Windsor

Residents debate plan for land surrounding proposed mega-hospital during meeting

The acute care facility is to be built on County Road 42 at Concession 9 and part of the planning process requires Windsor Regional Hospital to hire a consultant to put together a secondary plan for the 360 hectare site.

Dozens of concerned citizens voice opposition to secondary plan

Citizens voiced there concerns over a development plan for the area in and around the new mega-hospital Wednesday night. (Dale Molnar/CBC News)

Dozens of concerned citizens attended a meeting Wednesday night at the Roseland Golf and Curling Club to hear about the planning process for the land on and around the proposed new mega-hospital location.

The acute care facility is to be built on County Road 42 at Concession 9 and part of the planning process requires Windsor Regional Hospital to hire a consultant to put together a secondary plan for the 360 hectare site.

Jim Dyment, a partner in MHBC Planning Urban Design and Landscape Architecture, designed the plan and said it calls for green space and walking trails.

"It calls for a complete community made up of a range and mix of housing mostly lower and medium-density housing, office, retail, entertainment," he added.

Dozens of concerned residents crowded a public meeting to discuss the secondary plan for land surrounding the proposed mega-hospital site. (Dale Molnar/CBC)

However, several people at the meeting raised issues with the proposal.

Some said they don't want to see the hospital built on the rural site, while others stated the plan will be detrimental to Windsor's downtown core.

"I have no difficulty with the consultants that are presenting their plan here. I just think it's irregular that a major swath of the city is being planned by a consultant that is working for the hospital," said Greg Heil, an architect and a member of Citizens for an Accountable Mega-Hospital Planning Process (CAMPP) which is opposed to the hospital location.​

The secondary plan did have some supporters.

Robert Di Natale, who owns 100 acres in the planning area, said he believes it will attract additional investment, jobs and medical expertise to the city.

"It's not going to be relocating Windsor, it's actually going to be a growth centre where it's actually going to have a lot of professionalism that's going to migrate to Windsor where we're going to have the care like we have in places like London or Toronto," he explained.

The plan still needs to be approved by city council, which will consider it during a meeting in the fall.