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Norquest Careers Skills Centre | 34m | 10s | GEC

Interesting. I thought they were just going to throw down some grass, add a bench or two and call it a day. I"m curious to see how this turns out and who/how it's used (by) when it's done. Not exactly an ideal location for a park when you have to cross a street, parking lot, and alley to access it from Norquest, but it is so much better than just more parking.

You're missing the broader context of how this initiative aligns with the Campus Master Plan. This park represents the first step in a multi-phased, multi-decade strategy for campus expansion. The land it occupies was acquired specifically to advance the goals outlined in the Master Plan—not for the building that previously stood on it. That structure, over a century old, had significant code deficiencies and deferred maintenance issues that rendered it unusable. The value was always in the land, not the building.

This greenspace is a foundational element in the vision to create a cohesive, urban post-secondary campus that intentionally integrates green areas—something often overlooked in downtown campuses like NorQuest was five years ago, or Bow Valley College in Calgary today. As outlined in Post #20, the upcoming Career Skills Centre will complete an east-west green corridor, linking the existing campus entrance to 109 Street. This will enhance accessibility, campus permeability, and NorQuest’s visibility within the community it serves.

It’s important to understand that, due to the province’s capital funding model, major projects must be delivered sequentially. The college can’t build everything at once. That’s why it’s essential to view current developments through the lens of the Campus Master Plan. The vision is deliberate, grounded, and aligned with the needs of the surrounding community, the City of Edmonton’s urban planning goals, and the provincial post-secondary strategy. It also considers NorQuest’s unique role within the broader ecosystem of local institutions. The post-secondary institutions are realizing their unique roles in the sector by not seeing each other as competition and now starting to work together on an unprecedented level - this is a good thing for students and the Alberta tax payer.

Additionally, NorQuest recently acquired the former Champs Boxing Studio building at 109 Street and 103 Avenue. This property, directly adjacent to the new park, will be repurposed in the coming years for student-focused, non-academic uses—further enhancing the campus experience until the land it sits on is required for a future expansion.

It’s rare to see a Campus Master Plan being executed as thoroughly—and as swiftly—as NorQuest’s. Published publicly in early 2023, the plan is already well underway. Unlike many master plans that remain aspirational or are replaced before being realized, NorQuest’s is being brought to life with intention and momentum.
 
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NorQuest recently acquired the former Champs Boxing Studio building at 109 Street and 103 Avenue. This property, directly adjacent to the new park, will be repurposed in the coming years for student-focused, non-academic uses—further enhancing the campus experience until the land it sits on is required for a future expansion.

Does this imply that Champs will be retained as a Norquest fitness facility? Or maybe will it be repurposed into a student cafe/bar?
 
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Very well said @StoneCutter099

The park may look a little out of place at the moment, but it shows that the school is committed to its master plan and the community. I would say it is also a great PR move.
 
You're missing the broader context of how this initiative aligns with the Campus Master Plan. This park represents the first step in a multi-phased, multi-decade strategy for campus expansion. The land it occupies was acquired specifically to advance the goals outlined in the Master Plan—not for the building that previously stood on it. That structure, over a century old, had significant code deficiencies and deferred maintenance issues that rendered it unusable. The value was always in the land, not the building.

This greenspace is a foundational element in the vision to create a cohesive, urban post-secondary campus that intentionally integrates green areas—something often overlooked in downtown campuses like NorQuest was five years ago, or Bow Valley College in Calgary today. As outlined in Post #20, the upcoming Career Skills Centre will complete an east-west green corridor, linking the existing campus entrance to 109 Street. This will enhance accessibility, campus permeability, and NorQuest’s visibility within the community it serves.

It’s important to understand that, due to the province’s capital funding model, major projects must be delivered sequentially. The college can’t build everything at once. That’s why it’s essential to view current developments through the lens of the Campus Master Plan. The vision is deliberate, grounded, and aligned with the needs of the surrounding community, the City of Edmonton’s urban planning goals, and the provincial post-secondary strategy. It also considers NorQuest’s unique role within the broader ecosystem of local institutions. The post-secondary institutions are realizing their unique roles in the sector by not seeing each other as competition and now starting to work together on an unprecedented level - this is a good thing for students and the Alberta tax payer.

