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  #1  
Old Posted Jun 25, 2012, 8:55 PM
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Video: Driving through Halifax in 1989

Somebody recently posted this video of downtown Halifax from 1989.

It's pretty interesting, although they frustratingly pan away from some of the spots that are most interesting today.

Barrington overall looks somewhat worse than today. It looks like it had already gone substantially downhill by 1989. The early 90's were a real low point downtown. That's when the NFB building burned and the Barrington and George buildings were torn down. Barrington Gate is one of a very small number of decent 90's buildings in Halifax.

The Cornwallis House corner on Spring Garden Road is shown too. Back when the video was filmed they were tearing down the old wooden Victorian shop buildings in preparation for construction. I've seen pictures of that corner taken around 1890 and it looked basically the same as the 1989 views, except there was a church where the bank building with Rogue's Roost was later constructed.

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  #2  
Old Posted Jun 25, 2012, 9:21 PM
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Wow what a cool video! The coolest thing by far was the old white building on the corner of Spring Garden, I thought the modern building would have been in place by then!
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  #3  
Old Posted Jun 25, 2012, 9:53 PM
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Agreed on Barrington - there was far more retailactivity there then than there is now. Same is true for Gottingen, where there were actually viable retail businesses there. I had forgotten what those buildings on the corner where Cornwallis Place now sits used to look like. Surprised nobody tried to block their demolition.

Sweet ride too!
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Old Posted Jun 25, 2012, 10:40 PM
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Man, Purdy's Wharf was brand spankin' new when this video was taken! I was almost expecting it to still be partially under construction.
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Old Posted Jun 26, 2012, 2:35 AM
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Neat! Gottingen looked a little rough around the edges, but there seemed to be fewer holes and the movie theater was still there. Seeing what was lost at the Birks Block on Barrington just makes you sad and, yes it does look like Barrington had more retail back then. Seems like you have to go back to 1989 to find a time when that house on Spring Garden actually had a tenant.
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Old Posted Jun 26, 2012, 3:44 AM
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Turns out this guys got loads!

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Old Posted Jun 26, 2012, 4:16 AM
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Interesting note, in the second part of that video there was a Dunkin Doughnuts on Barington. I had no idea they ever expanded here?
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Old Posted Jun 27, 2012, 1:35 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cormiermax View Post
Interesting note, in the second part of that video there was a Dunkin Doughnuts on Barington. I had no idea they ever expanded here?
Yeah they used to have some stores here. I remember going to one in the Superstore in Sackville when I was a little kid (before they renovated the whole property). I think most of them closed in the later 90's because of Tim Horton's having such a giant market share.
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Old Posted Jun 27, 2012, 1:59 AM
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Wasn't there Dunkin's on the old P.E.I Ferries?
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  #10  
Old Posted Jun 27, 2012, 3:32 AM
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Seems like you have to go back to 1989 to find a time when that house on Spring Garden actually had a tenant.
The house was mentioned in an article a number of years ago in one of the papers. Apparently at the time the owner was regularly getting calls from prospective tenants but the building has not been leased out. There are a number of quirky landlords in Halifax.

I noticed that there was more retail on Barrington, but I also noticed just how out of date many of those stores look. A lot of them, like Sam the Record Man or Carsand Mosher, are no longer relevant at all. Today people get music on their computer, and many books come from Amazon whether they are in electronic or physical format. Other businesses like the Shopppers that used to be in the Roy Building were nothing special. I think newer businesses like Freak Lunchbox or Obladee are more interesting and they are part of an evolution in the role of the urban centre. The decline of some kinds of retail is one part of that but not the entire picture.
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  #11  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2014, 7:15 AM
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Another one from the same set. Herring Cove, Gottingen, Barrington, Spring Garden.
Video Link


It's interesting how much more lit-up Spring Garden and Quinpool used to be, with all the neon.
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  #12  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2014, 1:27 PM
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Originally Posted by Hali87 View Post
Another one from the same set. Herring Cove, Gottingen, Barrington, Spring Garden.
Video Link


It's interesting how much more lit-up Spring Garden and Quinpool used to be, with all the neon.
59.1 cents per litre for gasoline? God damn, lol.
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  #13  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2014, 5:31 PM
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Camera operator had a bad case of the jitters.

Interesting to see how little some has changed while also seeing how many other things have. While Gottingen overall seems about as slummy then as now, it was interesting to see that Glubes and New York Dress were still operating there in one section of the film, and that the Casino Theater, although apparently closed, still looked respectable, while the old Vogue/Eve Theater looked like it was ready to fall down. Today, the Casino has been replaced by Theater Lofts while the Vogue building has found new life as Global TV's studios.

