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  #2041  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2026, 2:12 AM
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It’s too bad they couldn’t keep the bridge for AT but to me it doesn’t make sense to spend a couple hundred million on a two lane bridge. The money could be better spent on widening McPhillips underpass or towards other spans like Louise or Redwood which are also falling apart.
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  #2042  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2026, 2:22 AM
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Or, hear me out - widen the McPhillips underpass BEFORE you close the bridge.

I am still not convinced the Arlington bridge is beyond saving, and definitely could have been fixed up as required to keep going a few more years. We have the technology.
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  #2043  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2026, 2:38 AM
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I’ll defer to you on the tech available to fix it. I’m just looking at it from which bridges get the most use and make the most sense to replace.
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  #2044  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2026, 5:10 PM
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The District At Bridgwater - Offices
Location: 345 Centre Street
Developer: Private Pension Partners
Architect: MMP Architects
Status: In development
Documents: Plan Approval–May 26, 2025 |Submitted Plans | Submission
Media: Brand-new Bridgwater office building gets green light from Assiniboia committee
Description: Proposed is a four-storey mixed-use commercial building near the intersection of South Town Road and northbound Kenaston Boulevard. The building will contain office uses on the upper floors, and three (3) commercial units on the ground floor. Included in these ground floor commercial units is a restaurant use with a floor area of approximately 3,445 square feet. This proposed restaurant unit features an accessory patio on the west side of the building. Plans submitted by the applicant identify a future phase of development immediately to the west of the subject property.

Construction photos




Dan Harper Photo
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Winnipeg Developments

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  #2045  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2026, 7:33 PM
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CBC Documentaries

Quote:
Documentary puts affordable housing centre stage
Winnipeg co-ops among models examined in film

Conrad Sweatman
Friday, Jun. 26, 2026

We see theatre artist Debbie Patterson making her way toward the Old Grace Housing Co-operative’s entrance in her wheelchair, then settling inside for a steaming cup of tea. The co-op is her home.

“Well, I’ve always loved this neighbourhood and wanted to stay in this neighbourhood. I lived in a big, three-storey Wolseley house and then got MS and couldn’t do the stairs,” she says in a voiceover.

“Having a place I could move into that was completely accessible was just a godsend at a perfect time when I needed to stop living in my house, so I could stay in my neighbourhood and continue to be in a safe place.”

It’s one of the opening scenes of Meeting a Moment: The Art of Social Architecture, directed by Danielle Sturk and produced by Leslie Stafford, which appears on CBC Gem today and airs on CBC TV Saturday.

The 44-minute documentary is a meditation on Winnipeg housing against a backdrop of a countrywide affordability crisis. It’s unapologetically a film with a mission: promoting affordable housing models and developments through the voice of local architects, residents, developers, historians and designers.

“This isn’t a commune, by the way. Very much, you close the door to your unit, it is your life. There’s no one paying attention to you,” says Old Grace resident/treasurer Doug Smith, the author of Property Wrongs.

“But it’s like Cheers: everybody knows your name.”

In the film, Patterson and Smith sit down for tea with Old Grace founding member Sandra Hardy and former NDP Manitoba premier Greg Selinger, who is a board member of La Crèmerie Co-op.

“Some people wonder where co-ops fit on the political spectrum, and the answer is everywhere. They’re used by groups that are looking for solutions, whether they’re Mennonites, Ukrainians or francophones,” Selinger says.

Patterson doesn’t downplay her political affinities: “I love the anti-capitalist model of the co-op — that housing isn’t an investment, it’s a place to live,” she says.

“Land, like people, is not a commodity,” adds Smith.

According to a figure cited in the film, 40 per cent of Canadian households can’t afford today’s average market rents.

This problem is exacerbated by speculation, with investors and developers buying up homes and land not primarily for living, but to profit from surging property values. As non-profits, co-ops are freer from this dynamic since they can’t be flipped for private gain.

During the Great Depression, co-ops took off across Saskatchewan and Manitoba as means for immigrant and rural communities to pool resources.

A carry-over from this co-op heyday is the 200-unit Willow Park Housing Co-operative in northwest Winnipeg, a subject of Meeting A Moment. Designed during the Great Depression by the pioneering Green Blankstein Russell architecture firm, Willow is Canada’s first permanent housing co-op and still stands tall today.

“A huge storm comes, and they’re under tents and the tents are almost going to collapse under the weight of the water,” says Sturk, describing a scene in the doc that unfolds at Willow. “Everybody moved together as a community: old women, young teen boys. All ages, all groups, working together.”

Willow’s waiting list, according to the filmmakers, is currently five years long — highlighting how housing pressures show up in Winnipeg even with comparatively low rents and home prices.

The city has a lower median income than the national average, a sizable unhoused population and an aging non-market housing stock.

The film explores other alternative approaches to this problem apart from co-ops, with examples of non-market, affordable and deeply affordable housing. This is a chance for local developers and architects to don a hardhat or throw up a concept render and show off projects still in development.

