TAS
Senior Member
^ I don't think that is Edmonton -- doesn't look like the CN Station that I recall.
^ I don't think that is Edmonton -- doesn't look like the CN Station that I recall.
It's wild to me how Albertas infrastructure went backwards in some regards as time progressed.See now the article is conflating different elements -- the railiners ran between Edmonton and Calgary on the CP line. And the building to the right of the CN station never existed in Edmonton (to my knowledge). The CN station in Edmonton looked something like that but remember CN is/was a crown corporation and therefore the stations from City to City resembled one another.
Looks like your right.Looks like Queen's Avenue School.
lostyeg.wordpress.com
There were two I believe. One was across 101st where the vacant lot beside the casino is. Someone correct me if I'm wrong.^ I don't think that is Edmonton -- doesn't look like the CN Station that I recall.
I wonder if the floorplans are targeted to the student demographic, and they're chasing the grant money. Otherwise, I'm baffled.
To be fair, what family is going to move into the old CN building?Are local investors not seeing the condopocalypse taking place in Toronto where units designed for AirBNB like these aren't selling at all? All these buildings have the exact same nonexistent market of single people who only flop in their closet homes for sleep.
Each floor could have half as many units and make them livable. Where's the 3-4 bdr units for families? We're so terrible at this.
They could go to a bank, though.To be fair, what family is going to move into the old CN building?
There is zero infrastructure to support a family of 4 or more downtown. Hell there isn't even a McDonald's to buy a happy meal downtown....




