River Landing

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River Landing is an ongoing redevelopment scheme in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan that will create a commercial/cultural development along the bank of the South Saskatchewan River in downtown Saskatoon.

Riverbank construction south and west of Senator Sid Buckwold Bridge, Can see Traffic bridge, Broadway bridge and Senator Sid Buckwold Bridge (freeway, or Idylwyld Bridge in the distance.)
Riverbank construction south and west of Senator Sid Buckwold Bridge, Can see Traffic bridge, Broadway bridge and Senator Sid Buckwold Bridge (freeway, or Idylwyld Bridge in the distance.)

River Landing is divided into two phases. The first phase concentrates on the eastern region of river landing and includes redeveloping the waterfront, a hotel complex and a destination complex. The second phase concentrates on the western region including the cleanup of the old A. L Cole site (a decommissioned electrical power plant that had been torn down in the 1990s), park land and the conversion of a pre-existing electrical service building into a year round home for the farmer’s market, business centre and residential development.

Contents

[edit] Phase one

Phase one consists of:

  • a hotel, commercial and residential buildings developed by Lake Placid Investments Inc.,
  • riverfront promenade walkway,
  • new boat dock,
  • children's water park area,
  • amphitheatres,
  • destination complex (including the new Persephone Theatre),
  • century plaza consisting of a “Prairie Wind” art work by Lee-Koopman Projects/Friggstad Downing Henry Architects and
  • other public art.

[edit] Phase two

Phase two consists of:

  • a riverfront promenade walkway,
  • public market,
  • business centre,
  • village square,
  • sounds/visual shielding around the electrical substation, and
  • residential housing.

[edit] History

Plans for redevelopment of the riverbank have come and gone since the 1970s. One of the first steps towards redeveloping the area was the demolishing of the old Saskatoon Arena in the early 1980s; at one point there were plans to build a new hockey rink and convention centre on the site, but ultimately it was decided to build Saskatchewan Place (now Credit Union Centre) on the city's outskirts. In 1989, the Arena site became an outdoor entertainment venue in conjunction with that year's Canada Summer Games, and proved popular enough that there was talk of the site becoming a permanent outdoor venue. Around this time, the city unveiled plans for a market and hotel on the site as part of its South Downtown Redevelopment scheme which also involved redeveloping several adjacent blocks to the north.

In the early 1990s, despite much criticism, the city council of the day abandoned the market/hotel plan and instead allowed the construction of a senior citizen's residence tower on the former arena site. There was also increased concern regarding rising crime in the neighboring Riversdale community. Despite this, plans for redeveloping the remaining riverbank lands as a cultural, commercial, and entertainment area continued. In the 1990s the A.L. Cole power plant was demolished after sitting unused for nearly a decade, followed in the mid-2000s by the demolition of the Gathercole (once Riverview Collegiate) building, which had formerly housed the Saskatoon Board of Education offices, and was last used as a hospital set in the filming of a short-lived television show.

The last major hurdle towards redevelopment of the site was cleared in 2005 when an agreement was reached with the Royal Canadian Legion over the sale of their building, however later that year the project encountered a stumbling block when the city announced the sudden closure of the century-old Traffic Bridge due to safety concerns; the bridge was expected to be a major access route into River Landing. After considering the possibility of replacing the bridge -- an option criticized by the developers of River Landing -- the city instead chose to repair the bridge and it reopened to vehicular traffic in September 2006. As part of the River Landing project, a roundabout was constructed at the foot of the bridge at the intersection of 3rd Avenue S. and Spadina Crescent, replacing the traffic lights used previously; this was the first roundabout constructed in Saskatoon since the unpopular "Traffic Circle" at 8th Street and Circle Drive was dismantled more than a decade earlier, although the new roundabout is a fraction of the size of the Traffic Circle.

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