Urban Outdoorsman
Active Member
Nice to see more high density development along the nw train line. Hopefully one day crowchild will be littered with high density TOD's
Perhaps now but it wasn’t always that way. I’ll be sorry to see that mall go.Pretty useless mall, nobody will be disappointed. Interested to see the proposal.
The city can buy them with citizens tax dollars if the citizens want to freeze them.
There is no civil suit that a property owner can pursue against the city/government for decreased property values. The only time a property owner might have a hope is if government action removed almost all economic utility from the property and that is a very high bar to reach in Canada.
Under Alberta statute, the city would have to pay compensation if the designation lowered economic value. That would be negotiated between the city and the landowner and if they weren’t able to come to an agreement, it would be dealt with through an administrative board.
They don't need to 'slow play'. Municipalities have a lot of power to manage and direct the use of private property through bylaws, negotiation, and Canadian property law more generally. The city chooses, based on policy reasons, not to leverage developers to better protect heritage buildings.
Loss of economic value, if the site has redevelopment potential, can be quite significant - the cost to buy a parcel of similar with similar zoning, minus the resale value of the designated property. The easy move for the city is to buy it themselves, and then sell it, though I acknowledge that that isn't what is needed. The net effect on the city would be similar.These are two interesting comments because they're, well the first one isn't true but it has been portrayed as being true.
@Disraeli is correct, the Heritage Act says that compensation for loss of economic value would have to happen.
The City in the past has said what @darwink said, that designating over an owner's wishes basically requires the city to buy the property. The thing is that's completely not true. What the Act says is compensation only for the loss of economic value, and of course the owner would need to prove it.
Loss of economic value, if the site has redevelopment potential, can be quite significant - the cost to buy a parcel of similar with similar zoning, minus the resale value of the designated property. The easy move for the city is to buy it themselves, and then sell it, though I acknowledge that that isn't what is needed. The net effect on the city would be similar.
It certainly can be depending on the site. Back in the early 2000s the city and the previous owners of the Lougheed Building negotiated a covenant in which the city paid annual payments of around $250000 for 10 years to the owner in compensation, and for restoring and maintaining the building. That gives some idea of the dollar figures involved.Loss of economic value, if the site has redevelopment potential, can be quite significant - the cost to buy a parcel of similar with similar zoning, minus the resale value of the designated property. The easy move for the city is to buy it themselves, and then sell it, though I acknowledge that that isn't what is needed. The net effect on the city would be similar.
I agree. Zoning is a big bargaining chip for heritage preservation and it shouldn't be tossed away lightly.Which also leads to an issue where the city regularly approves density increases to parcels that contain Heritage Inventoried buildings, immediately pricing themselves and Heritage Calgary's heritage grant program out of having any effect on preservation of the sites.
It is an interesting conundrum, since the city cannot deny rezoning for those reasons - it would be a slam dunk appeal.Which also leads to an issue where the city regularly approves density increases to parcels that contain Heritage Inventoried buildings, immediately pricing themselves and Heritage Calgary's heritage grant program out of having any effect on preservation of the sites.
It is an interesting conundrum, since the city cannot deny rezoning for those reasons - it would be a slam dunk appeal.
I see there's a land use amendment and a building permit application for the NW corner of 15 Ave and 2nd St SW.
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Addresses:
1413 2 ST SW
302 15 AV SW
310 15 AV SW
314 15 AV SW
316 15 AV SW
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This plot contains the Heritage Inventoried Rossmore Apartments and the house at 302 15 Ave SW which has been submitted for inclusion on the inventory but as far as I know it has not been evaluated yet
Discover Historic Calgary resources
www.calgary.ca
This is an interesting and really unique streetscape as there are those two buildings plus the Alexander Terrace apartments and the Western Hospital.
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In front of the un-inventoried brick home is also the kind of fun 1907 dog prints immortalized in the sidewalk
Anyone have any details on the BP?
More details on this
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Decided to do some 15 min photoshopping to show before and afters. It was tough since the perspective in the development render doesn't seem like an actual possible view, but who knows.
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I know planning must approve if a DP application is pursuant to a land use bylaw (although the Province could in theory amend the Municipal Government Act to allow for a condition of heritage protection just like they have for off-site levies ext).It is an interesting conundrum, since the city cannot deny rezoning for those reasons - it would be a slam dunk appeal.