosing control of this precious parkland is truly abhorrent to people. The recommendation should be withdrawn and the huge height and building massing increases in front of Council this evening should be rejected until the other elements presented to Council on August 11 as interconnected: the leasing out of parkland, the sale of the City owned lane-way property are resolved. 
Georgia Park needs, as it has for a number of years now, a redesign, a revitalization. I believe talented landscape architects and park designers can redesign the park in a way that first and foremost enhances this area for the greater community in a way that co-operatively and collaboratively meets as many of the hotel’s needs as possible. Without hearing from these experts, this should not proceed. An open design competition should be the first step. From there Council and Nanaimo-ites can decide if there is a win/win fit with what the developer has in mind.

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Here’s the detail of the upzoning variances Insight is asking for. ‪#‎Nanaimo‬


Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Ian Gartshore submission to #Nanaimo Georgia Park privatization hearing @ShoreEnergySolu



Progressive #Nanaimo new candidates forum Sept 17 @ProNanaimo


Monday, September 1, 2014

Time for leadership @Bill_McKay11 Dont turn parks over to commercial xclusv control


Tuesday, August 26, 2014

#Nanaimo Waterfront Hotel Proposal —
Let's play with some numbers...

$100 million.
How close to this very large number does the total capital Insight could raise if their 300+ room hotel proposal was fully subscribed by owners/investors purchasing individual rooms?
Let’s consider what the investor/purchaser might be offered before a single brick is laid:
 No Development Cost Charges
• The City of Nanaimo has agreed to selling adjoining property, currently designated as an alley, to the development rather than adding it to adjoining parkland.
• A 10 year property tax exemption.
• An agreement with the global hotel brand Hilton to operate the finished hotel.
• Control just short of ownership of waterfront parkland (a lease) adjoining the property for utility uses such as delivery bays and for restaurant and cafe patios.
• Generous rezoning allowing for greater height and massing than currently permitted.
• The modest Community Amenity Contribution created by the value lift of the property by the City’s generous actions, is to be spent in the park areas nearest the project.
Pretty nice package even before the investor weighs the merits of the business plan. 
Insight has a very smart idea here and I honestly wish I had thought of it! And is it at the end of the day any of my business? They own the property and I’d defend their right to raise investment capital any legal way they want. However —
Once the project exceeded it’s site, and the zoning restrictions in place, things changed fundamentally. The value that will be put on the market here to small strata owner/investors is provided by 3 pretty big players: Insight Developments who own the property; the Hilton Corporation who we’re told have contracted to operate the hotel; and here’s the thing: a large part of the value of the investment product will be supplied by you and me, that is the City of Nanaimo.
Let’s take a closer look at the investor, the business plan and Insight’s role once, as they’ve said is their plan, they turn over ownership of the building to the strata corporation owned in turn by some 300 small investors. 
Two of the three parties bringing value here, Insight and Hilton, have minimized risk while standing to reap great benefit. Good for them, that’s smart. The third party, the City of Nanaimo, is bringing considerable assets to the table, as listed above, and our potential upside is very difficult to quantify. We risk the loss of parkland, our portion of the cost of park upgrading which may or may not have been a high priority before we became involved in the hotel project, we risk, having given away the uplift value we’ve created, never being able to receive our rightful return on our investment. 
Once the project exceeded its site and existing zoning regulations and if it was accommodated by the City, we would effectively become principals and it’s time we did some due diligence.
We need to know the exact details of the agreement with Hilton and how it extends to the corporation we are in fact dealing with here: a corporation that doesn’t actually exist yet, but when it does, Insight with whom we are dealing now will no longer be a player.
We need the proponent to supply an independent analysis of the viability of the hotel project. I think it’s just prudent to assume that the mom and pop investors who will be enticed to invest in this project will lack the research resources to weigh such macro economic factors as the long and short term forecasts of the Chinese economy and of Asian tourist market trends.
We need to be as savvy negotiators as our experienced partners in this enterprise. We need to withhold any approval of land purchases and park use permits, of rezoning applications until we have satisfactorily concluded win/win agreements that bring the best value to the community. Approving the rezoning applications now leaves the City effectively hampered in negotiating any other outstanding issues. Why would we even consider doing that?
We need to ensure by covenant and or any other means that our concessions are “use it or loose it” and expire in total at the end of a set time frame.

