West District | ?m | ?s | Truman

It is a public park anyone can use it (and I can personally attest to the fact the ziplines in the playground will hold the weight of a fully grown adult..... ;-)). Truman foot the bill to build it, as is standard for any developer to do in a new greenfield community, Truman just chose to go a little higher end/innovative than normal. And that took a LOT of convincing at the City to be allowed to do that from what I understand. There is an HOA for West District, but I am not sure how much of the parks maintenance is covered by those fees, vs. just normal City operations.
Thanks for the info! These newer communities seem to have HOA, while older communities have Community Associations. Curious what difference it makes. The whole CA model in Calgary was very odd for me having lived in Vancouver and Toronto where recreation is primarily city-run.
 
I wonder how the amenities in Currie Barracks work? They opened nice washrooms and splash park this summer. The washrooms seem to be cleaned frequently and the splash park seemed to be staffed most of the time (though it just seemed like somebody sitting in the back room...not sure what they even do?). I presume this is coordinated by the city, but I really don't know?
 
The crane is up for the Wellington, and the excavation is progressing.


20251109_171400.jpg
 
The crane is up for the Wellington, and the excavation is progressing.

Great picture! Impressive momentum to keep on building.

This might be a dumb question, which factor drives development velocity: Is it based on units already sold out/rented out already? or is Truman using the large multi-family rental building subsidies from CMHC that must get build to get the subsidy? or is it just adhering to a pre-defined business plan?

I've heard about crazy good incentive plans from CMHC that may have been overly generous that drove a spike development cross Canada. Since I see a lot of 'for rent' and 'for sale' signs around West District & online, I'd have thought regular 'organic' development would slow down to absorb inventory before adding new units.
 
Great picture! Impressive momentum to keep on building.

This might be a dumb question, which factor drives development velocity: Is it based on units already sold out/rented out already? or is Truman using the large multi-family rental building subsidies from CMHC that must get build to get the subsidy? or is it just adhering to a pre-defined business plan?

I've heard about crazy good incentive plans from CMHC that may have been overly generous that drove a spike development cross Canada. Since I see a lot of 'for rent' and 'for sale' signs around West District & online, I'd have thought regular 'organic' development would slow down to absorb inventory before adding new units.
The program you're likely talking about is MLI Select, basically insuring a 95% Loan-to-Value mortgage for purpose built rentals. If there is a significant slowdown, the risk likely isn't with big developers like Truman, but the smaller rental operators. If they go bankrupt or insolvent, CMHC is left holding a bunch of apartments with questionable economics. They likely won't operate them and will sell at a discount. The losses at CMHC eventually flow to the Government of Canada and the rest of us taxpayers.

Most Truman projects aren't using MLI Select because it has to be 100% rentals, and I think most Truman properties are a mix, with more condos and a small rental component. It's also hard to do rentals at the scale they are building, because they'd need a huge amount of capital to hold all that asset, vs as a condo, they build it and sell and wipe it off their balance sheet.
It's rare for a project already started to stop mid stream unless something really bad happened. We might see a slowdown in new proposals, but in progress ones will usually finish because there's already a decent amount of pre-sales and not finishing means there's no revenue coming in to offset any sunk costs. It's why The ONE project in Toronto is being finished despite it being for sure a money loser and millions in debt. If they don't finish, it's all cost, no revenue. If they finish, still a net loss but a smaller one since there will be some revenue.
 
There are a handful of purpose built rentals in West District. All of the apartments fronting 77th Street for instance as well as Adelaide. And the Quarters as well.

Just a different line of business for them to diversify I to. And I am not 100% certain but once a building is finished and stable with occupancy, you can typically get a loan for it at a lower rate, allowing you to draw capital from it as the stabilized rents will cashflow the loan.
 
Last edited:
There are a handful of purpose built rentals in West District. All of the apartments fronting 77th Street for instance as well as Adelaide. And the Quarters as well.

Just a different line of business for them to diversify I to. And I am not 100% certain but once a building is finished and stable with occupancy, you can typically get a loan for it at a lower rate, allowing you to draw capital from it as the stabilized rents will cashflow the loan.
Yea that makes sense. Surprised there's that much rental demand in West District.
 
The Wellington, which is the new building where they are doing the excavation, will be a rental only.

Oak and Olive is also rental only.

I think the three larger towers that Truman has planned may be for sale.

West side Calgary is a desirable place to live. 15 minutes to downtown, close to the mountains, and easy access to the ring road. Also, four of the best private schools are all located on the west side.

I believe, and many do, that Calgary, and the rest of Alberta, are on the verge of a major investment boom for at least a decade.

CNRL announced a $15 bn expansion. Others will follow.

Data centres will also be huge in the province.

