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Was hopeful at one time this would have been in place for opening of LRT.
I still think this is a good plan and perhaps still the best one for it. Obviously the mall owner was not in a financial position to carry it out, so it didn't happen.

Someone who can purchase this property at a lower price may have the ability to proceed with making the investment needed to make this place more attractive and more viable.
 
Population isn’t the key factor here, disposable income is. Having lived in both Yaletown and downtown Edmonton, I’ve noticed a clear difference in how much more spending power people my age (I’m 34) have in Edmonton. In Vancouver, it was hard to get friends together for dinner even a couple of times a month. Meanwhile here in Edmonton we eat out more than once a week without thinking twice. This also applies to shopping, hobbies, etc. An IKEA City wouldn’t just serve downtown; it would draw people from the entire northside and St. Albert.
Northsider here.

As with many of my kind we avoid downtown like the plague. I think parking at Costco on 50st is terrible so I drive to Sherwood Park.
 
Please consider opening a Nations Experience in the old Bay space

This is a very good and interesting idea. It is easy to "avoid downtown like the plague" partly because there is not much unique or compelling for retail around now.

I suppose there are some people who have a phobia of downtown, but many more would come downtown if there was more interesting and quality retail ideas such as this here.
 
This is a very good and interesting idea. It is easy to "avoid downtown like the plague" partly because there is not much unique or compelling for retail around now.

I suppose there are some people who have a phobia of downtown, but many more would come downtown if there was more interesting and quality retail ideas such as this here.
I would go downtown more if it was appealing.

I've traveled around the world, yeah you can't compare Edmonton to New York or Singapore, it will never be that alive. But when I was in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia even their downtown is more alive and surprisingly pretty comparable in terms of climate.
 
There needs to be a focus on constructing more residential buildings, creating more 3rd spaces, improving access (e.g. more LRT lines, free parking on weekends or weekday after hours), and above all safety with more police presence. The return to work mandates companies have been doing are useless because downtown will just become a ghost town after 5pm
 
I would go downtown more if it was appealing.

I've traveled around the world, yeah you can't compare Edmonton to New York or Singapore, it will never be that alive. But when I was in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia even their downtown is more alive and surprisingly pretty comparable in terms of climate.
I understand the capital of Mongolia wasn't always as good as now, so perhaps there is hope for us too. Although it is a national capital, rather than a provincial one with a provincial government quite disinterested in it.

Probably good comparisons are similar sized Canadian cities and perhaps a couple of other mid sized provincial capital cities.
 
The Cornwall Centre in Regina has opened a downtown police office. I'm wondering if ECC should follow suit. Maybe EPS can take over the old Sport Chek space?

 
I would go downtown more if it was appealing.

I've traveled around the world, yeah you can't compare Edmonton to New York or Singapore, it will never be that alive. But when I was in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia even their downtown is more alive and surprisingly pretty comparable in terms of climate.
It is an interesting perspective, but I would argue, as @David A Mentioned, that it is not a really good comparison. The general makeup of Canadian cities' urban fabric is vastly different than those from anywhere except North America, Australia, New Zealand and maybe parts of England and South Africa. No other place suffered with suburbanization + easy and cheap access to land and private vehicles, with little to no geographic constraints in the same scale.
 
The Cornwall Centre in Regina has opened a downtown police office. I'm wondering if ECC should follow suit. Maybe EPS can take over the old Sport Chek space?

Seems like a good idea and it would be nice if we could also get new tenants like the ones mentioned in the article for the Cornwall Centre.
 
External ID
636764133-002
Job Type
Major Development Permit
Description
Alteration of (an) existing building(s), Other
Applicant
CANDEREL MANAGEMENT (WEST) INC.
Status
Intake Review
Class of Permit

Create Date
November 13, 2025
Approval Date

Location
1, 1 - EDMONTON CITY CENTRE NW Plan 1194TR Lot B 148, 1 - EDMONTON CITY CENTRE NW Plan 1194TR Lot A
Neighbourhood
DOWNTOWN
 
External ID
636764133-002
Job Type
Major Development Permit
Description
Alteration of (an) existing building(s), Other
Applicant
CANDEREL MANAGEMENT (WEST) INC.
Status
Intake Review
Class of Permit

Create Date
November 13, 2025
Approval Date

Location
1, 1 - EDMONTON CITY CENTRE NW Plan 1194TR Lot B 148, 1 - EDMONTON CITY CENTRE NW Plan 1194TR Lot A
Neighbourhood
DOWNTOWN
What does this mean? Altering an existing building can mean many things...
 
It is an interesting perspective, but I would argue, as @David A Mentioned, that it is not a really good comparison. The general makeup of Canadian cities' urban fabric is vastly different than those from anywhere except North America, Australia, New Zealand and maybe parts of England and South Africa. No other place suffered with suburbanization + easy and cheap access to land and private vehicles, with little to no geographic constraints in the same scale.
Mongolia is the definition of no constraints. When you fly over it, it's like being on another planet. Ulaanbaatar is in a valley and they are all about private vehicles. They also have to deal with huge Ger districts because there is such a huge housing crisis.
 
Mongolia is the definition of no constraints. When you fly over it, it's like being on another planet. Ulaanbaatar is in a valley and they are all about private vehicles. They also have to deal with huge Ger districts because there is such a huge housing crisis.
You literally described a constraint (a valley).
Nevertheless, Mongolia has not experienced the combination that North America has, of cheap and easy access to land and private vehicles, for the better part of the last 8 decades, and government/corporate incentivized sprawl in the same scale. The subsidies we've had to maintain the lifestyle we generally have in Canada and the US are not possible, in the same scale, in places with lower income (being from a lower income country myself, it is quite shocking how large the difference in purchase power is, especially in institutional terms).
 

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