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Importance of Downtown Edmonton and the Impact of COVID-19

Downtown Edmonton holds a critical share of Edmonton’s housing, employment, and civic activities, generating over nine percent of the city’s property tax revenues in less than one percent of the city's area. The City’s and regional plans recognize the significance of downtown; The City Plan provides the direction to preserve and strengthen the role of Centre City as Edmonton’s principal employment and residential node, regional economic and mobility hub, urban and traditional meeting place, and celebration space.

Implementation of the Strategy has already begun and partners are collaboratively working to advance several actions. The costs to implement the Strategy are estimated to be between $7 million and $28 million. Administration is proposing a risk-based financial approach for funding of $5 million for the strategy. This funding will be used to further leverage contributions from partners. This funding will be supplied through existing funds from within the existing 2021 operating budget, including year-to-date budget savings and continued cost management strategies and no new additional funding is requested.

Despite this progress, downtown has been negatively and disproportionately impacted by COVID-19. Since the pandemic began, fewer people are visiting downtown to work, shop, study, and attend festivals. Almost all the usual drivers of activity have been affected; up to 60,000 office workers are working from home; roughly 35,000 post-secondary students transitioned to online learning and are no longer coming to their downtown campuses; conferences, performances and events have been cancelled or conducted virtually. With fewer people downtown, restaurants, personal services and retail businesses have closed.
Public health measures have severely limited the capacity of homeless-serving agencies, reducing their ability to meet the need for services. The economic shock of COVID-19 has contributed to the overall increase in the number of people experiencing homelessness and the number of precariously housed people seeking support. With fewer eyes on the street, the perception of safety has decreased and crime rates for harassment and assault are proportionately higher.

Vibrancy Strategy
To further support the recovery of downtown, Administration worked in partnership with a range of downtown stakeholders on the development of a Downtown Vibrancy Strategy. The strategy lays out 20 actions that will be led by a number of partners. These actions are organized around four key pillars:
● Downtown as a home - a place with a thriving and inclusive population where people continue to want to live and enjoy a high quality of life.
● Downtown as an economic hub - a place that supports a strong, diverse economy, where businesses, infrastructure, and amenities are connected and coordinated.
● Downtown as a destination - a place that people love, where tourism, retail, services, festivals, arts and culture, and attractive, accessible and well-activated public spaces flourish.
● Downtown as a safe, welcoming place - a place that prioritizes participation and quality of life for everyone, regardless of race, gender, class, age, ability, culture or other identities.

 
Need for clean public washrooms key lesson from COVID-19, Edmonton businesses say

'A lack of washrooms was one of the most immediately harmful impacts of the pandemic'

Natasha Riebe

Cleaner public washrooms are high on the wish list of Edmonton's business groups as the city recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Puneeta McBryan, executive director of the Downtown Business Association, said the fallout was apparent last March when Edmonton public libraries and city facilities shut down, and in turn, cut off the bathroom facilties.

"It was very clear that a lack of washrooms was one of the most immediately harmful impacts of the pandemic on downtown," McBryan said during a council executive committee meeting Monday.

The city placed porta-potties in key areas while city facilities are closed but McBryan noted this temporary replacement plan runs only until October.

"It's a huge need," McBryan said in an interview with CBC Monday afternoon.

"There are the LRT washrooms — there's a few but they're, just to be totally blunt about it, they're kind of gross and scary."

 
Importance of Downtown Edmonton and the Impact of COVID-19

Downtown Edmonton holds a critical share of Edmonton’s housing, employment, and civic activities, generating over nine percent of the city’s property tax revenues in less than one percent of the city's area. The City’s and regional plans recognize the significance of downtown; The City Plan provides the direction to preserve and strengthen the role of Centre City as Edmonton’s principal employment and residential node, regional economic and mobility hub, urban and traditional meeting place, and celebration space.

Implementation of the Strategy has already begun and partners are collaboratively working to advance several actions. The costs to implement the Strategy are estimated to be between $7 million and $28 million. Administration is proposing a risk-based financial approach for funding of $5 million for the strategy. This funding will be used to further leverage contributions from partners. This funding will be supplied through existing funds from within the existing 2021 operating budget, including year-to-date budget savings and continued cost management strategies and no new additional funding is requested.

Despite this progress, downtown has been negatively and disproportionately impacted by COVID-19. Since the pandemic began, fewer people are visiting downtown to work, shop, study, and attend festivals. Almost all the usual drivers of activity have been affected; up to 60,000 office workers are working from home; roughly 35,000 post-secondary students transitioned to online learning and are no longer coming to their downtown campuses; conferences, performances and events have been cancelled or conducted virtually. With fewer people downtown, restaurants, personal services and retail businesses have closed.
Public health measures have severely limited the capacity of homeless-serving agencies, reducing their ability to meet the need for services. The economic shock of COVID-19 has contributed to the overall increase in the number of people experiencing homelessness and the number of precariously housed people seeking support. With fewer eyes on the street, the perception of safety has decreased and crime rates for harassment and assault are proportionately higher.

