City council rejects Glenmore Landing development proposal

City council has rejected a developer’s plans for a major expansion at the Glenmore Landing shopping centre in southwest Calgary.

The decision comes after council heard a variety of opinions about the proposed highrise development from several dozen Calgarians during a public hearing that was split into multiple days this week due to the volume of speakers.

Opponents expressed concerns about density and traffic, as well as fears about what the development could do to the surrounding environment considering its proximity to the Glenmore Reservoir. 

Meanwhile, proponents cited the development’s proximity to transit and other amenities, as well as Calgary’s need for more housing amid a strained market and population boom.

The proposal was defeated 8-6, with councillors Kourtney Penner, Jasmine Mian, Evan Spencer, Courtney Walcott, Gian-Carlo Carra and Mayor Jyoti Gondek all in favour of the proposal.

Kevin Taylor, a member of the Palliser Bayview Pumphill Community Association, said residents of the area want what he called “responsible development.”

“I can tell you that council got it right, they listened to the citizens,” Taylor told reporters at city hall.

“We’re not opposed to development. We want responsible development that’s going to protect, we say our drinking water, but our park, our reservoir park.”

The land is just south and east of the Glenmore Landing shopping plaza running parallel to 14th Street and 90 Avenue southwest.
The proposal was to develop the area immediately south and east of the Glenmore Landing shopping plaza, running parallel to 14th Street and 90th Avenue S.W. The Glenmore Reservoir is pictured in the top left of this image. (Google Maps)

The development plan — proposed by RioCan, which also owns the nearby shopping plaza — was to build six mixed-use highrises along the sides of 14th Street and 90th Avenue S.W., just south of Heritage Park, adding over 1,100 residential units in the coming decades. 

It comes after council approved plans to sell some city-owned green spaces to RioCan earlier this year. The 5.48 acres (2.22 hectares) of land is along the east and south of the shopping plaza, parallel to 14th Street and 90th Avenue S.W. However, the sale has not been completed. 

A park beside a parking lot with a grocery store in it.
The proposed site of the highrises is this green space near the Glenmore Landing retail plaza at 14th Street and 90th Avenue S.W. (Mike Symington/CBC)

The proposal was part of RioCan’s desire to use that land and expand its redevelopment over the next 10 to 15 years.

Taylor says he expects RioCan to refine its plans and come back with another, smaller proposal.

Council divided on plan

Ward 1 Coun. Sonya Sharp, who originally supported the land sale in January, said during the debate portion of Thursday morning’s council meeting that she would not vote in favour of the proposal. 

“RioCan, I’m a big fan of yours, you did a fantastic job in Brentwood, and I know there’s more to come,” said Sharp.

“I hope you still continue to build in Calgary, I know you will, but we do need to listen to our communities. And with that, I will not be supporting this.”

Following the debate, Ward 11’s Penner — the city councillor representing the area in question — said she was “deeply disappointed” in her council colleagues.

“All of the answers to all of your debate were there. You’ve had a chance to meet with the applicant, with administration, on this file,” she said. 

“We heard from Coun. McLean and Coun. Chabot through budget about how the private market could do TOD [transit-oriented development] better.… We can’t talk about an underutilized BRT and then not put people where it is.”

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