People involved in real estate are wildly bullish about Alberta: https://renx.ca/alberta-expects-billions-in-investment-that-is-good-news-for-cre

A picture of Wellington

Screenshot_20251115_095436_Drive.jpg
 
First time over here this past weekend. Nice new area but University District is definitely more vibrant. Maybe this area will be more impressive in a few years. Lots of new retail potentiallly to be added around Truman’s new head office and adjacent buildings.

UD is definitely more vibrant. But it's been building for years.

The progress at WD is impressive if you take into consideration that about a year ago, the only retail there was at the Gateway building. Everything else has been completed in the last year.

Not sure if this is true, but the below article suggests that West District will have one of the longest retail streets in Calgary. I think by the summer of 2027 the street will be transformed


Calgary’s West District to Feature Eight-Block Retail High Street [Interview]​


By Mario Toneguzzi
Date:
July 2, 2024

Calgary-based, family-owned, Truman Development Corporation is creating a massive mixed-use community called West District which eventually will include an unprecedented high street of eight blocks with various retail, dining and entertainment tenants.

Tony Trutina, President of the company, said his father George started buying and assembling the land for the huge development, in the western part of Calgary, about 10 years ago. Today, it’s about 95 acres, a contiguous piece.

The project will eventually have several thousand residential units, several hundred thousand square feet of commercial, retail and office space.

“This area was just under-serviced,” said Trutina. “There wasn’t really a master-planned community at the time that this started. Ten years ago, 15 years ago, there was none that had a large contiguous land assembly like this one where you could try and do a main street, where you can plug and play certain uses, and program the street, which is not typical.

“Of this scale, I can only think of us that are doing it and that’s really it.”

The first phase of the development began in 2017.

“The vision is an urban main street where you can truly live, work, play, enjoy. You don’t have to be downtown to go to a great restaurant. All the things that you would do like destination kind of shopping which Calgary is, we’re trying to incorporate it all 10 steps from your front door. That was the idea, the concept behind it,” explained Trutina. “And that’s where the main street concept has come from.”

John Moss, Senior Vice President of real estate firm CBRE, who is handling the retail leasing of the project, said the project is creating an eight city block high street.

So when you consider Kensington, 4th Street, 17th Avenue and Marda Loop, all of those neighbourhoods are in between four to six blocks max. Truman is being more aggressive, bringing eight city blocks that’s going to impact the whole city,” said Moss.

“This is going to be a destination for people from all over the city who are going to come. In addition to the park that they’ve curated. This is going to be a major mecca. A social media hub for the public art they’re bringing. It’s going to be city renowned.”

Trutina said a public park will be “massive”, one of the largest in the city. It will be finished in September.

Moss said one of the goals is to bring more daytime traffic to the community.

“Keeping everybody in close proximity to where they live, work and play. The food and beverage program that we’re trying to bring is we want to bring the best of class local operators like the UNA, the Blanco, the Deville coffee that we’ve already started and then start bringing other national, international players just to augment that,” said Moss.

“The food and beverage is always going to be the base. But then we want to start bringing in more fitness boutique, more retail, personal service. Anything from your local fashion retailers. We want to bring that more so you have that walkability and you have a very diverse use. We don’t want to just focus on one, you have to give everybody every offering, and every experience.”

Commercial space will include a 40,000-square-foot Sobeys.

Trutina said main street will open later this fall and the whole build out of the project will be between five and 10 years.

According to a retail leasing brochure by CBRE, West District’s average household income within a 10-minute driving radius is 152 per cent above Calgary’s and 181 per cent more than Canada’s. Its average household spending is 148 per cent more than Calgary’s and 168 per cent more than Canada’s.

The CBRE brochure says the master-planned community will bring over 3,500 new dwelling units with an anticipated 7,000 + residents with more than one million square feet of office and 500,000 square feet of retail space. The new community will host over 250 new shops and services creating over 5,000 new jobs with an anticipated 60,000+ year visitors.

Currently, the population surrounding the West District is just over 119,000 people within a five-kilometre radius. CBRE says this is anticipated to increase to 160,700 by 2033, growth of 135 per cent in 10 years.


 
So when you consider Kensington, 4th Street, 17th Avenue and Marda Loop, all of those neighbourhoods are in between four to six blocks max. Truman is being more aggressive, bringing eight city blocks that’s going to impact the whole city,” said Moss.

17th definitely runs from at least 4th-14th (1600m), but I'd even say its 2nd-15th for a full 2km (long blocks)

Broadcast Ave could be a little under 800m. Same as Centre St from 8th-16th.

If you allow an L shape then Kensington Rd-10 St NW is about 1km. 9 Ave in Inglewood is 800-1000m. You could probably make an argument for a stretch of 11th Ave SW.

Still pretty darn unique in the suburban context, if it actually gets there. Which I wouldn't have really doubted until realizing how unique it would be!
 

Back
Top