New projects explored include, for instance, Wehwehneh Bahgahkinahgohn, a large-scale transformation of the former Hudson’s Bay department store into a mixed-use Indigenous-led community space with housing and other services.

“It was a real privilege to do the work and to be able to have access to the multiple brains and hearts of folks that are working in this space right now, trying to find solutions,” Sturk says.

The word “community” is often on the lips of the film’s architects and developers, who are the film’s primary protagonists, though some may seem remote from the people actually living in the spaces discussed.

Smith, a co-op resident himself, stresses that a grassroots approach to housing challenges alone is insufficient.

“It’s dangerous to think the housing crisis is going to be resolved by a small group of activists. If it weren’t for the government supplying the land here and a loan, we wouldn’t have happened,” he says.

Meeting a Moment — whose funders include the CBC, Manitoba Film and Music, the City of Winnipeg, the Manitoba government and others — premièred in Winnipeg at the Architecture + Design Film Festival in April.

“(Audiences) felt really positive about Winnipeg, which is not always the case,” says Stafford. “There’s a lot of people doing this work and we don’t know about them, (but) it’s wonderful to know this work is being done.”
Winnipeg Free Press
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  #2046  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2026, 8:51 PM
asher__jo asher__jo is offline
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Can we please stop posting projects that have already been completed, all these projects already are linked in separate forums and it’s quite annoying having to scroll for days to get past old news.
Thank you
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  #2047  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2026, 9:27 PM
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Originally Posted by asher__jo View Post
Can we please stop posting projects that have already been completed, all these projects already are linked in separate forums and it’s quite annoying having to scroll for days to get past old news.
Thank you
Instead of complaining about reposts like it’s a personal tragedy, why don’t you actually put in the effort and maintain an updated developments list yourself?
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  #2048  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2026, 10:14 PM
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EDITED FOR MODERATION

A reminder to everyone: please keep comments focused on the content and avoid personal remarks

Last edited by MolsonExport; Jun 29, 2026 at 5:58 PM.
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  #2049  
Old Posted Jun 26, 2026, 10:32 PM
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  #2050  
Old Posted Jun 28, 2026, 12:34 AM
asher__jo asher__jo is offline
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-
Ask a man nicely to change their behaviour, they act like a child and attack you.

Last edited by MolsonExport; Jun 29, 2026 at 5:58 PM.
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  #2051  
Old Posted Jun 28, 2026, 5:06 AM
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Ask a man nicely to change their behaviour, they act like a child and attack you.
I mean…feel free in contributing to the forum in other ways than just prescribing how you like to receive information that others provide you on here.
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  #2052  
Old Posted Jun 28, 2026, 1:17 PM
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I caught the last 30 minutes of this last night. It was very cool to watch video about the projects that are discussed here. I thought the projects looked impressive and city looked very good overall. I cringed a bit when one panelist said something about being "surrounded by poverty all the time". I'd like to see it again from the start
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  #2053  
Old Posted Jun 28, 2026, 1:19 PM
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Originally Posted by pspeid View Post
I caught the last 30 minutes of this last night. It was very cool to watch video about the projects that are discussed here. I thought the projects looked impressive and city looked very good overall. I cringed a bit when one panelist said something about being "surrounded by poverty all the time". I'd like to see it again from the start
You can stream it here for free: CBC Documentaries
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Winnipeg Act II - April 2024

Winnipeg Developments

In The Future Every Building Will Be World-Famous For Fifteen Minutes.
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  #2054  
Old Posted Jun 28, 2026, 3:30 PM
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You can stream it here for free: CBC Documentaries
Thanks!
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  #2055  
Old Posted Jun 28, 2026, 8:26 PM
asher__jo asher__jo is offline
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Originally Posted by Mr Tall Forehead View Post
I mean…feel free in contributing to the forum in other ways than just prescribing how you like to receive information that others provide you on here.
Giving feedback to other users would arguably be contributing to the forum. Also, glad to see the majority of users on here haven’t stooped to piling on.
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  #2056  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2026, 2:08 AM
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Does anyone on here know of the status of The Winnipeg Hotel restoration?
Rumours persist about it.
I am thinking WPG_GUY might be aware?
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  #2057  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2026, 1:49 PM
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Originally Posted by Wpg_Guy View Post

got to see it at WAFF
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  #2058  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2026, 2:44 PM
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Originally Posted by asher__jo View Post
Giving feedback to other users would arguably be contributing to the forum. Also, glad to see the majority of users on here haven’t stooped to piling on.
To a degree, but your instance is a streeeetch.
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  #2059  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2026, 4:06 PM
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Does anyone on here know of the status of The Winnipeg Hotel restoration?
Rumours persist about it.
I am thinking WPG_GUY might be aware?
I believe it's dead in water for now.
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Winnipeg Developments

In The Future Every Building Will Be World-Famous For Fifteen Minutes.
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  #2060  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2026, 5:24 PM
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Giving feedback to other users would arguably be contributing to the forum. Also, glad to see the majority of users on here haven’t stooped to piling on.
Just take the L.
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