Redroom Studios
Senior Member
disgusting and sad. Its been a long list of bad news and bad decisions for Brantford. Maybe Wayne Gretzky is having a museum built for himself...
PS: I've never been to Brantford. Is it one of those Ontario towns with a dead downtown but where the big box garbage on the outskirts is rolling in money?
Brantford debates bulldozing history
January 29, 2010
PAUL MORSE
THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR
BRANTFORD (Jan 29, 2010)
Heritage advocates are begging Telephone City politicians to hold off bulldozing the longest remaining stretch of pre-Confederation architecture in Ontario.
Bids to demolish an expropriated stretch of 40 downtown buildings along the south side of Colborne Street -- over a dozen of which date to the 1840-1866 era -- will be unsealed Monday, with the intent to start demolition within two weeks.
"The south side of Colborne Street has been a blight for 30 years," said Brantford Councillor Mark Littell, head of a city taskforce that recommended razing the three blocks of buildings.
Littell said the YMCA of Hamilton-Burlington-Brantford wants to build an athletics facility for community and postsecondary use on about a third of the site in partnership with Mohawk College, Wilfrid Laurier University and Nipissing University. He expects a gold rush of developers to fight over the prime real estate near the Grand River that would become available.
The YMCA, on behalf of the partnership, applied unsuccessfully last year for federal infrastructure stimulus funding for the $42-million project, said YMCA CEO Jim Commerford.
"We have, through Wilfrid Laurier University, applied for some funding through the federal development agency," he said.
But opponents of the demolition say the city is rushing to the wrecking ball without having studied whether the buildings -- some of which are 170 years old but do not have an official heritage designation -- are structurally salvageable.
"There have been no structural engineers to say they are falling apart," said Jack Jackowetz, chairperson of Brantford's Heritage Committee.
"They haven't marketed them to anybody by saying, 'We have 40 heritage buildings here, is there anything you could do with them?'"
Jackowetz said the value of rehabilitating heritage districts can be seen just down the highway in Hamilton, where new life has been breathed into stretches of James, Locke and Ottawa streets.
Hamilton politicians also saw the wisdom in saving buildings such as the Lister Block.
But Littell said there has been no interest from the private sector to gut and restore the mouldering downtown Brantford buildings.
"I find it ironic that, at the 11th hour, all of a sudden people want to save some of the buildings.
"We waited 30 years and had nothing but decay."
The city has secured $1.38 million from the federal government to help pay for site demolition and remediation, he said.
Brantford Councillor Dan McCreary said no one disagrees something needs to be done, but to tear down unique building stock is the wrong way to go.
McCreary said the city did not do an overall analysis to study the viability of redeveloping the buildings itself.
"Quite frankly, I don't believe creating a gravelly slope from a collection of heritage buildings is urban renewal."
A notice of motion will go to council Monday that will call for the city "to cease the process and engage in public consultation," he said.
Brantford Mayor Mike Hancock said the buildings' owners never applied for heritage designations and the city must move forward to get rid of a dilapidated part of the city.
"The vast majority of our city is strongly in support of this demolition," he said.
"It would give our downtown new life."
pmorse@thespec.com
905-526-3434
Littell said the YMCA of Hamilton-Burlington-Brantford wants to build an athletics facility for community and postsecondary use on about a third of the site in partnership with Mohawk College, Wilfrid Laurier University and Nipissing University. He expects a gold rush of developers to fight over the prime real estate near the Grand River that would become available.
I've never been to Brantford. Is it one of those Ontario towns with a dead downtown but where the big box garbage on the outskirts is rolling in money?
I know I've never been and it won't sound like much but, if this gets wiped, there'll be very little to ever make me want to visit Brantford. Granted, there wasn't much before, but I love the old downtowns of small-town Ontario and am planning a tour with my fiancee this summer of the Erie coast from Caledonia, down and across, all the way to Amherstburg and up to Windsor. Canada needs more manifestations of its history, not less.
I'm cynical enough to wager that it's all down to money.
This is unbelievable. Talk about being stuck in the 50s mentality.