The first step toward Tourism Âé¶¹AV getting full approval to build an information centre at the foot of Queensway is over — now one of the more controversial projects the city has seen in awhile goes to a public hearing.
Âé¶¹AV City Council approved first reading of an application to rezone the site from parks and open space to major institutional Monday, and the project earned widespread support among elected officials.
Coun. Luke Stack stole a line from Joni Mitchell and said he liked that the plan would â€ÎвԱ貹±¹±ð a parking lot and put up a piece of ±è²¹°ù²¹»å¾±²õ±ð.â€
â€Àá²Ô my opinion ¾±³Ù’s a lovely building and with the extensive walkway around it, it compliments the ²¹°ù±ð²¹,†he said. â€Àá³Ù also respects covenant ±ô²¹²Ô»å.â€
Initially, he said, he was concerned that it crossed Simpson covenant land, but thewere heartening. As have been all the alterations by Tourism Âé¶¹AV since the public engagement phase has gotten underway.
Others expressed similar excitement for the openness to change, by Tourism Âé¶¹AV and the plan itself.
Coun. Charlie Hodge offered a critique, noting that he ·É²¹²õ²Ô’t sure that the time of the drive-thru tourism centre was truly over, but he too liked the overall plan.
“G¾±±¹±ð²Ô its location in the heart of our revitalized downtown, the future plans for Kerry Park and how it coincides with that, all the pieces are coming ³Ù´Ç²µ±ð³Ù³ó±ð°ù,†said Mayor Colin Basran. “A²Ô»å if and when we get our downtown ³ó´Ç³Ù±ð±ô… this will be an incredible ±è±ô²¹³¦±ð.â€
Tourism Âé¶¹AV has been looking for a downtown location for its information centre for several years. A version of that plan was presented several months ago and was met with public opposition. Since then, they revamped the building decreased it inside and moved it off of the Simpson Covenant land.
Construction of the new $2.8 million building could begin next year with an early 2018 completion.