Windsor

BIA chair surprised by council's Wyandotte Town Centre rejection

City Coun. Rino Bortolin is criticizing the city's 'themed districting' plan for Wyandotte Street East, while the area's BIA chair is "quite surprised" after council rejected a plan for the area that was approved more than one year ago.

'I was quite surprised in general, I hadn’t heard anything about it before Monday morning'

Concept of World Market as envisioned by Architecttura Inc. Architects for Wyandotte Town Centre. (Wyandotte Town Centre BIA)

Reaction continues to pour in after Windsor city council's decision Monday not continue with a plan to spend $1.4 million for the first phase of the Wyandotte Town Centre World Market.

City Coun. Rino Bortolin is criticizing the city's 'themed districting' plan for Wyandotte Street East, while the area's BIA chair is "quite surprised" after council rejected a plan for the area that was approved more than one year ago. 

Instead of continuing with the plan from the business community on Wyandotte, council voted in favour of a new plan Monday that would harmonize the area with the city's $5.25-million "districting concept."

Districting involves highlighting certain aspects of specific neighbourhoods — for example, making a distillery district in Walkerville to take advantage of the close proximity to Hiram Walker and Sons Ltd., the Canadian Club Brand Centre and the Walkerville Brewery.

Hear more from Coun. Rino Bortolin and Walkerville BIA chair Tamara Kowalska:

Bortolin said the city's approach to districting needs to re-examined. He said setting up districts shouldn't be a "top down approach," so the city isn't playing "SimCity" or creating an "Epcot" theme park.

"There are much more than Middle Eastern restaurants and stores in that community," said Bortolin, referring to Mayor Drew Dilkens' idea to turn the Wyandotte area in a Middle Eastern district. "That's the whole idea [behind the BIA's original plan] of the world market."

Chair of the Walkerville Town Centre BIA, Tamara Kowalska thought the proposed Wyandotte plan that included colourful banners for the world market was a done deal. 

"I was quite surprised in general, I hadn't heard anything about it before Monday morning," she said. "In my mind the project had been approved."

Kowalska said architects who were working on the plan had been meeting with city officials regularly.