Quote:
Originally Posted by Dado
Do you seriously think anyone else was going to put in a bid after the City violated its own processes to allow Lansdowne Live! to go through outside the bounds of the design competition that was already underway? How stupid would anyone else have to be to put themselves through that sort of grief?
The salient point is that the City had no need to cancel its design competition. For a brief moment it looked like Ottawa had begun to grow up and take a step forward by holding a design competition for Lansdowne to which the public was going to be invited to participate, but that kind of progressiveness was too revolutionary for Ottawa.
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I don't think that you understand my point. For the purpose of the legal challenge, the Friends don't have to demonstrate that someone else actually put in a bid. All they would have to produce is evidence from some other interested party stating that they would have bid, or even were interested in bidding, had the competition not been cancelled. That would be a critical piece of evidence vis a vis the City's claim that sole sourcing was warranted. The fact that they cannot find even one other party who is expressing an interest is a very good indication that this "queue" of potential bidders just doesn't exist. Well, that and the fact that 30 years has gone by without a better proposal surfacing.
This unwavering faith in the design competition also baffles me. Sure, design competitions are preferrable in some circumstances, particularly when the City has earmarked the money to actually implement the winning design. But that was not the case here. What you are calling a "design competition" was actually a process to award the right to develop the site. There is simply no realistic possibility that any bidder was going to make a proposal that didn't include a very similar commercial/residential component, because nothing else would produce the revenues to support the stadium, particularly without a confirmed tenant.
Having seen numerous failed design competitions elsewhere (Downsview and Nathan Phillips Square come to mind), I think that there is a very good argument that a collaborative approach with private sector partners is preferrable in this type of complex endeavour. It allows for a more evolutionary process, based on input by various stakeholders. Results do matter, and I have seen no evidence whatsoever that continuing the design competition was more likely to lead to a better result in this case.
Your suggestion that OSEG's proposal wouldn't have stood a chance in a right to develop competition, had it gone ahead, is also questionable. This is a complex project, and design alone is only one consideration. The evaluation would have also taken into account financial backing, development and managment expertise, all of which OSEG possesses in spades. And when you consider the fact that no other bidder could offer confirmed OHL and CFL franchises to anchor the facilities, I don't see how other bidders could match that combination. Sure you might have gotten interesting designs, but I don't know who could have offered a similar complete package.
Lastly, you have completely ignored the fact that the City did in fact hold a very successful design competition for the urban park portion of the site. The public had lots of opportunity to participate and did so, just as you suggest. Even though it is only for part of the site, I would have thought that counts for something. Surely there is a basis for seeing it as a reasonable compromise given financial constraints, the history of intertia and all of the other moving parts that needed to be fit into a solution for the site.