Your thoughts are welcome.
Johnston St Bridge to Store St.

Store St to Government St.

Government St to Douglas St (Option 1)

Government St to Douglas St (Option 2)

Douglas St Terminal

Thanks Aaron
Posted 21 August 2007 - 09:45 AM





Posted 21 August 2007 - 10:17 AM
Posted 21 August 2007 - 10:40 AM
Posted 21 August 2007 - 12:32 PM
Posted 21 August 2007 - 02:54 PM
Posted 21 August 2007 - 03:12 PM
Great looking proposal! I'd love to see the train downtown again, what if the station was put in up Store St where the proposed bus terminal is?
Since this is not an actual development I've moved this thread to the Infrastructure forum.
Posted 21 August 2007 - 05:22 PM
Posted 06 September 2007 - 07:34 AM
Does the minister today, or perhaps in committee, find himself able to tell us the current estimated final capital cost for the building? [a waterfront trade and convention centre on Wharf St.] We appreciate, of course, that the government proposes to contribute $2.5 million. That's very generous. I don't criticize that at all. I wonder if you could tell us what the final capital cost is now, as prepared for you by the Provincial Capital Commission.
The lines of at least the first drawings of the building and the restraint and the architectural sensitivity of the first models coming forward are really fine. They must be honoured; they must be respected. There is no point in putting up an enormous garage for human beings with four plain walls and presuming that we've done justice to the remarkable location made available to us here at the Inner Harbour. No one wants that - it wouldn't serve any good purpose. The site is extraordinary and so the building should be. The sea access is extraordinary and should be reflected in the design and the usability of that building. The access to the Inner Harbour by a promenade for ordinary citizens - not necessarily coming for a convention centre or coming for trade centre purposes, but simply wanting access to the site - is also extraordinary and it must be respected and honoured in the design.
There are other remarkable aspects here that have to be understood and have to be integrated into the final design. One of the lucky circumstances is that this site connects with virtually every significant form of transportation, save one, to and from Vancouver Island - and I refer of course to Swartz Bay. It has bus access, it has seaplane access, it has direct access to the Coho and the Marguerite.
There is one more form of access that it could incorporate, and I simply propose it as something worth studying. I don't know if it's entirely practical - I'm advised it is - but it would be up to the government to conduct the feasibility studies that may make it so. Would it not be possible to simply consider extending the E&N track down Wharf Street for four blocks and using the convention centre at ground level on Wharf Street as the terminus of that service? Would it not be a marvelous thing to be able to invite tourists who come for convention centre purposes to catch the train at their front door right there on Wharf Street, all of four blocks from the present terminus, go across the Johnson Street Bridge and proceed up Vancouver Island? Would it not be a marvelous thing for all of us on the Island to be able to encourage that direct, local and physical use of the last remaining active rail line on the Island? Would it not be possible to at least consider extending the E&N track from where it now ends at the foot of Johnson Street down Wharf Street to the foot of Fort? It's all of four blocks. I'm told that to extend the rail line itself that short distance may cost less than 5 percent of the total final cost of the convention centre and the related facilities. It may well be that that 5 percent could make a first-class difference. It may well be that that 5 percent, should the figure prove accurate, should the feasibility study bear it out, could allow us to heighten and enhance the outstanding connectedness of that really outstanding location to all of the forms of transportation that we enjoy in downtown Victoria. It is at the very least, I think, worth some study.
There is one final argument that I'd like to make. The commercial enterprise values of this convention centre are self-evident; they are not in dispute by anyone. It is important that they be enhanced here. The commercial worth of this site.... Its annual operating losses, which one can predict will be in the order of $200, 000 to $400, 000 in the first years - so we're informed - are worth bearing, because the final result, the indirect asset, is much more considerable. So it is that this House every year justifies the small operating losses of the Princess Marguerite, because the overall benefit to the economy is enormous. So too the small operating losses of this convention centre can be more than justified by the overall impact of the literally millions of dollars that will come in in convention centre activity. Those values are self-evident and we respect them. The opportunities for retail space, for active, small, private enterprise space down there - also serving the interests of the people who come for convention centres - are significant, worthy of respect and worthy of incorporation into the final design.
Posted 06 September 2007 - 09:34 AM
Posted 06 September 2007 - 04:24 PM
Posted 06 September 2007 - 04:32 PM
Great looking proposal! I'd love to see the train downtown again, what if the station was put in up Store St where the proposed bus terminal is?
Since this is not an actual development I've moved this thread to the Infrastructure forum.
Posted 06 September 2007 - 11:28 PM
Posted 06 January 2008 - 01:34 AM
Posted 06 January 2008 - 10:34 AM
Posted 06 January 2008 - 02:01 PM
Posted 06 January 2008 - 04:26 PM
Thanks UrbanRail. Those are both interesting proposals. The station could be centered on the Bambu hole.
Running it up to the next block into Sesqui-centenial Square still strikes me as troublesome. You'll have a lot of businesses p/o'd about the loss of parking on Pandora for a train that runs once or twice a day.
Posted 06 January 2008 - 05:08 PM
Posted 06 January 2008 - 06:27 PM
I used to work at 3 Fan Tan Alley, right at the corner on Pandora. I noticed a few things:
1. Those parking spots weren't used to visit the merchants on Pandora St.
2. Bambu being dead is a major hole, filled by homeless people
3. The two buildings between Fan Tan and the Bambu hole have no apparently purpose. Aside from the cheapest pop in the city (the machine behind fencing is 75 cent/can), I once noticed about two dozen middle-aged Chinese women lining up to get into the Eastern building (at the corner of Fan Tan and Pandora). Aside from that, the buildings sat empty. Can anybody comment on this?
4. Swans has about 300 compliants on file about the homeless around the hotel.
All this means something has to be done and fast. One possibility for a station might be to run up Pandora, through the Bambu project and then down Fisgard. The major issue with this is how do you get the buses down to that area to transfer people who work in other parts or are going to Camosun/UVic.
Posted 06 January 2008 - 06:33 PM
Posted 06 January 2008 - 07:15 PM
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