Vacs
Active Member
Its an amazing concept. Alldritt will never build it
Alldritt went through the machinations, cost, and deliberate focus of developing a separate entity -- Alldritt Land -- including staffing up, to jump into the major development game. They must have spent a ton of money and sincere effort to get to the point at which they are at present. The project started with Architect Brad Kennedy (the vision that you see posted on this thread); when Brad died they took the project over to Dub Architects and Gene took a very different approach to design and had the whole re-engineered and the design, while maintaining the height profile modified to more of an angular "Deco" style of building, was intently engaged to help make the building the legacy project that it was intended to be. I, too, remain skeptical that it will get built but I don't think that it is out-of-the-question. It is so easy to pooh-pooh the idea without understanding the road travelled by Alldritt much less the road ahead. Certainly, it has become a running laugh-generator on this website by (my guess) over half the know-it-alls; wouldn't it be exceedingly funny if they were all served up a plate of crow.I remain skeptical.
They haven't built ANYTHING other than SFH in years, and even these are not going out of the door as quickly as one would hope.
Alldritt went through the machinations, cost, and deliberate focus of developing a separate entity -- Alldritt Land -- including staffing up, to jump into the major development game. They must have spent a ton of money and sincere effort to get to the point at which they are at present. The project started with Architect Brad Kennedy (the vision that you see posted on this thread); when Brad died they took the project over to Dub Architects and Gene took a very different approach to design and had the whole re-engineered and the design, while maintaining the height profile modified to more of an angular "Deco" style of building, was intently engaged to help make the building the legacy project that it was intended to be. I, too, remain skeptical that it will get built but I don't think that it is out-of-the-question. It is so easy to pooh-pooh the idea without understanding the road travelled by Alldritt much less the road ahead. Certainly, it has become a running laugh-generator on this website by (my guess) over half the know-it-alls; wouldn't it be exceedingly funny if they were all served up a plate of crow.
When the city had a lot of momentum… Have you seen our growth numbers….This tower was proposed when the city had a lot of momentum. There was a lot of optimism around the city at this time, the new arena was just finished, Stantec and JW were rising and beginning to dominate the skyline and it seemed like the city was well on its way to becoming a truly big city. The city was seeing new towers popping up left and right so it was logical that a big ambitious proposal like Alldritt would come along. I remember this was the time I became interested in planning and is probably the main reason I chose it as my career path. The time between 2015-2019 was a golden age for Edmonton tall building construction and hype around the city was at an all time high. I don't want to say that it's completely gone now but it's definitely significantly reduced, COVID definitely paused the building boom, but it seems like things are finally starting to pick back up again with Falcon, The Parks, MacLab and others under construction. Who knows maybe we see this project brought back to life but if it is, it will probably be significantly reduced in scale and impact. I doubt it though, it seemed like this one died when they found the abandoned coal mine right below it.
When the city had a lot of momentum… Have you seen our growth numbers….
Don't mistake a lack of building due to inflation, interest rates and supply chain issues for that of city stagnation. Your assessment would be false.
I remember in 2018/2019 counting cranes was a favorite pastime.
Again I point out supply chain and financing issues. So I guess what you are missing about what I am saying is that the energy is still there, only I see the forces that see that energy stored as potential energy where it seems you a lamenting a lack of kinetic energy .If you read my comment it's pretty clear I'm talking about the building boom that happened in that period and not general growth. The building of tall buildings downtown was booming at that time and had a lot of momentum compared to post 2019 as we entered the COVID and Post-COVID years. I don't think the city itself is stagnating, quite the contrary, but to say that the amount of large downtown projects reduced during that period is not a stretch at all. Look at all the projects that got cancelled or put on hold during that time, including the Alldritt Tower / Quarters Hotel and Residence. Even physically looking at the skyline in 2018 vs. 2021 the difference is staggering, there were cranes everywhere before and scarcely anything during the COVID years. But it's starting to come back again with all the new towers going up that I listed before.
I want this tower to get built, but I highly doubt it will be. I think the next big tower in the city will be associated with Katz.
The Tegler site makes a lot of sense, but the dog in the manger developers who don't seem to know what they are doing and don't have the resources to do it would have to sell it, but they seem to want to sit on it.I'm guessing if we get anything big it'll either be around the Ice District, the old BMO Tegler site, or something tall fronting the new Warehouse Park.