Calgary flood damage to cost city $256M
Early cost tallies include $50M for devastation at zoo
Calgary officials say it will cost at least $256.5 million to repair damage from the flooding that devastated parts of the city last month.
The preliminary estimates were discussed by aldermen on the finance committee, which met Tuesday in a temporary space in the city’s northeast because city hall in downtown Calgary is not yet fully open.
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Damage to the city hall complex will cost $26.5 million to repair, officials said. The historic sandstone building will not reopen until late July or even August.
Your photos
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Send your best shots to calgaryphotos@cbc.ca and we'll display them at the the Back in the Saddle fundraiser all day Thursday at CBC Calgary.
Committee members were told the Calgary Zoo suffered $50 million worth of flood damage, the Central Library needs $10 million in repairs, and the Talisman Centre, a multi-sports complex on the Elbow River, sustained $6.2 million in damage.
Structural damage to the Calgary Police Service’s downtown administration building will cost more than $31 million to fix, the committee heard.
The tally so far for damage to Calgary Transit facilities is $11.7 million, including $8.2 million to repair the south C-Train line.
Flooding at the McDougall and Civic Centre parkades will cost $33.9 million to fix, transportation department officials said.
According to a city report, repairing flood damage will significantly affect future budgets, although the city is expected to recover some costs from other levels of government.
Corrections
- The city cited the total cost as $256.5 million, not $265.5 million as originally reported.Sep 12, 2013 7:28 PM MT