Sambo
New Member
Sounds like the DQ owner didn’t have fire insurance either which makes this a nice ending.
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If the neighbour's appeal of it is not successful....Apparently the City of Calgary is planning a $45 million expansion to Repsol Centre as it plans to close the Beltline and Inglewood pools. Construction could begin next year.
Beltline, Inglewood pool plan includes $45 million ask for Repsol leisure upgrade - LiveWire Calgary
Calgary could extend the support for two inner city Calgary recreation facilities, but $45 million towards an expansion of Repsol could secure inner-city aquatic service for the future. A report on the Beltline and Inglewood Aquatic facilities will come to a Community and Protective Services...livewirecalgary.com
That's only if you're getting the single admission during prime time. It's $13.50 if you get the 10-pass card, and for monthly memberships it's $75. If swimming is THAT important, it seems like you would go reasonably frequently?The Beltline pool was $8 per swim; Repsol is $20. (Even with Fair Entry, it's still more expensive than the regular price at Beltline.) I guess for some people it's an improvement to have better facilities; for others, swimming will become a luxury.
I like the concept here. However, before any proposal should even near fruition, the CFL needs to rethink their entire business strategy. The CFL is almost dead. And even with a potential merger with the XFL, it's still not looking very good for football in Canada. What would be a guaranteed save for the CFL would be an NFL merger and that is not likely to happen.
Not an angle much-discussed publicly in Calgary, but to what degree is access to basic recreation services a "right" ? It's really not clear to me at all we as a city have ever really answered to this question is based on the weird and contradictory outcomes we have achieved. The inner city pool saga is emblematic of this.The Beltline pool was $8 per swim; Repsol is $20. (Even with Fair Entry, it's still more expensive than the regular price at Beltline.) I guess for some people it's an improvement to have better facilities; for others, swimming will become a luxury.
Not an angle much-discussed publicly in Calgary, but to what degree is access to basic recreation services a "right" ? It's really not clear to me at all we as a city have ever really answered to this question is based on the weird and contradictory outcomes we have achieved. The inner city pool saga is emblematic of this.
While the Beltline and Eau Claire YMCA struggled, we have celebrated opening the largest YMCA in the world, twice in a few years. Very cool and awesome facilities, filled with all sorts of amenities and a half billion dollars of public investment. But thinking a bit deeper:
Part of the problem is we haven't answered the question clearly do all people deserve access to recreation - although that's often how the speeches of the facility ribbon cuttings start. We have some facilities with competition level diving pools and hundreds of thousands of square-feet of recreation space (Seton YMCA, Repsol), some with cool designer indoor park spaces (Vivo) while others don't have money to maintain their simple boring old pool (Beltline). The level of amenity given out is wildly different across the system. Meanwhile some Calgarians have access to literally no recreation facility because it is too far away, they can't/are able to afford to drive, or they simple can't afford the entrance fee. Other Calgarians are getting indoor parks at a quality better than most outdoor (and free to access) public parks.
- why is having big facilities a good thing to celebrate?
- Why haven't bigger or older cities done this that we have both the first and second largest facilities?
- Are we ahead of the trend of public recreation facilities? On our own path?
- Why did these big facilities open and are are getting expansions while others are closing? What are the trade-offs?
Another problem that comes with these super-amenity rich facilities is they are ginormous. Rocky Ridge YMCA is like 50 acres or something. They couldn't have fit something so large next to the Tuscany LRT so opted for a car-dependent site to the north. This is a clear example where amenity was prioritized over accessibility to recreation. Had they opted to just copy the Crowfoot YMCA they could have build it within the transit parking area with room to spare. I wonder if we took an alternative policy path where the goal was provide a more basic level of recreation amenity, but more standardized and accessible, could we have more facilities and better accessible ones .
Giving $45M for Repsol expansion is great - but if it eliminates some/all of the clientele of the Beltline pool is that a good trade-off? It's not just a total number of people - it's a very specific, marginalized number of people that don't have access anymore. We seem to be okay putting public money into recreation so we determined that free market-levels of access are an unacceptable outcome, but we also don't go as far as to say everyone should have access either. It's a weird spot we have landed on for if access to recreation is a right or not.
This is the problem with the unicity model. If the Town of Tuscany Rocky Ridge had to build a YMCA with their tax base, it wouldn’t look anything like what they got. The suburban councilors are a majority and they have no shame spending inner city tax dollars on benefits for the suburban fringe.This is where I have a problem with the City of Calgary. We're one of the least densely populated cities in the world, which makes the cost of providing services like transit and recreation astronomically high. There is no feasible way to provide utilities, transit, recreation, schools etc. to these fringe communities built with tiny density 40km from downtown, and its asinine that the City takes that responsibility on. Especially because the property taxes they pay do not even begin to cover the actual cost of servicing them.
The city should focus providing services as efficiently as possible for as many people as possible. It's not about recreation as a right, its about using tax dollars to effectively provide services, and if we're trying to build a connected, diverse, and resilient community/city, we're doing a really shitty job.
I have nothing against low density housing necessarily. Its that we choose to move so far away from the core city, expect the same level of services without remotely paying the proportional increased tax burden created, and then complain about fiscal responsibility. If you want services, live closer to them or pay for them.
For example, why are we value engineering out the Green Line downtown to 16th Ave leg, while building to Seton?? Why build Rocky Ridge YMCA when Eau Claire is closing?