This rendering is tantalizing, but it doesn't fix the problem: Contemporary Calgary is land-locked! Bracketed by Bow Trail on three sides and no-man's land on the fourth (East) side. The two car dealerships nearby are also not exactly pedestrian destinations, nor is the huge clover-leaf interchange for 14th St. I like the idea of a Big Dig, but it took two decades and was enormously expensive. Ultimately worth it for a big city like that (I actually drove through it before and after!) But burying Bow Trail only addresses a local problem. If Calgary needs a Big Dig, it should be similarly major and do something like activate the entire riverfront or move the train line. Spend billions and make the city anew, like Boston, Portland, or Pittsburgh.
I would love to activate Contemporary Calgary. It's on the pleasant side for a quasi-Brutalist structure, but it's unpleasant to get to. The museum doesn't get the visitors and activities it deserves. Look at Paris Pompidou Centre, whose plaza is a gathering city for everybody. There are always people lunching there, busking, reading a book by the fountain. But CC seems almost infeasible. As much as more park would be nice, you still gotta get to it, and how relaxing would it be with Bow Trail streaming by just behind the hedges? The whole "connect to community" sounds nice, but as rendered is just a fantasy.
While we're at it, also need to activate the similarly isolated skate park, which is part of the same problem. The aspiration would be Venice Beach skate park, which is just two bowls and a concrete square. But the bowls look nice, people boogie to music on the square pad, and there are always passersby from the boardwalk. Calgary skatepark has much more variety, but it looks like crap and is perhaps too big for people to gather round. Literally nobody hangs out there but the skaters.
TLDR: I hate to be a downer, but to fix this place takes 10x the budget and 10x the vision. Need foot traffic.