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Council supports group seeking to renovate, expand downtown core

Posted By MIKE WHITEHOUSE, THE SUDBURY STAR

Posted 10 months ago

It has been 40 years since downtown Sudbury saw a major development and it's time to start thinking big again, say downtown boosters.

City council last night offered support to a group planning to kick start renovating and expanding downtown.

Downtown will soon see several new developments with the potential to reshape it. With a School of Architecture, a planned new Francophone Cultural Centre and a relocated and expanded Art Gallery of Sudbury in the works, more than $50 million worth of projects are planned for the downtown.

And it's no coincidence all have targeted downtown as the place to be, boosters say.

"The health of downtown is crucial to our future economic competitiveness and success," local architect Blaine Nichols told council in launching a community-wide consultation.

Nichols, representing a group forging ahead with the School of Architecture, and Stephane Gauthier, executive director of le Carrefour francophone de Sudbury, hope to bring dozens of groups together to talk about how these projects fit into the future of downtown.

Big changes will be coming, Nichols says. The challenge will be to co-ordinate all these projects so they strengthen each other. His group, Big Ideas, Big Solutions, hopes to draw the community out of its shell to participate in a wide-ranging discussion on the downtown's future.

The last time downtown underwent a facelift of this scale was 40 years ago when the Borgia Street area was razed to make way for some housing and the mall now known as the Rainbow Centre.

While revitalization is an ongoing process, what the downtown is about to experience will rival 40 years ago, Nichols said.

The consultation will begin with a speaker series during the next few months designed to bring people together to talk about issues. The first will be design guru Bruce Mau on Nov. 10. Mau, a Sudbury native, will speak about innovation, creativity and design.

It's hoped these speakers will offer a rallying point for people to become involved in these and other projects. Gauthier says he wants people to come with ideas, big or small.

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"We know there are ideas flying around out there," he said. "You never know which ones might take hold."

All three of the noted projects are unfunded, except for a $10-million commitment over 10 years from the City of Greater Sudbury for the School of Architecture. As organizers begin making plans and drumming up funds for their projects, they will benefit from being able to point to each other and to downtown as partners, Nichols said.

While, none of the groups has a site for their projects, redeveloping the rail lands downtown has again been raised. Nichols says there's a couple of parcels of land available for development adjacent to the rail lands, so he doesn't see that as an issue.

Gauthier says he's wary that strategic planning projects haven't always drawn widespread support in Sudbury, but suggests this one will be different.

"We know that out of this process, we will have these three projects. They are going to happen no matter what," Gauthier says.

mwhitehouse@thesudburystar.com

Article ID# 2152131




Comments on this Article. You are currently not logged in.

Buy the CPR switching yard.

Post #1 By bulshoy, 10 months ago | 0 Votes | Vote: Thumbs Up Thumbs Down

With what bulshoy????The city doesn't have two cents to rub together.

Post #2 By AlvinTostig, 10 months ago | 0 Votes | Vote: Thumbs Up Thumbs Down

And yet they find wads of cash for ridiculous "traffic calming" measures on Southview Drive, money to re-pave and lay sidewalks on Marcel Street ( a street that sees maybe 15 cars per day on it), money for amphitheaters, etc etc etc.

But buying a parcel of land is out of the question for lack of money?

Post #3 By bulshoy, 10 months ago | 0 Votes | Vote: Thumbs Up Thumbs Down

The School of Architecture is going to be a major flop.
It plans on employing 80 people (and probably more by the time their done)for 50 students per year.
That is if they can even find 50 students.
There is a reason no other School of Architecture has opened in 30 or 40 years.
Because we don't need one.
And if you plan on becoming an Architect you sure in h3ll aren't going to want the Sudbury School of Architecture on your resume.

Post #4 By KID CHAOS, 10 months ago | 0 Votes | Vote: Thumbs Up Thumbs Down

Mr. Negative strikes again. Nothing like putting your own down every chance you get eh?

Post #5 By lanny, 10 months ago | 0 Votes | Vote: Thumbs Up Thumbs Down

And just HOW is a School of Architecture, a French Cultural Center and an expanded Art Gallery going to renovate the downtown? More importantly, where are the monies coming from? I see no mention of an English cultural center. Oversight?? What a city.

Post #6 By browzer1, 10 months ago | 0 Votes | Vote: Thumbs Up Thumbs Down

C'mon, this is nothing but a lobby group with their hands out - trying to steal taxpayers money for a cause that will only line teir own pockets. Pigs at the trough!

Post #7 By ernie keebler, 10 months ago | 0 Votes | Vote: Thumbs Up Thumbs Down

I almost slipped on the BS when I read this article.Yeah,where is the English cultural center going to be?The projects are going to happen "no matter what" says Gauthier.I guess Gauthier is in charge of the public purse strings now?Pompous ass.

Post #8 By AlvinTostig, 10 months ago | 0 Votes | Vote: Thumbs Up Thumbs Down

And only a 4.3% Tax increase!!! How much tax dollars to fork out, 50M, x 3 for sure. I'm afraid of our elect. Just look at how they plan road repairs. Every main road, at the same time. Yes, we need roads, repairs and upgrades, but our city elect, cannot plan a plan and go by a plan without the "massive" cost over runs. There are too many examples to go by. Hopefully, when the election happens next year, a good house cleaning will happen and those applying, don't promise what you can't deliever. Just look at what we have now. Sad...

Post #9 By tigger12, 10 months ago | 0 Votes | Vote: Thumbs Up Thumbs Down

I think it's great that someone wants to bring people back to the downtown. I remember a time when it was always busy downtown, and not the ghost-town that it's been for the last 15 years. But what about parking? Parking has always been downtown's Achilles' heel.

Post #10 By kinetic, 10 months ago | 0 Votes | Vote: Thumbs Up Thumbs Down
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