Vibrancy Strategy
To further support the recovery of downtown, Administration worked in partnership with a range of downtown stakeholders on the development of a Downtown Vibrancy Strategy. The strategy lays out 20 actions that will be led by a number of partners. These actions are organized around four key pillars:
● Downtown as a home - a place with a thriving and inclusive population where people continue to want to live and enjoy a high quality of life.
● Downtown as an economic hub - a place that supports a strong, diverse economy, where businesses, infrastructure, and amenities are connected and coordinated.
● Downtown as a destination - a place that people love, where tourism, retail, services, festivals, arts and culture, and attractive, accessible and well-activated public spaces flourish.
● Downtown as a safe, welcoming place - a place that prioritizes participation and quality of life for everyone, regardless of race, gender, class, age, ability, culture or other identities.


From the article on this strategy it says:

"Work has already been underway since the pandemic began with more than $271 million of investment toward relief initiatives in the Downtown. This includes the city’s economic recovery construction grant, which to date has provided funding for seven construction projects with a value of $324 million and the creation of 1,254 residential units and 2,614 construction jobs."

Does that mean 7 residential construction projects have been approved for 2021 with that money or is this something different? What are the 7 successful projects to receive funding?

 
There is general recognition that 7 high-rise projects have been keyed for tax incentives, but I haven't heard anywhere which projects they might be. The Hudson and Qualico's project are two where the leak has slipped and identified them as recipients. The other 5 are worth guessing at. I suspect the 3 projects enveloping the Warehouse District Park are in there. Otherwise ???
 
Regarding this Edmonton downtown plan/strategy, it certainly pales in comparison to the $1B downtown plan Calgary just released. Their city just approved $200M for the plan and...
Council intends to seek the remaining $800 million from the provincial and federal governments.
In a statement, Calgary's Alberta NDP municipal affairs critic Joe Ceci said the Alberta government can’t delay in assisting Calgary’s downtown.

I don't recall seeing anything about the city of Edmonton requesting any provincial money for our plan.

Maybe the province can fund the downtown Calgary plan with all the money they gutted out of the University of Alberta - 25% of its base operating budget equalling $170 million over the last couple years. In fact, the UofA is absorbing 50% of the total post secondary cuts in the province.
 
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City announces new two-year strategy to stimulate downtown vibrancy​

June 15, 2021

The City of Edmonton has announced a new two-year Downtown Vibrancy Strategy to support businesses, visitors, employees and residents of downtown. The Strategy outlines short-term steps the City, along with its many dedicated partners, will take to re-energize and activate the heart of Edmonton.

The strategy focuses on four pillars:
  1. Downtown as a home
  2. Downtown as an economic hub
  3. Downtown as a destination
  4. Downtown as a safe, welcoming place

Each pillar outlines the budgets and resources needed to achieve each action, including potential leads and partners.

“Putting the strategy into action requires intentional partnerships; coordinated efforts of the City of Edmonton, other orders of government, agencies, industry, downtown employers, land owners and Edmontonians,” said City Manager Andre Corbould. “Leveraging these partnerships will ensure the City is strategic in supporting business owners in navigating and overcoming the challenges they are experiencing as they serve citizens.”

The Strategy also aims to help Edmonton’s downtown recover from the financial and social effects of COVID-19. This Strategy recognizes the importance a strong, vibrant downtown has on our city and region. Edmonton’s downtown generates nine per cent of the City’s property taxes in only one per cent of its area and more than $4.4 billion in private and institutional investment.

“The pandemic has impacted our city centre particularly hard as fewer people visit, work, shop and study downtown,” said Urban Planning and Economy Deputy City Manager Stepanie McCabe. “Prior to COVID, economic indicators for Downtown had trended positive since 2017 and we have seen significant transformational change in our core. Our Downtown Vibrancy Strategy charts a course toward catalyzing that momentum again.”

The Downtown Vibrancy Strategy builds on steps the City has already taken to support downtown. These include:
  • Shared streets initiatives
  • Free parking promotions
  • Temporary Patio and Retail Extension Program
  • Economic recovery and downtown construction grants
  • Activations like Downtown Spark

Combined with planned capital projects such as the Warehouse Campus Park, this work totals over $271 million in public investment downtown over the short term.

“This new strategy will build off of the learnings and successes of our many downtown revitalization initiatives,” said Corbould. “We remain committed to creating the conditions for a vibrant downtown throughout our COVID-19 recovery and into the future.”

