Portage and Main: Open the gates to Winnipeg pedestrians
Cities, especially their downtowns, are for people, not cars, David Loftson writes
Portage and Main should of course be reopened to pedestrians. It was closed to foot traffic almost 40 years ago, and it was one of the most destructive things Winnipeg has done to its downtown. It was a completely wrongheaded way to "save" downtown Winnipeg from decades of neglect and from forces beyond the city's control. Traffic was increasing, suburbanization was in full force. The city capitulated with no vision whatsoever and basically decided the car was going to dominate city planning. Allowing and encouraging this downtown was especially egregious.
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Central and downtown Winnipeg had (and still has) many favourable characteristics, including many untapped and unique ones. These characteristics include a large mature housing stock nearby, including apartments; a large mature urban forest (a lot of boulevard trees); an easily navigable grid street system; a well-used and efficient transit system (especially compared to other North American cities); a world-class stock of historic buildings; an amazing arts scene (professional as well as indie theatre and music); professional sports teams; a unique climate (that ranges from lows of -30 C to highs of plus 30 in a matter of six months); and a unique setting with rivers and lakes and wilderness a short drive away.
Desperate for development
In the 1970s, city council was desperate to attract development to downtown Winnipeg; they wanted another tall building at Portage Avenue and Main Street. Trizec Corp. from Montreal showed interest. Some city councillors and the mayor went on a junket to Montreal partly to view Trizec's Place Ville Marie development in downtown Montreal. They wanted something like that for Winnipeg; they really liked the subway that travelled beneath the office tower.
Mayor Stephen Juba, most members of city council, most planners and developers wanted a "modern city," and that meant new highrise buildings and a separation of vehicular traffic from pedestrians. Official plans for Winnipeg in the 1960s and 1970s included building parking garages (publicly funded) and freeways everywhere to get to the parking garages. But the city in the 1970s was in a slow growth cycle and private developers were reluctant to build in Winnipeg. Most development was happening in Toronto and Calgary.
Megaprojects
Since the 1960s, Winnipeg City Hall has tried to use megaprojects to kick-start the economy and "improve" the city. Urban renewal schemes were hatched throughout the central city and downtown, such as Lord Selkirk Park in the North End and the Centennial Centre on Main Street. The Centennial Centre was only a fraction of what was originally planned for the east side of Main Street. All but four or five buildings east of Main were to be knocked down to make room for modern structures and freeways along the Red River and in the Forks area. There were also massive plans for the Central Park area and for south of Portage. The convention centre and Lakeview Square are products of these plans. Always central to these plans were parking garages. Must have parking garages; must separate cars from people. Public transit was largely ignored.
Winnipeg Square and the underground at Portage and Main fit perfectly into this dream. However, it became a nightmare; costs rose, and Trizec, with more development experience than members of city council, got many concessions, including making it illegal for pedestrians to cross the street. Trizec was worried people would avoid their underground mall if they had a choice. Trizec and the city achieved the goal of encouraging people to walk through the mall by making Main Street and Fort Street so ugly. The city allowed, encouraged and helped a developer build (actually not build) one of the ugliest structures anywhere.
Cities, especially their downtowns, are for people, not cars. Some people expect to drive through downtown without stopping. That's what you do in the suburbs, not downtown. The barricades officially blocked off Portage and Main in 1979 and people have not been able to legally cross since. (Full disclosure: I often illegally cross and it is not that difficult to do.)
It would therefore, on a trial basis, be easy and economical to open the intersection. Lift the gates, have cadets supervise, let the city breathe. And I predict that the many pedestrians who cross the intersection will do so safely, and any drivers frustrated with the "horror" of seeing lots of people on the streets of Winnipeg's downtown will easily find alternative routes.
David Loftson is a local historian and recovering bike messenger. His column Flat Not Boring can be heard regularly on CBC Radio One's Weekend Morning Show with Terry MacLeod.