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» BRANTFORD TO RAZE ITS ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE   [BUILT HERITAGE]  

In November 2009, the City of Brantford expropriated 41 buildings in downtown Brantford on the south side of Colborne Street and threw out all the tenants. Despite a growing public outcry and no apparent plans for the site, the City is moving to demolish all the buildings by the end of February. Many of them were built prior to 1870.
      Posted February 14, 2010 - 4:54 PM
  1 Reply Reply

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The Heritage Canada Foundation has loudly condemned this action. It has written letters to both the federal government and the Brantford city council to protest. It points out that the $1.38 million contribution from the Southern Ontario Development Program (SODP-a federal program) will result in the demolition of 41 heritage buildings on the town’s main streets--Colborne and Water Streets. It seems the urgency to demolish, with no plans for subsequent projects, is spurred by the fact the federal money must be used by March 31.

All of the buildings in question are on the City’s Heritage Inventory and are being demolished on very short timelines.

Andrew Crawford, a Brantford resident has written, “... these buildings make up the longest stretch of pre-Confederate buildings in the province.

“... many of these buildings could be renovated at a cost lower than the cost of demolition and construction of something new.

“... these buildings have huge potential. [university and colleges] Laurier, Nippising AND Mohawk have all recently moved within walking distance of these buildings. A new city square is being built directly across from them. Our city council is making a hasty, uninformed and mind boggling decision to wipe them out WITH NO PLANS of actually putting something in their place.

“PLEASE HELP! THIS IS HORRIBLE!”

The Architectural Conservancy of Ontario’s President Lloyd Alter has written a letter to the Tourism Minister Michael Chan outlining what the terrible loss this obliteration will be for Ontario’s heritage. Click here for the letter.

Here is Heritage Canada’s press release

The Heritage Canada Foundation /
La fondation Héritage Canada
 
CALL TO ACTION
City of Brantford “Urban Renewal” to Demolish 41 Heritage Buildings with Federal Funding Support
 
The City of Brantford, Ontario is determined to demolish 41 heritage buildings on Colborne Street—most dating from 1850-1870—in a move reminiscent of a 1960s-style “urban renewal” mass clearance project. With anticipated federal funding of $1.38 million, hoardings have been erected and demolition is set to begin in two weeks. The City has no firm plans to redevelop the site once the three downtown blocks of historic commercial buildings are bulldozed.
 
The Heritage Canada Foundation (HCF) has called upon Brantford Mayor and Council to suspend their demolition plans in order to conduct structural and heritage assessments, and to consult expertise in heritage-centred revitalization strategies.
 
Heritage advocates are urged to tell the Minister responsible for the Southern Ontario Development Program (SODP)—a federal agency charged with revitalizing communities by building on their assets and strengths—that federal funds must not be used to support a project that will send 41 viable heritage buildings to landfill. Click here to tell Minister Gary Goodyear to reallocate the funding for the rehabilitation of some or all of these historic structures.
 
Colborne Street represents a rare example of a mid-19th-century Ontario commercial district. Most of the threatened buildings are of heavy-timber and masonry construction, a building system with proven durability even in cases of prolonged neglect. There are many Canadian examples where historic properties were used as catalysts for downtown renewal: CentreBeam Place in Saint John; Red River College’s Princess Street Campus in Winnipeg; and the Meduse complex in Quebec City.

Read more news or join Facebook site at: www.heritagecanada.org



APPEL À L’ACTION
« Renouvellement urbain » à Brantford : 41 immeubles patrimoniaux sur le point d’être démolis grâce à une aide financière du fédéral
 
Ottawa, le 12 février 2010 – La ville de Brantford (Ontario) est décidée à démolir 41 immeubles patrimoniaux – datant pour la plupart de 1850 à 1870 – sur la rue Colborne. L’opération rappelle les projets de nivellement massif associés au « renouvellement urbain » des années 1960. Un appui financier de 1,38 million de dollars est attendu du gouvernement fédéral. Les préparatifs ont été effectués et la démolition devrait commencer dans deux semaines. La ville n’a aucun plan bien établi pour le réaménagement du site une fois que les trois pâtés d’immeubles commerciaux historiques du centre-ville auront été rasés.
 
La fondation Héritage Canada (FHC) a incité le maire et le conseil municipal de Brantford à suspendre le projet de démolition afin de procéder à des évaluations de la structure et de la valeur patrimoniale, et pour consulter des spécialistes des stratégies de revitalisation axée sur le patrimoine.
 
Les défenseurs du patrimoine sont invités à faire savoir au ministre responsable du Programme de développement du Sud de l’Ontario (PDSO) – un programme fédéral visant à revitaliser les collectivités en misant sur leurs atouts et leurs points forts – que les fonds fédéraux ne doivent pas servir à appuyer un projet consistant à remblayer 41 immeubles patrimoniaux viables. Cliquez ici pour adresser au ministre Gary Goodyear un courriel le priant de réaffecter les fonds en cause à la réhabilitation d’une partie ou de l’ensemble de ces structures.
 
La rue Colborne est un rare exemple des quartiers commerçants de l’Ontario du milieu du 19e siècle. La plupart des bâtiments menacés sont faits de bois d’œuvre et de maçonnerie, un type de construction d’une durabilité éprouvée même après une longue période de négligence. Il y a au Canada de nombreux exemples où des immeubles patrimoniaux ont été des catalyseurs d’un renouveau du centre-ville, tels que l’ensemble Place CenterBeam à Saint John, le campus de la rue Princess du Collège Red River de Winnipeg ou le complexe Méduse à Québec.

Trouvez d’autres nouvelles ou joignez-vous au groupe Facebook à : www.heritagecanada.org

      End of Posting
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      Reply February 17, 2010 - 10:00 pm
  1st Reply  

Shame on you City of Brantford. It is your duty under the Ontario Heritage Act to protect buildings of heritage and cultural significance. Not only is the mayor and the supporting councillors completely out of sync with the current 'green initiative', these people are disrespecting their constituents and thousands of Canadians by proposing to tear down our pre-Confederation heritage. I challenge Mayor Hancock to do the right thing and step down from your position as Mayor of Brantford. You are misguided and misinformed and by continuing to proceed with the destruction of the heritage of downtown, you have failed in your elected responsibility to represent the people of Brantford.

Derrick Pirie
 

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Thursday July 29, 2010
 
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