Saskatchewan

Regina can't force company to fill big Capital Pointe hole

The city of Regina says it can't force the company responsible for Capital Pointe to finish building.

Construction project has been in limbo since 2011

The city of Regina said it cannot force completion on the Capital Pointe project. (Craig Edwards/CBC)

The city of Regina can't force the construction company responsible for the Capital Pointe hole at Albert and Victoria to complete the project, according to a city hall memo.

The site is supposed to be home to a 27-storey condominium, which would house 186 units. The project is to include a 12-storey hotel with 140 suites.

"If the property is properly constructed, tidy and safe, but construction has simply ceased, the City has no authority to force the developer to continue construction to completion," the city wrote in a letter, which will be addressed at Monday's city council meeting.

The site is supposed to be home to a 27-storey condominium, which would house 186 units. The project is to include a 12-storey hotel with 140 suites. (CBC News)

The site was formerly the home of a hotel which had been demolished in 2011 but for years, the project has been progressing at a slow pace with delays and revisions to the construction timeline.

Construction which proceeds very slowly or gets abandoned is not uncommon, the city said in the same letter.

"Municipalities do not have powers to compel property owners to adhere to a construction schedule through any means, financial or otherwise."

Those who had invested in the project had anticipated completion by 2013.

The construction permit is up for renewal in March, and if "meaningful construction" has not happened, the city must decide if it should be renewed.