if only 5yrs ago the city had $85mm they needed to spend on a parking garage…
I'm not sure money is even a big part of the equation. Tons of people still act like taking away a lane on 12th ave was like shooting their dog or something. It's not really an opportunity for a political win; with only 2 urban wards vs. 9 classic suburban (+ the 3 easternmost wards which using this broad-brush would be industrial/ethnic).
- Reduce the density and attractiveness of the destination so demand equals the capacity of the inherently inefficient car-based transportation system. Everyone who wants to visit can drive. Do this by replacing or limiting the land use of an area, applying parking minimums, don't allow streets to be repurposed for other uses and ultimately tearing down large parks of the strip and surrounding neighbourhood to allow for wider roads, more parking lots and more parkades. Stampede Park is a great example of this approach in action.
Your post is bang on and Stampede Park is a great example, though I struggle to imagine how Stampede Park could have gone much differently?
Maybe there was a way to prevent the deterioration of east downtown/Vic Park, but once it passed the tipping point I'm not sure it could have gone much differently than scorched earth? It's definitely taking longer than desired, but I'm not sure the parking-lot wasteland is really the reason as much as simply needing to wait for EV to bleed south and beltline to bleed east...
A few things could have happened faster, but most of those are at least pending/proposed (17th ave thru road, bus barns relocation, more riverwalk, etc.). Quite a lot of good stuff has happened since say 2006 (south of tracks, east of MacLeod):
- track siding reduced from ~12 to 4 tracks
- 4 St SE underpass
- Arriva, Guardian 1+2, Numi, Keynotes, Nuera, Alura, Vetro, Sasso, BLVD, Upten...maybe missing a few?
- 12 Ave Promenade (so far only 1 block developed, but they've set a decent standard with wide sidewalks and greenery) - as far as interim-surface-parking goes, the arena-site ones are probably the nicest in the city, especially with the big trees in the middle...
- tons of ugly operations stuff relocated from both sides of the riverbank to 25th ave/Dartmouth area
- Enmax Park
- Performing arts campus
- Halls E, F, and Casino* (*starting to look more and more regrettable, but it has really helped to cut a 4 block gap to DT in half)
- Village Ice Cream - pretty amazing hole in the wall that's now 10 years old...kind of pudding-proof that the area can/will be something
It should all pay off eventually, but I think some degree of parking sprawl is inevitable for any fair grounds.
There are some practical barriers to this, but the dream scenario would be to locate the arena 2 blocks further north than
currently previously proposed, with a community rink + parkade (inevitable) on the north side of the tracks, bridged by indoor and outdoor concourses. Adds to the price tag, but it's a really rare opportunity to mitigate our heavy rail and would be tangible public benefit (that IMO doesn't really exist in previous proposal, no matter how romantic we find the next week(s) of playoff hockey)
City would swap bus barn lands with Remington; don't have strong opinions on their projects, but I'd definitely trust them a lot more than CSEC to revitalize that riverfront.
All that is to say I can envision a scenario where we actually achieve something pretty nice despite following Option 1 as quoted [but in most cases we need to lean hard into option 2!].