City of Lougheed Rises Next Door

Massive development plans unfold on Coquitlam’s border

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Rendering shows various aspects of the new City of Lougheed development. Photograph from the Tri-City News

While Tri-City residents have been focused on construction activity in their own community over the last few years, plans are afoot for a massive residential development right on Coquitlam’s doorstep.

When it is completed, the City of Lougheed on the Burnaby side of North Road is expected to boast 23 highrise towers that will house 10,000 units. It will also feature 1.4 million sq. ft. of retail space as well as another million square feet of office space — which is about five times the amount that currently exists in all of Coquitlam, according to the city’s most recent semi-annual economic report.

It is a development that will dramatically change the face of the neighbourhood over the next 15 to 20 years, according to Darren Kwiatkowski, the executive vice-president of development and design at Shape Properties, which owns the 40-acre site.

“There hasn’t been a lot of developable land in the [Lougheed] area over the last decade,” he said. “We think there is pent-up demand.”

A promotional video for the project depicts a grand promenade with street-level shops and restaurants while towers appear across the skyline at the point where the Evergreen Extension joins the rest of the Millennium Line.

While some indoor shopping will be maintained, Kwiatkowski said that over the next 15 years, large portions of the existing mall will be demolished to make way for an outdoor network of streets and plazas. The presentation centre opened for previews this week and there is already interest in the street-level retail the development will offer, he said.

“It will evolve over time,” he said. “We will integrate the new phases with the existing mall.”

MORE TRAFFIC

But with larger developments and more residents come increased pressures on the road system, a concern raised by a number of Tri-City News’ letter writers in recent weeks.

While the City of Lougheed is close to SkyTrain, Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan acknowledges there will be some criticism about the traffic levels associated with the project.

“It is impossible to avoid the criticism because there will be more traffic and all of us know that,” Corrigan told The Tri-City News. “Increased traffic and increased congestion is going to affect livability in these communities.”

But he said some of the pressures on the road system will be mitigated by access to SkyTrain and the fact that employment, shopping and residential units will all be located on one walkable site. He added that most people who live in the new neighbourhood will require no more than one car.

The alternative to high-density developments like what is being proposed at Lougheed is sprawl, Corrigan said, which means more people having to drive longer distances to work and shop.

“When we are growing in a constrained area, there really isn’t an easy way out,” he said. “You’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t.”

The fact that the project sits on the municipal boundary doesn’t change Burnaby’s approach, he added. There are numerous mixed-use proposals occurring on city borders, Corrigan said, including large-scale projects on Coquitlam’s side of the Burquitlam area that he said will affect Burnaby residents.

Carl Johannsen, Coquitlam’s manager of community planning, said city staff have been aware of the plans at Lougheed Mall for years, noting the area is a designated town centre in Metro Vancouver’s regional growth strategy.

Planners on both sides of the border are frequently in communication during their neighbourhood planning processes and he noted that Coquitlam’s roads are built to sustain the kinds of traffic that could be generated on the Burnaby side of the boundary.

Despite the fact the Lougheed area encompasses two municipalities, Johannsen said movement between the two communities should be seamless.

“We do keep that in mind,” he said. “When we are planning our side, we are thinking about connections to the neighbourhood regardless if they are going into another jurisdiction.”

OFFICES MOVING

Jobs are a key component of the City of Lougheed.

Shape Properties said the site will include a million square feet of office space, which is about five times the amount that currently exists in all of Coquitlam, according to the city’s most recent semi-annual economic report.

Bringing in the business to fill those commercial spaces will not be easy, Corrigan said, but doing so is necessary in order to create job opportunities for local residents.

“Moving business out of the downtown [Vancouver] core will be very difficult,” he said, later adding that he believes “over the long run, [the offices] will be occupied.”

Kwiatkowski is more optimistic.

As Vancouver’s downtown core becomes increasingly expensive, he said commercial office space in the outlining suburbs will become more highly sought after. Lougheed is particularly attractive to companies, he added, because of its connections to rapid transit.

Kwiatkowski said he believes changing attitudes about living closer to where they work will also help bring employers to the Lougheed area.

“Traffic heading to downtown Vancouver hasn’t increased despite the growth [in the region],” he said. “They credit that to transit components but also the mixed-use concept.”

The new development will also feature a variety of housing options, including purpose-built rental residential buildings.

LONG-TERM PLAN

While the thought of 23 new towers and millions of square feet of commercial and retail space may seem daunting to current residents of the area, Burnaby’s Corrigan noted that the project will be phased in over time.

