Kosy123
Active Member
Seeing all this and the Warehouse Park, I now fully understand why there were some suggestions proposing 108 St be a shared pedestrian similar to 104 and Rice Howard Way.
Not usually, no. Back to refine and address issues raised and move forward or chug along without their support and hope for the best.Dang, Does that kill the project?
Seemed like their concerns were largely about having the rear of the building integrate better with Warehouse Park--which honestly is a fair criticism I think--this is not the typical site where the rear of the building faces an alley way and is designed with primarily service access in mind. Specifically, I don't think there should be any rear surface parking on this one, and the rear entrance should be much more bright and inviting (but within reason and still secure), rather than the typical blank steel door.This project got non-support at Edmonton Design Committee.
This all makes good sense and seems to be the whole point of this process, to give feedback to help improve the look, feel and function of buildings in the area. It is good when the process works.Seemed like their concerns were largely about having the rear of the building integrate better with Warehouse Park--which honestly is a fair criticism I think--this is not the typical site where the rear of the building faces an alley way and is designed with primarily service access in mind. Specifically, I don't think there should be any rear surface parking on this one, and the rear entrance should be much more bright and inviting (but within reason and still secure), rather than the typical blank steel door.
The City is spending $45,000,000 on this park, I don't think it's too much to ask that developers building adjacent to it have some architectural care for how their buildings integrate into the space.