PEI

5 proposals for bridge fabrication yard in Borden-Carleton

Five proposals for redevelopment of the former Confederation Bridge fabrication yard at Borden-Carleton are now in the hands of provincial and municipal officials.

After 27 years, vacant site could finally get a new purpose

Aerial view of Borden-Carleton fabrication yard
'The town ultimately will have the final say on what goes forward' on the site, says Cory Deagle, P.E.I.'s economic development minister. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Five proposals for redevelopment of the former Confederation Bridge fabrication yard at Borden-Carleton, P.E.I., are now in the hands of provincial and municipal officials. 

The 45-hectare cliffside site, with stunning views of the Northumberland Strait and the bridge, is where large concrete components were created for the span, which opened in 1997 — more than 27 years ago.

Requests for the latest proposals to develop the site closed Nov. 13. Innovation P.E.I. owns the land, where cattle grazed on green pastures prior to the construction of the bridge.

What might the future hold for the old fabrication yard in Borden-Carleton?

11 days ago
Duration 2:07
The province has received five ideas for developing the 45-hectare waterfront property that welcomes visitors coming off the Confederation Bridge. But there are some concerns the process won't be fair.

"From here we're going to put in place a selection committee, which will review the submissions and rank them," said Cory Deagle, P.E.I. minister of economic development, innovation and trade. 

"We'll then share that information with the town and then eventually the town will hold a public meeting and we'll support that." 

The selection committee will be made up of senior government bureaucrats and "the town would also have involvement," Deagle said Friday at the P.E.I. Legislature. 

The public meeting will likely be held in 2025, Deagle said, and the public will have a chance to provide feedback.

Deputy Mayor Larry Allen, in a statement to CBC News on behalf of the Town of Borden-Carleton, confirmed that five submissions had been received and a public meeting will follow in the new year.

'Is it going to be fair?'

"That's a pretty good number, to have five responses to the RFP [request for proposals]," said Matt MacFarlane, the Green Party MLA for Borden-Kinkora.

Man with thinning brown hair, brownish-gray suit jacket and tie with light-coloured shirt stands in front of a CBC microphone and flags that say Legislative Assembly of P.E.I.
Area MLA Matt MacFarlane worries the government committee will not allow a comprehensive discussion of the merits of all the proposals but will push the province's favourite. (CBC)

MacFarlane called a meeting two months ago to gather public opinion about the process, and planned to draft a letter to provincial officials about what he heard. He hopes that meeting might have encouraged some proposals to come forward. 

He'd like to see Borden-Carleton hold a town hall meeting to discuss all the proposals equally and "have a fulsome discussion." But he worries the top proposal will be pushed forward as the only choice and a done deal. 

"Is that going to lead the municipality with potentially a bias in favour of one proposal or another and not give the townspeople the option of having a general discussion on all of them … with a level playing field?" MacFarlane said. "Is it going to be fair?" 

Deagle offered assurances that it would be.

Head and shoulders shot of a man with brown hair, light gray and white shirt with tie, stands in front of a microphone.
The province will choose senior government staff for a committee that will review and rank the five proposals, says Cory Deagle, P.E.I. minister of economic development, innovation and trade. (CBC)

"The town ultimately will have the final say on what goes forward," Deagle said. He added, "It could be nothing." 

MacFarlane said the site is important because it is clearly visible to travellers on the Confederation Bridge and to communities that border the town. 

"It will be a sight for people to see coming off the bridge … and one of the first sights that people see coming into Prince Edward Island," he said. "So it is important that it's done right."

Flyover of the fabrication yard in Borden-Carleton

1 year ago
Duration 1:05
Nestled right by the Confederation Bridge, the roughly 45-hectare fabrication yard has sat idle since the 1990s.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sara Fraser

Web Journalist

Sara has worked with CBC News in P.E.I. since 1988, starting with television and radio before moving to the digital news team. She grew up on the Island and has a journalism degree from the University of King's College in Halifax. Reach her by email at sara.fraser@cbc.ca.

With files from Wayne Thibodeau