The first tower of the first four-tower phase is only just beginning to work its way through the municipal planning process and the neighbourhood plan was developed for a 20- to 30-year timeframe, he said.

“People get intimidated by seeing long-range plans and don’t understand that it is not going to happen all tomorrow,” he said. “I think in some ways, the community can overreact to these things because it seems like it is overwhelming.”

The plans are ambitious, Corrigan said, and the process is necessary to create expectations for residents of how their community will develop in the future.

In Coquitlam, Johannsen said the phased nature of the project means the cities will be able to react to issues as they come up over the two-decade course of development.

“It is something that will grow over time,” he said. “It is not going to drop out of the sky all at once.”

This article was written by Gary McKenna for the Tri-City News, and originally appeared on their website.

Regional Impact Report on Rapid Transit Development in British Columbia

A Regional Impact Report For Burnaby Heights On The New Evergreen Skytrain Development

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This report on the regional impacts of the new rapid transit Evergreen Line currently under construction in the Tri-Cities of British Columbia was commissioned by the Business Improvement Association of Burnaby Heights, BC.

“When the Evergreen Line opens in the fall of 2016, it will have a dramatic impact on commuting patterns in the Lower Mainland’s northeast sector. The Tri-City area in particularly is bracing for massive change, as the six-stop SkyTrain link connects two previously unserviced municipalities with rapid transit. It is difficult to project exactly what the impact will be on the region as a whole, however one thing is clear: there will be fewer people relying on automobiles as their primary mode of transportation as a result of the Evergreen Line.”

Read the full impact assessment here: Regional Impacts of Rapid Transit in the Tri-Cities

Efficacy of Civic Elections Funding Sources in the Fraser Valley

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An in-depth analysis of campaign donation sources and their effect on election results in Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley, British Columbia.

For the purposes of these reports, over 700 different finance disclosure forms were collected from multiple cities across the lower mainland for statistical analysis. The data for each candidate was divided into donor categories and analyzed in respect to that candidate’s election results to determine if there is a direct correlation between a candidate’s donor pool and their successful election to council.

Read these reports in full:

Civic Election Funding in the Fraser Valley

Civic Election Funding in the Fraser Valley- Looking Deeper

News and Feature Writing

Gary has over ten years of Reporting and Communications Experience: Below is a small sample of some of his selected news and community feature reporting

March 2015: CivCampaign Finance in Tri-Cities coveric Government / City Hall News Reporting

One of Gary’s most popular stories in his ten years of news and media writing was this recent piece on municipal campaign funding.

“Developers dug deep for city elections”

“Financial disclosure forms from the 2014 civic elections were made public last month, outlining exactly how much each of the candidates raised and spent during the fall campaign. But a closer look at the documents reveals just how concentrated the funding sources are in municipal politics, with the bulk of the contributions coming from two groups: real estate developers and unions…”

Read the full story here

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2014 Award Winning Photo Essay: Community Features

Gary was the first place recipient of the 2015 Canadian Newspapers Association Awooden bats photo essayward for Best Photo Essay for this community feature piece on local artisan Bruce Campbell who hand crafts wooden bats that are used by some of today’s best professional baseball players.

“Crafting Wood Bats, One at a Time”

In an era of mass production, Bruce Campbell’s workshop is a throwback to another time: a man, his tools, a single purpose.

Ankle-deep in sawdust and wood shavings, the Coquitlam craftsman spends much of his spare time in his garage turning bulky pieces of lumber into finely tuned items…

View the full story and photos here

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December 2010: Community Issues / Human Interest Reporting

This story is only one of several Gary has reported on over the years. Gary was lucky to have gotten to know Irving Wickens and was deeply saddened by his death.  Gary is honoured to have been able to tell Irving’s story through the years. 

“Generous Homeless Man Mourned” 

“Irvin Wicwickens2kens may have been quick to help other people, but he was unable to help himself.

That is how friends at a funeral service remembered the 43-year-old homeless man, who was found dead next to a busy Port Coquitlam intersection last week. More than 150 people turned out on Thursday afternoon to share stories and memories of their fallen friend, who lived on the streets of the Tri-Cities off-and-on for more than 25 years.

“Irvin was a beautiful man and I will never forget him,” said Mark Mcintosh, an acquaintance of Wickens who struggled to hold back tears as he shared stories at the service…”

Read the full story here

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