City aims to build 'reuseable' multi-use parkades as it looks to the future
'We can no longer build standalone, single-use civic facilities,' says Coun. Gian-Carlo Carra
The next parkade to be built by the City of Calgary could become more than just a place to leave your vehicle — with plans to incorporate office, retail and residential spaces into the new structure.
The $60-million project slated for Ninth Avenue S.E., across from the new central library in the East Village, could also be a place where people live and work one day, says Michael Brown, president and CEO of the Calgary Municipal Land Corporation.
"That new type of building is pretty active, it hopefully has other uses in it," Brown said.
"Some of those other uses could be an office, could be a residential tower, it could be retail," he added.
The city agency is overseeing the construction of the new 500-stall parkade, slated to begin next year.
- MORE CALGARY NEWS | How to minimize chinook headaches
- MORE CALGARY NEWS | Fentanyl and opioid crisis on Nenshi's agenda for big city mayors' meeting
Brown says while parking is needed today, the arrival of autonomous vehicles might one day change that.
The city is already working on a pilot program that could see driverless shuttles between Telus SPARK and the Zoo LRT station by 2018, with the goal of determining whether they will be feasible in other parts of Calgary.
"We can no longer build standalone, single-use civic facilities, and we have to create them as mixed-use places," says Coun. Gian-Carlo Carra.
"And specifically with parkades, we have to design them in such a way that they are robust and reuseable into the future."
With files from Scott Dippel