Quote:
Originally Posted by PortaPetee
But still, they preserve instead of letting a lot of the stone buildings fall to pieces. The wooden buildings, on the other hand, were terrible slums for decades. Not sure if that's been cleaned up or not.
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The demolition that continues to happen in Halifax is unusually bad and people or at least the councillors there don't seem to quite get it. I am thinking of examples like the former Nova Centre office on Blowers, which was clearly left to fall apart for years. Of course the entire north end of downtown was a disaster but after this mistake and the 1970's it all continued with the speculative demolition at Barrington and George, the old brick building next to TD with the 2 storey storefront, BMO on Spring Garden Road, Roy, etc.
I think sometimes the Halifax-SJ comparisons are strained because SJ is so much smaller. In Halifax, everything in an Uptown Saint John sized footprint is part of the commercial core. If you want a nice old neighbourhood you could go to say the Jubilee and Henry area which has a mix of masonry rowhouses and wooden buildings not unlike much of Uptown SJ; but it is 1.5 km away from downtown, a distance that would be suburbia in SJ (the Hydrostone, about 100 years old, would maybe be in the woods). Similarly if you took the historic properties which seems like a little chunk of DT Halifax and put it in SJ it would take up maybe 1/4 of the footprint of the core of old commercial buildings. There are many historic parts of Halifax (Falkland-Maynard or Schmidtville being others) but you kind of need to know about them and it is true that they are often separated by areas with lots of modern construction.
One aspect of Saint John that I like is that it is a very specific time capsule since so much was rebuilt after the 1870's fire. There are so many building styles and intact streetscapes from that exact period. I think the city has a lot of potential and that it should lean into the heritage aspect.