Paskapoo Slopes rezoning application debate continues at Calgary city council
Arguments for and against the proposal near Canada Olympic Park being heard
A controversial rezoning application is under debate at city hall, with the company that wants to develop land at the foot of Paskapoo Slopes arguing the project meets all current rules and should be approved.
Developer Trinity Hills wants to build a mixed-use project on 100 hectares of land along 16th Ave N.W. just east of Canada Olympic Park.
Spokesman Greg Brown said a residential village is a critical element of the project.
"It is the residents for this area which will give it daily life, will give it ongoing life throughout the plan, to make sure that there's users in the town centre and in the gateway [who] live close at hand," he said.
Trinity plans to build a new interchange at its own expense on Sarcee Trail south of 16th Avenue to improve access to the site.
It wants to start clearing land later this year and start construction next spring.
The proposal is to develop about one-third of the area at the foot of the hill, and turn the remaining two-thirds of the land over to the city for a new regional park. The Calgary Planning Commission recently approved the application.
More work to come, says Nenshi
Mayor Naheed Nenshi says there's more work to be done on the proposal.
"The recommendation of the Calgary Planning Commission is to provide first reading, which is sort of approval in principle, and withhold second and third readings until a whole bunch of things are decided around the design of the Sarcee interchanges, other transportation issues [and] some financing questions," he said.
However, opposition is significant. About 10,000 people have signed a petition against this proposal and 222 pages of letters from the public are included in the agenda.
City council is hearing from many people who don't want to see any development on the Paskapoo Slopes site, people who talked about the cultural and archeological significance of the greenspace. They say once it's gone, it will be gone forever.
Sydney Empson, with the Bowness Community Association, spoke against the idea.
"We can always find places to build shopping malls and hotels but park space of this quality, both environmentally and culturally, is rare indeed," she said.