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Originally Posted by Wpg_Guy
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The City Administration Recommends Rejection
The Winnipeg Public Service (Urban Planning Division) is recommending rejection of the rezoning application (DAZ 208/2026) for 284 Wellington Crescent primarily because the proposed four-storey, 14-unit apartment building is inconsistent with the Corydon-Osborne Secondary Plan and its associated Planned Development Overlay (PDO).
Main Reasons for Rejection:
Conflict with the Secondary Plan:
The site is designated Medium Density Residential in the Corydon-Osborne Secondary Plan. While the plan allows up to 4-storey buildings on corner sites for medium multi-family development, it directs that density should be limited to approximately 1 dwelling unit per 800 sq ft of lot area (consistent with RMF-M or existing R2 zoning). The proposal seeks RMF-L zoning, which would allow significantly higher density.
Excessive Density:
The lot is only ~4,495 sq ft. The 14-unit proposal results in roughly 1 unit per 321 sq ft — far exceeding the density limits set out in the Secondary Plan and PDO for this area. The PDO does not support densities beyond the medium-density range on this site.
Policy Inconsistency:
Although Complete Communities 2.0 generally supports intensification and mid-rise housing in Established Neighbourhoods, the more specific Corydon-Osborne Secondary Plan takes precedence. The proposal does not align with the detailed local policy framework for the area.
In short, city planners acknowledge that some multi-family development is appropriate on this corner lot, but they view the scale and density of this specific 14-unit project as too intensive for the established policy direction. They therefore recommend the rezoning to “RMF-L” be rejected.
The City Centre Community Committee, at its meeting on May 29, 2026, may choose to overturn the Public Service’s recommendation to reject the application. If the Committee does not concur with the recommendation, the matter will advance through the Standing Policy Committee on Property and Development and the Executive Policy Committee before proceeding to City Council for a final vote.