Additionally, NorQuest recently acquired the former Champs Boxing Studio building at 109 Street and 103 Avenue. This property, directly adjacent to the new park, will be repurposed in the coming years for student-focused, non-academic uses—further enhancing the campus experience until the land it sits on is required for a future expansion.

It’s rare to see a Campus Master Plan being executed as thoroughly—and as swiftly—as NorQuest’s. Published publicly in early 2023, the plan is already well underway. Unlike many master plans that remain aspirational or are replaced before being realized, NorQuest’s is being brought to life with intention and momentum.

No, I get that and didn't say anything about the building that was previously there. I'm just pleasantly surprised that the park looks like it will be more than just some grass and benches. That also doesn't change that it will still be awkward to get to until more of the campus plan comes together east of it.

I'm really looking forward to what's to come from both Norquest and MacEwan around here.
 
Does this imply that Champs will be retained as a Norquest fitness facility? Or maybe will it be repurposed into a student cafe/bar?

I do know that the CSC will have a major fitness component to it, so retaining the Champs site for that reason is unlikely.
 
You're missing the broader context of how this initiative aligns with the Campus Master Plan. This park represents the first step in a multi-phased, multi-decade strategy for campus expansion. The land it occupies was acquired specifically to advance the goals outlined in the Master Plan—not for the building that previously stood on it. That structure, over a century old, had significant code deficiencies and deferred maintenance issues that rendered it unusable. The value was always in the land, not the building.

This greenspace is a foundational element in the vision to create a cohesive, urban post-secondary campus that intentionally integrates green areas—something often overlooked in downtown campuses like NorQuest was five years ago, or Bow Valley College in Calgary today. As outlined in Post #20, the upcoming Career Skills Centre will complete an east-west green corridor, linking the existing campus entrance to 109 Street. This will enhance accessibility, campus permeability, and NorQuest’s visibility within the community it serves.

It’s important to understand that, due to the province’s capital funding model, major projects must be delivered sequentially. The college can’t build everything at once. That’s why it’s essential to view current developments through the lens of the Campus Master Plan. The vision is deliberate, grounded, and aligned with the needs of the surrounding community, the City of Edmonton’s urban planning goals, and the provincial post-secondary strategy. It also considers NorQuest’s unique role within the broader ecosystem of local institutions. The post-secondary institutions are realizing their unique roles in the sector by not seeing each other as competition and now starting to work together on an unprecedented level - this is a good thing for students and the Alberta tax payer.

Additionally, NorQuest recently acquired the former Champs Boxing Studio building at 109 Street and 103 Avenue. This property, directly adjacent to the new park, will be repurposed in the coming years for student-focused, non-academic uses—further enhancing the campus experience until the land it sits on is required for a future expansion.

It’s rare to see a Campus Master Plan being executed as thoroughly—and as swiftly—as NorQuest’s. Published publicly in early 2023, the plan is already well underway. Unlike many master plans that remain aspirational or are replaced before being realized, NorQuest’s is being brought to life with intention and momentum.
This looks/sounds like it was ran through chat gpt. Do we really need ai to write our basic forum board messages?
 
Does this imply that Champs will be retained as a Norquest fitness facility? Or maybe will it be repurposed into a student cafe/bar?
The masterplan shows it demo'd and a new building there and as mentioned, the area will include a comprehensive student wellness centre.
 
Oh wow. That's next level, as in the seventh level of hell.

Kudos for the "artist" that rendered a police car into the scene. That's rather on-point and pure gold.
 
Ready for landscaping soon.
IMG_3064.jpeg
 
I really love how, between the O'Daymin Park, the new developments and this, the whole area will be looking so much better in the span of just a couple of years. I feel like by the time the VLW is ready, Warehouse District will be the trendiest area of DT, if all the proposed developments do come to fruition, alongside the potential ones from the Student Housing Accelerator.
 

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