Oilers99
Active Member
Boring another mid rise. Hopefully more exciting than black or white stucco like at the other Autograph buildings.
Except that Broadway is very much driven by tourism/destination bach/bachettes, live music and conferences that we simply do not have in any real magnitude comparatively speaking.I think have a really decentralized workforce doesn't help either. Edmonton needs to redefine itself, I was in Nashville and I think turning Whyte Ave into something like Broadway would attract people.
Over several decades the City of Edmonton has neither been very focused on either tourism or attracting corporate offices downtown and it shows.Except that Broadway is very much driven by tourism/destination bach/bachettes, live music and conferences that we simply do not have in any real magnitude comparatively speaking.
Not to say that we cannot create our own drivers and destinations, but it's quite a different world.
We need to focus on infill housing of real significance, ie. 20,000 more people living Downtown and say 5-10k more around Whyte to really drive change and THEN the rest may follow.
We also need to work on corporate expansion here and bring far more private sector workers to the core each and every day to drive retail, restaurant and entertainment.
If I was faced with having to relocate to Alberta, it would only be Calgary. As one raised in Edmonton, I don't like saying that but it's the honest truth, and for many of the reasons expressed recently in this thread.I chatted with a couple who connect skilled (foreign) workers to Alberta with South Americans looking to move here and they said '80%' of folks want Calgary (vs Edmonton) due to reputation/perception, 'climate' and the overall look/feel of the city that is being promoted.
It's not just the City but there is an obvious solution staring people in the face on the Skyrise Cities site and others relevant to Edmonton that goes unsupported by the general population. Many of you know that I went to high school (Hochschule -- 4 years) in Europe in the beautiful Black-Forest-adjacent City of Zweibrücken. The question I was asked most often by Students and the General Population on the German Economy and across Europe generally related to First Nations (a Canadian-centric term -- the Europeans wanted to know about Cowboys and Indians). So with just a modicum of exaggeration and a penchant for story-telling I could hold groups' attention wrapt in fascination for long stretches of time. The Canadian Constitution recognizes 3 distinct Indigenous Groups with a very broad cultural flavor among First Nations (with over 630 recognized Governments/Bands), Métis (approximately 600,000 population), and Inuit (approximately 70,000 population). Add that to a World Population of 476 Million Indigenous People representing over 5,000 distinct cultures and there is a recipe to put Edmonton on the map.Over several decades the City of Edmonton has neither been very focused on either tourism
How about just focus on, I don't know, the basics?! Cleanliness, social disorder, perception of safety. Maybe wash down the smells of urine and feces and meth.
DT's word-of-mouth reputation is terrible due to the city's neglect/ kids-glove approach. IE: the transit system should be a transit system, not a homeless shelter. DT should be a place of biz/ culture/ entertainment. Not a homeless shelter.
I was in YYC recently and, my goodness, it was a night and day difference to YEG. Yes, Calgary has that corporate presence. But so what?! Why can't we have a better feeling in the core?
Yes, the province is not doing enough. But it seems council is more concerned about appeasing social justice warrior advocates.
Perception is everything. As it stands, most Edmontonians are not proud of DT. Perceptions will only change, when some tough love decisions are made. Sadly, I am not anticipating the needle to move much.
