The Winnipeg Walkway System, popularly known as the Winnipeg Skywalk, is a network of pedestrian skyways and tunnels connecting a significant portion of the city centre in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
In 2002, a profile of Downtown Winnipeg published by the City of Winnipeg described the Walkway as a system of 14 skyways and 7 tunnels connecting 38 buildings and allowing for a maximum protected walk of 2 km. It went on to state that the system provides year-round climate-controlled access to over 170,000 m2 of space, including over 200 shops and businesses, 10 office complexes, 60 restaurants and snack bars, 700 apartment units, 2 hotels, 11 financial centres, and the Winnipeg Millennium Library, bringing together 21,000 employees.[1]
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Starting in 2004, in anticipation of the openings of the MTS Centre and Millennium Library, a new unified system of signage was developed for the entire network to assist wayfinding therein. This process brought with it the branding of the system as the Winnipeg Walkway and the subdivision of the network into four interconnected segments.
This portion of the network is centred underneath the historic intersection of Portage and Main, said to be the windiest in Canada. At street level this intersection is closed to pedestrians; it is not possible to cross it without going underground.
On a much smaller scale, this segment is somewhat reminiscent of Montreal's Underground City. Via a network of tunnels, the Main Underground connects the following:
At the southwestern corner of Winnipeg Square, near the intersection of Graham Avenue and Fort Street, there are escalator, lift and stairway connections to the second floor of 200 Graham Avenue, thereby connecting the Main Underground to the Graham Skywalk.
The 360 Main Street tower sits upon one of several structural pads atop Winnipeg Square. The complex is said to be able to accommodate the construction of an additional high-rise office tower on Graham Avenue as well as a low-rise building for use as a hotel on Main Street, following this same model.[2]
The Graham Skywalk consists of a series of skyways connecting the buildings on the south side of Graham Avenue, between Main Street and Hargrave Street, as well as the MTS Centre (the former site of the historic Eaton's store) and the former Eaton's power station on the north side. This portion of the network provides access to the following:
The MTS Centre can be said to be a major hub in the Winnipeg Walkway network as it connects the Graham Skywalk to the Portage Skywalk.
The southwestern corner of City Place, at the intersection of Saint Mary Avenue and Hargrave Street, is kitty-corner from the Delta Winnipeg Hotel (formerly the Holiday Inn Crowne Plaza), part of the Convention Centre's pedestrian network. In 2008, construction of two new skyway bridges was announced, one across Saint Mary Avenue between CityPlace and 330 Saint Mary Avenue, and another from 330 Saint Mary Avenue,crossing Hargrave Street, wrapping around the front of the Delta Winnipeg hotel, and connecting to the previously existing skywalk connecting the Delta and the Convention Centre.[3] Construction began in summer 2009 and the link was opened to the public August 30, 2010.
This segment of the Winnipeg Walkway boasts many of the shopping and entertainment attractions most often associated with Downtown Winnipeg. An extensive network of skyways and second-floor pedestrian rights-of-way connects the Radisson Hotel, the MTS Centre, the Newport Center (sic) and other adjacent buildings on the south side of Portage Avenue, with the three-block Portage Place shopping and entertainment complex between Carlton Street and Vaughan Street on the north side. Several neighbouring residential, recreational and commercial buildings, including the One Canada Centre tower between Vaughan Street and Colony Street, are directly connected to Portage Place. At the western edge of Portage Place there is a skyway link to the historic Bay department store and the Power Building on the south side of Portage Avenue. Via an open-air connection through the covered parkade of The Bay, the network reaches further south, providing access to the Saint Mary Skywalk. More specifically, the Portage Skywalk links the following:
As was the case with the construction of Winnipeg Square, structural pads were built atop Portage Place to allow for future upward expansion.[2] There is one atop each end, and there is currently a plan for an office and hotel tower to be built on the western pad.[4][5]
This is both the smallest, and the most tenuously linked segment of the Winnipeg Walkway System. Its only connection to the network is via the covered, although not exactly indoor, parkade of The Bay department store. The Saint Mary Skywalk connects three buildings on the south side of Saint Mary Avenue, between Vaughan Street and Edmonton Street, namely:
400 Saint Mary Avenue and the Winnipeg Convention Centre are separated by a mere half a block, and there is currently a plan in the works to replace the parking lot currently occupying this space with a hotel and apartment complex. This complex would then be connected to both 400 Saint Mary Avenue and the Convention Centre by means of skyway. This would provide a second link between the Winnipeg Walkway System and the Convention Centre walkway system, thereby completing the loop between the Convention Centre, cityplace, MTS Centre, Portage Place and The Bay, and allowing (mostly) weather-protected travel between the points in either direction. Representatives of Lakeview Properties, the firm planning the complex, has said it will only move forward with its development once the long-discussed expansion of the Convention Centre becomes reality
In addition to the Winnipeg Walkway, there are two smaller enclosed pedestrian networks in Downtown Winnipeg that are not currently connected to the principal Walkway network.
On the two blocks bordered by Edmonton Street, Saint Mary Avenue, York Avenue and Hargrave Street is a residential and commercial complex consisting of the Winnipeg Convention Centre and the various buildings of Lakeview Square. A network of pedestrian tunnels and skyways connects the following buildings:
The two Holiday Towers are linked to each other by a basement tunnel, and by two different skyways, one closer to ground level and one near the top floor. The North Tower is also connected by tunnel to the Delta Winnipeg, which is itself connected to the adjacent 185 Carlton Street. The Convention Centre is connected by skyways to both 185 Carlton Street and 155 Carlton Street. The latter is connected to the adjacent 349 York Avenue. The Lakeview Square development forms a 'U' around an open central courtyard which faces the Convention Centre across Carlton Street.
As explained above, there are currently plans to connect the St Mary Skywalk to the Convention Centre, and links between CityPlace and the Delta Winnipeg are currently under construction. Once this connection is made, it will incorporate the Convention Centre's network into the Winnipeg Walkway System. If the former were made, it would create a loop in the western portion of the Winnipeg Walkway, thereby facilitating travel in that section of the network in either direction.
From the perspective of graph theory, the addition of one of the proposed links, or edges, would create a single connected network, or graph, of the two separate networks that currently exist. In other words, a path (without having to go outside) would exist between any pair of buildings, or vertices, in either one of the two existing networks, thereby creating a single, larger network. Furthermore, the addition of both proposed links would create a cycle in that network.
Another series of interconnected buildings straddle Main Street, approximately 1 km north of Portage and Main. On the west side of Main Street is the Winnipeg Civic Centre and on the east side is the Manitoba Centennial Centre. This pedestrian network's underground tunnels link the following public buildings:
Unlike the Convention Centre pedestrian network, it is not at all feasible to imagine a pedestrian link between the Civic Centre and the principal Winnipeg Walkway System in the foreseeable future. Not only is the distance great between the Main Underground and the Civic Centre, but any connection between the two would require sensitive tunneling underneath turn of the century heritage buildings over several blocks.