Industrial Revolution: The Design and Influence of #GranvilleIsland @DIALOGvancouver

This is what the South Downtown Waterfront Initiative visioning statement means when it says that the site, done right, has the potential to be truly transformative for Nanaimo...

Monday, August 25, 2014

Rushing hearings the Shock + Awe of RE Dev. No time for citizens to understand,organize. @wisemonkeysblog





Sunday, August 24, 2014

Georgia Park on #Nanaimo downtown waterfront in the 50s. Theres a proposal to lease it out to a Hilton hotel development


Saturday, August 23, 2014

From @archpaper —Michael Van Valkenburgh’s new Toronto park is a stormwater treatment plant in disguise

Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates (MVVA) has taken its talents up north to Canada with the new Corktown Common park in Toronto. The 18-acre public space—which is part of the burgeoning, 80-acre West Don Lands neighborhood—was created with Arup and developed by Waterfront Toronto, the government-funded corporation spearheading the revitalization of the city’s waterfront. Tead more: A/N Blog . Michael Van Valkenburgh’s new Toronto park is a stormwater treatment plant in disguise

Friday, August 22, 2014

— @jen_keesmaat in Own Your City —
In Complete Communities
Pedestrians Take Precedence


Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Sneak peak at some @IslandFerriesca concept drawings...


Saturday, August 16, 2014

email to Larry Beasley,
Former YVR Chief Planner re: Development Threat To Nanaimo Waterfront Park

Larry Beasley
From: Frank Murphy 
Subject: Nanaimo's downtown waterfront park

Date: August 16, 2014 at 7:52:47 PM PDT
To: larrybeasleycm@gmail.com
Cc: David Witty, Wally Wells, Pam Shaw

Hi Larry, contacting you from Nanaimo assuming I have your correct email address. I attended and very much enjoyed your presentation here earlier this year as part the exciting South Downtown Waterfront Initiative the leadership of which, as you know, Dave Witty has skillfully assumed. I’ve been posting developments of the Initiative and examples of waterfront revitalizations that have happened or are happening elsewhere at

http://nanaimocommons.blogspot.ca

I remember how taken you were with our wonderful downtown waterfront public areas of promenades, park areas and the array of uses including the boat basin and residential units that integrate with the public sphere. I, and most Nanaimoites love and value highly this brilliant community asset.

There has been a development which threatens this parkland that I thought you would like to hear about. There’s been for the last number of years a derelict construction site — at the top of the hill near the lagoon, if you recall that area. The developer has now come forward with a proposal to build a 35 storey 300 room hotel on the site. The massing is considerable: FAR of 12. The proponent says they have a bit of a problem: their project is too big for their site. Rather than scaling back the size of the project, they have applied for a lease of the adjoining parkland allowing them to build loading docks and restaurant patios and a “grand staircase” down to the waterfront. They also proposed, and have received Council approval, to purchase a thin strip adjoining their site which was designated “lane-way". They propose to contribute to the cost of upgrading another large portion of the park to serve as an extension of the hotel’s grounds.
This has come in front of Council here in the sleepy days of August and Staff are recommending Council use the Alternative Approval Process to meet the requirements to seek voter assent to privatize parkland.
These links will take you to the Staff report presented to Council and an editorial in one of the local papers that addresses some concerns.
http://nanaimocommons.blogspot.ca/2014/08/proposed-hilton-hotel-to-council-monday.html
http://nanaimocommons.blogspot.ca/2014/08/nanaimo-hilton-still-exists-only-in.html
I fear that before people realize what’s at stake, we could loose a large portion of our beloved waterfront park.
Your thoughts and counsel would be very much appreciated.

— Frank Murphy


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