Local councillor at large Brent Harris wants to study repurposing the Belyea Arena as transitional housing for 39-46, and even has plans drawn up for this project, as part of his Vacant 2 Vibrant "initiative", which he thinks would be great for the Bayshore area.
Call me crazy, but wouldn't the most logical solution to turn a vacant rink into something vibrant be to turn it back into a functioning hockey rink again? The city has seen significant population growth since they made the short sighted, cost savings based decision to shut down the rink. Brent the builder even wasn't on council when that decision was made, but "Mr. fixer upper" seems to believe the arena is no longer worth repairing, and we should now turn it into transitional housing on the West Side instead?
Leasing out the rink operations to a private interest, and marketing the property to private investors and developers to build some residential towers on the sizeable field and park portion that comprises the majority the land parcel, is a far more desirable goal for the West Side. The Ocean views of the Bay of Fundy from a condo tower would be absolutely outstanding from this location, and the
right type of development to add value to the Bayshore neighbourhood, an area with a lot of untapped potential.
If and when the rink is truly "past its expiry date" one day, then demolish it and build a condo tower. But as it stands today, there's absolutely life left in that facility for it to be a useful, profitable rink and asset to the neighbourhood for decades to come. The neighbourhood deserves an asset, not a liability.
A few residential towers and reopening the rink would transform the area in a fundamentally positive way. Perhaps it could look something like this:
The lack of support and strategy for "building up" is one of biggest instances of untapped or squandered potential in Saint John, especially in areas surrounded by the ocean like the Carleton Peninsula of the West Side. Not everything has to be a skyscraper, just tall enough to sea the water, which isn't that high in a lot of places around Saint John.
While I don't expect the West Side to look like
White Rock, BC skyline anytime soon, we could certainly learn something from them, along with places like Halifax, Moncton, and coastal cities in the US northeast. Saint John has a lot of room for improvement, especially on the West Side.