Oh for sure and I wholeheartedly agree! For more flimsily constructed boomtown buildings you really do need to do the math and see if there’s historical, architectural, or an even economical reason to keep them around. Say with Beljan’s Tipton Investment Building down the street. If it was in a terrible condition when they had bought it I wouldn’t have begrudged them for saying “look, it’s gotta’ go.” But with this one we’re talking about a sturdily constructed brick building with historic ties to Whyte Ave’s development, a prominent community builder, and Alberta’s early Arabic community. Other buildings have been given protective designations for far less. To me it'd be a shame for this one to slip away.
Come on, there’s a very real difference between arguing for the preservation of a historic building — in a
provincial designated historic area mind you — and being a backwards hick that “pines for small-town Canadiana life” and who “to move the eff out of Edmonton.”
This really is a case of two sides of the same coin (
NIMBYs aside). People like me, looking to save a small sliver of the city’s history, and boosters of this project all care about the same thing: Edmonton and wanting it to be the best it possibly can be. How we get there is what differs. In my eyes we’ll achieve that through protecting what little of our collective history we have left: It’ll help create a tangible sense of place, while keeping hold of the city’s story, and providing small scale storefronts to small scale tenants. In the boosters’ eyes we’ll achieve that through more modern buildings: It’ll help freshen the city’s image while densifying, and providing more bodies to support more businesses and a more urban lifestyle.
If you look through my posts, its clear I love Edmonton and its history dearly. I've devoted so much time to it. I’m not a stooge of NIMBYism nor some anti-development agenda holding, small-town thinker for simply saying “I’d love this project if it was on literally any other plot of unimportant land.”
As for the building not looking historic, it's really a non-starter. It still maintains its built form, and aside from the missing cornice and application of stucco, it differs little from how it would’ve looked when new. A restoration could seriously do wonders. You need to look no further than to 104th Street’s most handsome building. You know the
Phillips Building? That big, beautiful, Redcliffe bricked, Edwardian warehouse? Here’s how ugly it looked like prior to its restoration:
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