Quote:
Originally Posted by silkspith
FWIW, the conditions presented as part of the sale were a bit more complex. Based on the conditions that the Province placed as part of the $1M sale, Irving was to assume all liability for and demolish the building on site, and retain the property as green space until a suitable economic development opportunity comes forward.
As to whether $1M was a sweetheart deal for the land given the pending demo and land prices in the Y2K era, it was discounted enough to get Irving to bite, but how many other groups were prepared to assume the liability of a vacant building?
I realize we're more than 25 years into the future, but Irving has held up their end of the bargain by maintaining it as green space, and now an (arguably relevant) economic development opportunity has come forward.
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So is a temporary parking lot a suitable economic development opportunity? Last time I checked Canada and Saint John are in the middle of a housing crisis, not a parking crisis. The only rezoning requests considered for such a prime piece of real estate should be residential or mixed use residential.
If Irving really needs a temporary parking lot, I don't see why the city should have a problem with them using it for a limited period while keeping the property zoned as parkland.
Giving into a zoning change proposal for a temporary parking lot at such a prominent piece of parkland on the West Side would be a pretty short sighted decision by the city council, and go against what's mapped out for the area according to Plan SJ.
If the agreement was to rezone the property as mixed use residential, then the city should role out the red carpet for the project, but that's not even close to what they're suggesting.
They want an open ended rezoning to stable commercial, for a temporary parking lot to service the expansion project at the mill to the west of Bridge Rd, according to Plan SJ, Mill operations and parking lots for the mill should stay to the west of Bridge Rd and shouldn’t spill over into a mixed residential area.
A temporary parking lot is not something that really necessitates a rezoning request, the city would be selling that property incredibly short giving into a permanent zoning change for such a liminal project.

The views from would be absolutely phenomenal at this location, perhaps the best in the entire city.
This would be one of the finest locations in the city for a high rise residential development with sweeping views of the Douglas Avenue peninsula, the Port of Saint John, Reversing Falls, the Uptown Skyline, the St. John River Valley. The side that would face the pulp mill would actually have one of the best views, i believe that's Mt. Champlain way off in the distance there. pretty wicked.
Giving into a rezoning request for something as short sighted as a temporary parking lot would be a mistake. Is it really too much for the city to try and get the largest construction company in Atlantic Canada which is headquartered in Saint John to build some housing on a prime piece of real estate that they were sold for pocket change?
Not only would a residential development at Wolastoq Park be part of long term parking solutions for the mill, as millworkers could live there, it's the perfect type of project to follow up the temporary carpark. It's a prime piece of real estate that should be opened up for residential development, not further commercial projects. This would be an ultra walkable location that could easily accommodate hundreds of units across multiple residential towers.
For the long term, parking lots and commercial buildings would be selling this prime piece of real estate incredibly short.