Also interesting to see that in one section the old Sobeys on Gottingen had been demolished, while in another section of film it was still standing and in use as Global Furniture & Appliance. I suspect that business was fairly short-lived.

It was also interesting to see the old Canadian Pacific (?) Telegraph building on the corner of Barrington and George still standing. I vaguely remember that building but it was soon to be knocked down along with Birks and the one in between that was in use as a bookstore IIRC. They remain parking lots today - a shameful waste of prime land.

I remember that era's Spring Garden very well. The Little Nugget, the Garden View, and those storefronts in the old wood-frame buildings running west from Queen St. SGR is better today but memory lane is nice to visit.
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  #14  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2014, 6:10 PM
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the little nugget even had two locations on Spring Garden; both were excellent
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  #15  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2014, 7:50 PM
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Whoa, what is the building across from TD? When was that torn down? More importantly, why hasn't it been replaced?

Not much has changed... this is 25 years ago. The damage of the HT stopping so many developments is evident.
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  #16  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2014, 10:06 PM
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This is a video I just found showing a drive through Halifax circa 1960. I instantly recognized the drive as starting on Herring Cove Rd even though much has changed.

Video Link
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  #17  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2014, 11:03 PM
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Originally Posted by worldlyhaligonian View Post
Whoa, what is the building across from TD? When was that torn down? More importantly, why hasn't it been replaced?
That's the Crowe Building, pictured here along with two other excellent structures that were foolishly permitted to be torn down in the early 90s (or maybe 89) in order to accommodate a tower proposal. Heritage Trust actually had nothing to do with killing the tower it (indeed, they were obviously powerless to halt the demolition). It was the early 90s real-estate bust that kiboshed the tower project--after, sadly, the existing buildings were already gone.

Would've really bolster that stretch of Barrington to have them back. This is part of the reason why knocking down the Dennis at this point would just be the final insult to what was really a magnificent block.
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  #18  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2014, 11:25 PM
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Originally Posted by Drybrain View Post
That's the Crowe Building, pictured here along with two other excellent structures that were foolishly permitted to be torn down in the early 90s (or maybe 89) in order to accommodate a tower proposal. Heritage Trust actually had nothing to do with killing the tower it (indeed, they were obviously powerless to halt the demolition). It was the early 90s real-estate bust that kiboshed the tower project--after, sadly, the existing buildings were already gone.

Would've really bolster that stretch of Barrington to have them back. This is part of the reason why knocking down the Dennis at this point would just be the final insult to what was really a magnificent block.
Thanks for the info.

Could a tall building (residential) be built there?
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  #19  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2014, 11:37 PM
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Originally Posted by Drybrain View Post
That's the Crowe Building, pictured here along with two other excellent structures that were foolishly permitted to be torn down in the early 90s (or maybe 89) in order to accommodate a tower proposal. Heritage Trust actually had nothing to do with killing the tower it (indeed, they were obviously powerless to halt the demolition). It was the early 90s real-estate bust that kiboshed the tower project--after, sadly, the existing buildings were already gone.

Would've really bolster that stretch of Barrington to have them back. This is part of the reason why knocking down the Dennis at this point would just be the final insult to what was really a magnificent block.

You've got your sources mixed up. From the page you cited (typos at source):

Quote:
1739 Barrington serverd as part of the Atlantic Trust Comapny. The first floor was retail, and the Boardroom was located on the second floor. The ground floor was occupied by a Jewler into the 1960's

The Atlantic Trust building stood on the Corner of Barrington and George. Also built in 1912 for Cragg Bros. & Co Hardware. AT the time it was considered the tallest (at 7 stories) and most modern building in the Maritimes. Likely built in the Chicago Style. with concrete and brick. In the 1960's Most of the ornimentation was removed during a modernization by Fowler Bauld and Mitchel as part of an overhaul by Atlantic Trust.

These Structures were all demolished in the early 1980's to make way for a never constructed office tower. The land is Currently owned by the province.
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  #20  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2014, 11:59 PM
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You've got your sources mixed up. From the page you cited (typos at source):
Ah, yes, I was just looking for the pics, didn't read the whole post--yes, Atlantic Trust at the corner, Crowe on the right-hand side.

I also could've sworn the block was knocked down in 89, but could easily be wrong. I don't go back that far, myself.
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