Windsor blight hits 400 properties, community group reports
'We're going to have a city that's just a doughnut. With a hole in the middle'
Blight is everywhere.
Kathryn Tisdale created the 'Windsor's Vacant Buildings and Lots' webpage to raise awareness of how much vacant space Windsor has.
Radio-Canada put together a map with the 400 vacancies found so far. More than 100 are residential properties owned by the Canadian Transit Company in the Indian Road neighbourhood in the city's west end.
"If we don't stop what we're doing and stop building around the edges of our city, we're going to leave a big hole in the middle," Tisdale said. "We're going to have a city that's just a doughnut. With no downtown at all."
"We're not taking care of our vacant buildings," Taylor said.
CBC spoke with Thom Hunt, the city planner outside of the heritage Walker Power Building on Devonshire Road.
The four-story building has sat for many years without being developed.
Hunt said someone currently owns the building.
He could not answer what it meant to be well maintained.
"Our neighbouring municipalities have actually gained population that way," he said.
There is a community development plan in the works looking into how to repurpose buildings and bring back a population base.
With files from Radio-Canada's Edith Drouin