adamyyc
Senior Member
Is this the fire station where the Budget car rental is/was (it’s been a while since I rented a car from there so I have no idea if it still exists)?Sounds like something exciting is on the way for the old firehall downtown.
Is this the fire station where the Budget car rental is/was (it’s been a while since I rented a car from there so I have no idea if it still exists)?Sounds like something exciting is on the way for the old firehall downtown.
great, turn a character mid-century building into a turd. Not what i had in mind
If they don't want to trigger a new DP, then yes. These guys don't get a free pass from the development department for their new dream DQ since the first was destroyed by fire. They can rebuild exactly the same way without issue, or go through the same process everyone else in the city does if they want a new development. Rules are rules, despite Corbella's fake outrage.Would it be appropriate to rebuild a 50 year old restaurant exactly as it was?
Agreed, Better than an empty building.The Sierra project is a downgrade aesthetics wise but this is a good compromise. What’s the point of having a building that looks good but sits empty. The new design isn’t great but it’s passable.
We've discussed this a little in the Office Space Conversion thread. Basically, Sierra Place (originally the Dome building) was built as shown on the left in that tweet in 1958 as a four story building, the same year as the landmark Elveden Centre across the street (and in a similar style). In 1980, six more stories were added, but they are fairly consistent in look with the bottom four rather than a Biscuit Block (etc) totally different style.This building doesn't even look like the left anymore I correct?
It's not like we can't have both though. The Barron building is an excellent example of this.Agreed, Better than an empty building.
Barron project is half-finished and stalled so unclear if it's an excellent example yet.It's not like we can't have both though. The Barron building is an excellent example of this.
We've discussed this a little in the Office Space Conversion thread. Basically, Sierra Place (originally the Dome building) was built as shown on the left in that tweet in 1958 as a four story building, the same year as the landmark Elveden Centre across the street (and in a similar style). In 1980, six more stories were added, but they are fairly consistent in look with the bottom four rather than a Biscuit Block (etc) totally different style.
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This link has more history of the building. There are a handful of good ca. 1958 International style buildings in the area; in addition to Dome/Sierra Place and Elveden Centre, there's the Britannia Building across the alley from Dome/Sierra and the Petro-Fina building across the alley from Elveden. This area was really Calgary's first downtown of the post-war/post-Leduc oil boom era.
To me it's a pity to lose the heritage facade of the building, but I suppose push come to shove I'll take more housing units than an empty heritage building, if both are not possible.




