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August 2011
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1567 Ouellette – Follow Up

The Ernest Wilby House is long gone. It was actually knocked down a few weeks back, but little work has taken place on the site recently.

So another empty lot is planned for Ouellette, sad but true.

From this, to vacant land.

*Sigh*

Andrew

View Comments

  • That's our style. But the Medical Arts Building retro fit is coming along swimmingly. Or is it? (cringing...)

  • Ken is correct, that is the stupidity of city hall...Our style! So just another vacant lot on supposedly the #1 street in Windsor. The gap-toothed whore that is now Ouellette Ave has lost yet another tooth!

    When will our clueless administration and spineless council ever understand...DENSITY PEOPLE, DENSITY!

    They demo'ed the building without saving anything from it. Not even the windows. How sad.

  • The bigger picture is never really on the mind of politicians that can think no further than the next election. Planting a tree is an act of faith. What are the odds of planting a tree today and ever being able to fully enjoy it's shade. Forward thinking people plant trees every day. My father who is 88 planted 4 black walnut seedlings this spring. Now that is an optimist :). Why would a politician stick their neck out and risk not getting re-elected by supporting some act of faith in good sense city planning. Just take a look at the new train station. It looks like a bigger brother of the bus station. Did they save a whack of cash by recycling the drawings? A huge opportunity was missed on this one. Imagine using the drawings from a turn of the century (20th not 21st) train station and upgrading it with geothermal heat and cooling, handicap accessible amenities and all the other things that make it user friendly. As long as we think small we will be small. What possibly could the cost difference be, a few hundred thousand dollars? More money than that has been wasted by governments in this country in the time it has taken me to write this ramble.

  • Right on, Pinstripes. The politicians, especially local proud residents in Smiths Falls, Ontario, twisted VIA's arm, ever so slightly, and got what was/is pleasing to the eye and a quite practical facility -- as opposed to what VIA was proposing. Mayor Eddie, are you and your gang listening and thinking about the next tear-down in beautiful Windsor? Density is something to be desired if that's why you're allowing sad demolitions I've seen illustrated on this site.

  • If the city bought every building with historical value nobody could afford the tax rate in Windsor,thus people would move out, no city no old buildings.
    Simple dollars and cents rules.

  • Richard, who is saying the city needs to buy these buildings? What is needed is a change in policy. How about before a building is demo'ed, the owner has to have another use for the land and then it is decided if the structure should be torn down.
    If there is no plan other than tearing it down to save tax dollars for the land owner (and thus less revenue for the city) then the landowner's taxes should stay the same or even be raised.

    It isn't our fault (the residents of this city) that the landowner bought high and couldn't sell at a higher rate. Their bad business decision, not ours. At least we wouldn't have vacant land all over the city as we have seen in the last decade.

    Pinstripes, what is even worse is that when the city does chop a tree down they don't replace it. The landowner has to ask the city to plant a new tree. This usually takes another 2 years! I always thought the city should automatically replace the tree they cut down unless the landowner says no. It would help beautify the city espeically where there are a lot of absentee landlords are located.

    I will state once again our policies are ass-backwards in this city....we are not progressive enough and it certainly shows.

  • take Toronto, every piece of vacant land gets turned into condos eventually. A corner gas station vacant for a few years becomes a hole in the ground as they put the pilings in for another high rise apt building or condo. When all these high buildings are shoulder to shoulder like at King & Bay streets in Toronto, and the wind starts to blow it feels like a hurricane on the street level cause the wind has no where to go. Ouellette Ave, shoulder to shoulder high rises from Tecumseh to the river, giving the wind somewhere to go!

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