Quote:
Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse
I think what bothers me is that for a city of our age, we don't really have any significant sized historic districts. Pretty much every part of downtown is dominated by modern(ish) highrises. I enjoyed the fact that this area wasn't, even though not all the buildings are historic. The downtown Halifax wiki page sort of mentions this:
When one of the NFLD forumers mentioned this a couple years ago I sort of scoffed it off because obviously there are quite a few heritage buildings. But I see where he was coming from now. It was really highlighted to me after visiting QC, Montreal, and even Saint John this summer.
But hey, we'll see how things turn out...
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I agree that it would be nice to have a distinct area that is heritage preserved; it could be sold as a specific destination ("let's go the Distillery district.. or Gastown", etc.
But perhaps we should actually protect the Granville Mall and the surrounding "historic properties" as a heritage district now. In ways, we sort of already treat it that way -- I've often told visitors to check out "heritage properties" along the waterfront there, and then up along Granville Mall.
The problem, of course, is that this area is very dead, mostly killed by the idiotic Cogswell Exchange. Perhaps a big, modern, residential development to replace the Cogswell space-- while also preserving Granville mall and surrounding as a heritage district-- might be a very nice way to promote this area. I think Granville could eventually be a beautiful shopping area for high end shops (like Barrington), if we actually reconnected it to the city by gutting the stupid Cogswell and the big triangular parking spot nearby and infusing much needed residential via new developments nearby.