Edmontonians can follow the work ahead and watch for new activities and events taking place downtown by visiting edmonton.ca/downtown.​
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For more information:
edmonton.ca/downtown

Media contact:
Melissa Lovatt
Account Director
Communications and Engagement
780-719-0544​
 
Regarding this Edmonton downtown plan/strategy, it certainly pales in comparison to the $1B downtown plan Calgary just released. Their city just approved $200M for the plan and...
Council intends to seek the remaining $800 million from the provincial and federal governments.
In a statement, Calgary's Alberta NDP municipal affairs critic Joe Ceci said the Alberta government can’t delay in assisting Calgary’s downtown.

I don't recall seeing anything about the city of Edmonton requesting any provincial money for our plan.

Maybe the province can fund the downtown Calgary plan with all the money they gutted out of the University of Alberta - 25% of its base operating budget equalling $170 million over the last couple years. In fact, the UofA is absorbing 50% of the total post secondary cuts in the province.

If you scour the internet for press releases over the past several months on corporate relocations to Calgary, airline announcements, funding announcements, downtown improvements, the provincial government is directly involved in many many announcements and initiatives. The government is heavily invested and doing everything in its power to see the resurgence of Calgary. It is quite evident that Edmonton is not even close to getting anywhere similar to the level of support that Calgary is receiving from both our municipal and provincial governments.
 
Downtown universities are critical to the recovery of city cores

Universities are inherently connected to their communities, creating whole new sectors, supporting innovation, entrepreneurship and economic growth.
by Annette Trimbee
June 16, 2021
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As I walked the seven city blocks of Edmonton’s MacEwan University on my first day as president back in August 2020, I was overjoyed to see that some students, faculty and staff were back on campus. The vast majority of the university’s offerings had moved online (with monumental effort, flexibility and creativity from faculty and students). We were optimistically planning for a more active campus in the fall and hoping that we might avoid a second or third wave of COVID-19.

Outside that “bubble of hope” at the northernmost edge of downtown, our neighbours were flocking to the suburbs, and vacancies were on the rise. People were avoiding the city centre for fear of catching the virus. Businesses were struggling. Downtown arts and cultural organizations were shuttered. Homelessness surged. Unemployment was among the highest in the country.

 
I lived in Auckland, New Zealand for a while. The University of Auckland campus is baked right into the center of the city and has a very prominent presence around Albert Park. But within the same general vicinity exists the Auckland University of Technology, Imperial College of New Zealand, University of Otago (Auckland Campus), International College of Auckland, and the New Zealand Skills and Education College (NZSE). It exists in such a large swath of the downtown area, the post-secondary institutions are hard-baked into the Downtown experience. And it's great - everything betwee Queen Street, Karangahape Road, Quay Street, and even surrounding neighborhoods like Parnell and Grafton really benefit from students, staff, and visitors constantly combing the streets.

Post-secondary institutions are so critical to functioning downtown with the right "energy" needed to make it work. Innovation and and a constant flow of people either living there or moving through it essential. MacEwan University is a great start but it and the U of A need to be better connected IMO - that means a train line, pedestrian walkway, and micro-transit options should exist. Additionally, a Quarters campus from a future institution with similar transit connections would go a long way to reaching the downtown core (and with plentiful and safe residential options inside that triangle and with travel options to boot).
 
There is general recognition that 7 high-rise projects have been keyed for tax incentives, but I haven't heard anywhere which projects they might be. The Hudson and Qualico's project are two where the leak has slipped and identified them as recipients. The other 5 are worth guessing at. I suspect the 3 projects enveloping the Warehouse District Park are in there. Otherwise ???

Parks and Falcon are good bets.
 
Reference ID:Job No 399688619-002
Description:To operate a Special Event (Taste of Edmonton 2021, operating from July 18 to August 4, 2021), and to construct a total of 55 temporary tents, a mobile stage, and to bring on other trailers and shipping containers to support the Special Event
Location:1 - SIR WINSTON CHURCHILL SQUARE NW
Plan 4390NY Blk C
9918 - 102 AVENUE NW
Plan 4390NY Blk D
10240 - 99 STREET NW
Plan 4390NY Blk OT
Applicant:EVENTS EDMONTON
Status:In Development Review
Create Date:6/16/2021 10:20:22 AM
Neighbourhood:DOWNTOWN
 
Reference ID:Job No 400179846-002
Description:To operate a Bar and Neighbourhood Pub with 224 m2 Public Space and 105 seats in the basement of the Armstrong Block building, and construct interior alterations.
Location:10125 - 104 STREET NW
Plan NB1 Blk 3 Lot 159
Applicant:ARTIFACTS HOLDINGS
Status:Intake Review
Create Date:6/21/2021 2:05:35 PM
Neighbourhood:DOWNTOWN
Class of Permit:Class B
 

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