2004
Top Ten Endangered Sites
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(Updated)
With redevelopment proposals now before Council, decisions
affecting this landmark will determine the future of the building
and its neighbourhood, for better or for worse. Woodward's
has anchored the Victory Square district since the building’s
construction in 1903, when Charles Woodward chose the northwest
corner of Hastings and Abbott to build his second department
store.
Despite twelve additions occupying almost an
entire city block, the building maintains a strong sense of
architectural cohesion. Its muscular massing, red brick facade,
and continuous streetwall define the area's historic character.
The red neon 'W', atop an 80-foot steel tower,
is a city icon. Hidden, but no less significant, is the massive,
first-growth, 'heavy-timber' structure supporting the original
building. Since Woodward's closed in 1993, the building has
remained vacant. A parade of development proposals have come
and gone.
In 1996, the City designated Woodward's a heritage
building, and finally purchased it in 2003.
Last May, the City relit the neon 'W' as a gesture
of its commitment to revitalization of the Woodward's site
and the wider neighbourhood.
Unfortunately, that commitment does not extend
to preservation. In contravention of its own heritage standards
and guidelines, the City's 'proposal call', (to potential
developers) contains no specific requirement for retention
of this designated building, or even portions of it, stating
only that proposals should "[take] advantage of heritage
opportunities" and "[celebrate] the symbolism of
this historic building."
So it should be no surprise that many of the
schemes now before Council propose major demolition and fail
to respect the character of the building and the streetscape
it anchors. Aside from the obvious degradation of an historic
landmark, there's a serious risk of losing the district's
historic ambience if the building's exterior, or major parts
of it, are destroyed. Let's hope City Council does the right
thing.
Updated 01 May
2006: The Woodward's development is currently going
forward, with a recent pre-sale of condos slated for the property.
The original corner 1903/08 building will be restored, along
with the "W", and the remaining building structure
on the property demolished. Key features have been identified
throughout the entire structure (both exterior and interior),
and will be retained for potential incorporation into the
new developments.
Updated 19 January 2006: All structures on the site have been demolished, with the exception of the original 1903/08 building, which will be restored. The "W" is in storage, along with several other building elements from the demolished structures.
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