You feel "at least a few on council now realize these are the problems"? Its a little late for that don't you think? Also, Edmonton's council is dominated by lefty virtue signalling anti -capitalist who have no idea how to attact corporate business. Edmonton will never ever compete with Calgary in most areas now. There was a time, about 60ish years ago, when Edmonton and Calgary had similar corporate presence. However, Edmonton relied too much on government and did very well - the expansion of government bureaucracy and the growth of the U of A led to thousands of well paid unionized public service jobs. Calgary could not rely as much on these types of employment sectors and therefore put much greater focus into corporate economic growth - this is why the boom and bust has traditionally impacted Calgary more than Edmonton. Its also why they are more conservative because more Calgarians appreciate market driven competition and are less enamoured with publicly funded unions. While Calgary was coming into its own in the 1970s and 80s and hosting the Olympics Edmonton was being led by anti-capitalist types like Jan Reimer. I will always cheer for the Oilers and have a soft spot for Edmonton but the city has become too much left wing, too much socialism, too soft on crime and too much NDP. The well paid government employees know who butters their bread and raving anti-semitic civic embarassments like Heather Macpherson has a job for life here in Edmonton. Calgary has become a much nicer, more urbane and respected city and is a major player nationally and growing player internationally. Edmonton is an afterthought - it's downtown is a civic disgrace and middle class union types with guarenteed pensions who think the UCP is evil will keep voting for the socialist NDP and gap between Calgary and Edmonton will keep growing. It is what it is - the last two civic elections show the two different directions these cities are going - Calgary with more pragmatic common sense leadership with an emphasis on job growth, cleaning up downtown and law enforcement, attracting high paid jobs in the tech sector and protecting their beautiful heritage neigbourhoods from multiplexes - and Edmonton which does the opposite. Now if you came to Alberta as a immigrant which city would you want to live in? Which city has a better future for your kids?Over several decades the City of Edmonton has neither been very focused on either tourism or attracting corporate offices downtown and it shows.
I feel at least a few on council now realize these are problems so it would be nice if this changes, more corporate offices in particular could help downtown a lot.
What?!? Soft on crime ? Like Edmonton made these policies and not the feds and province…. What did I just readYou feel "at least a few on council now realize these are the problems"? It’s a little late for that don't you think? Also, Edmonton's council is dominated by lefty virtue signalling anti -capitalist who have no idea how to attact corporate business. Edmonton will never ever compete with Calgary in most areas now. There was a time, about 60ish years ago, when Edmonton and Calgary had similar corporate presence. However, Edmonton relied too much on government and did very well - the expansion of government bureaucracy and the growth of the U of A led to thousands of well paid unionized public service jobs. Calgary could not rely as much on these types of employment sectors and therefore put much greater focus into corporate economic growth - this is why the boom and bust has traditionally impacted Calgary more than Edmonton. It’s also why they are more conservative because more Calgarians appreciate market driven competition and are less enamoured with publicly funded unions. While Calgary was coming into its own in the 1970s and 80s and hosting the Olympics Edmonton was being led by anti-capitalist types like Jan Reimer. I will always cheer for the Oilers and have a soft spot for Edmonton but the city has become too much left wing, too much socialism, too soft on crime and too much NDP. The well paid government employees know who butters their bread and raving anti-semitic civic embarassments like Heather Macpherson has a job for life here in Edmonton. Calgary has become a much nicer, more urbane and respected city and is a major player nationally and growing player internationally. Edmonton is an afterthought - it's downtown is a civic disgrace and middle class union types with guarenteed pensions who think the UCP is evil will keep voting for the socialist NDP and gap between Calgary and Edmonton will keep growing. It is what it is - the last two civic elections show the two different directions these cities are going - Calgary with more pragmatic common sense leadership with an emphasis on job growth, cleaning up downtown and law enforcement, attracting high paid jobs in the tech sector and protecting their beautiful heritage neigbourhoods from multiplexes - and Edmonton which does the opposite. Now if you came to Alberta as a immigrant which city would you want to live in? Which city has a better future for your kids?
What you read is the ongoing and repetitive rantings of someone many of us have long since muted, FYI.What?!? To soft on crime ? Like Edmonton made these policies and not the feds and province…. What did I just read
I like Chris Fleming's coinage that someone who posts like this is "playing the keyboard bongos"What you read is the ongoing and repetitive rantings of someone many of us have long since muted, FYI.
30% in the year of our Lord 2026, are you deadass?? Meanwhile on this forum, we thought the sky was falling when we were at the mid-twenties during the height of COVIDCalgary is great at marketing, but they’re currently hiding a 30%+ office vacancy rate.