@CplKlinger I have several thoughts and some fall on the negative side of the ledger. First the positive -- gh3 is an
extremely capable firm and they have already made a significant impact on the City of Edmonton with built work, particularly in Borden Park where they have won awards for both the Natural Swimming Pool and for the Pavilion building and the creative design for park restrooms (
recently re-emerged with @Kaizen's re-posting of those two projects). The park project has a nice scale to it and replacing surface parking is always a plus. Another positive is the book-ending of the Park by significant building projects which will "help" with monitoring use of the Park by people (
eyes on the street). I like that 107th street will be terminated at the Park boundaries (
I hope that there is no left-over sentiment about making it an unnecessary transit corridor and I hope that it will be fully incorporated into the park). "The Parks" project (
Hariri Pontarini Architects -- again a very skilled group with the Ice District's Marriott Hotel tower to their credit) will be a significant two-tower structure on the west end of the project and "The Shift" (
MCM Partners, Architects out of Vancouver) plus the as-yet-un-named tower designed by Arc Studios (
the Edmonton firm after-group left when Brad Kennedy died a few years back) will provide three towers on the east end of the project. What would have been useful to the Warehouse District Park would have been discussions with the three architectural groups aligned with these projects brought in to discuss ways of connecting these projects in a more definitive way to the Park itself (
a blurring of borders if you like).
The opportunities that are almost certain to have been missed will be the potential for sub-surface park development that could have included a world class aquarium -- see
https://www.aquaticbiosphere.ca/ (
as important to the fulfillment of the promise of downtown as the Ice District), perhaps an in-Park eatery of two, and monitored restrooms and administration functions.
On the surface level I am reading over and over again the "need" for a large open space -- here I tend to think "Plaza", grass or no grass. I then look at the work of the landscape firm brought on as consultants --
Claude Cormier + Associés and they have nothing to their credit in their work except ornamental arrangement of trees and water ponds around paved footpaths, project after project.
What I am sensing as an end result -- and I hope with every fiber of my being that I am wrong here -- is a directive from Edmonton City Planning to create an open-area Park in the downtown that (
minus the river) will end up looking ever so much like their "touch the water" design failure. They should have learned from their Kinistinâw Park, another failure that had barely opened when 3 people were found dead there from drug overdoses.
This City Centre Park should be vibrant with activity (
and I don't mean people tossing frisbees about or playing "catch" with baseballs and footballs -- there are way too many places in Edmonton to do that if one is so inclined) -- it should have court games, children play areas, BBQ areas, etc. -- all of this broken up with paths, viewing stands and ornamental gardens.
The other thing that is totally off-base is the need for public consultation. The "public" are not designers and they should not be consulted as such -- this is more of a "cover-your-ass" concept that Planners have perfected to a fine art (e.g. "well 63.5% of the people liked the scheme so it must be good" -- garbage!!! -- leads to mindless pap that neither challenges the imagination nor serves the City well).
It is very difficult to prognosticate results in advance of a presented scheme -- my thoughts are only derived from what
seems to be coming.