'Ambitious' proposal aims to transform waterfront district in Surrey and along Fraser River - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 01:37 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

'Ambitious' proposal aims to transform waterfront district in Surrey and along Fraser River

The Surrey Board of Trade wants to transform the area along the Fraser River into a waterfront district that would combine industry, housing and recreation opportunities but the proposal has so far fallen flat with regional officials.

Metro Vancouver committee opted not to fund initial phase, but Board of Trade still seeks partners

A new proposal from the Surrey Board of Trade would transform parts of the Fraser River into a destination for jobs, housing and tourism. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The Surrey Board of Trade wants to transform the area along the Fraser River in the Lower Mainland into a waterfront district that would combine industry, housing and recreation opportunities but the proposal has so far fallen flat with regional officials.

Anita Huberman, the board's CEO, says the project is an opportunity to develop underutilized areas along the Fraser River in order to drive economic growth andhouse some of the 1.5 million people expected to move into the region by 2050.

"Yes, it is ambitious," Huberman said. "This is to enhance livability. It's to create jobs. It's to ensure that we are a region of the future."

The Fraser River has long been home to heavy industry that makesuse of the waterway. In Surrey, the waterfront near the Patullo Bridge is dotted with warehouses, paper mills and port facilities.

The board's vision, presented in a proposal shared with the Metro Vancouver Regional Planning Committee in September, is to supplement the area with aspects like housing, an "innovation hub" and green space.

Support from other municipalities

The proposalhighlightsa similar project along the River Thames in England, whichbrought together 17 municipalities and the port authority.

"It's being done all over the world. Why can't we do it here on the Fraser River?" Huberman said.

The Surrey Board of Trade iscurrently shopping the project around to regional, provincial and federal governments to get partners on board.

The project has support from the City of Surrey,Huberman says, as well as other municipalities along the Fraser that areinterested in developing their waterfronts.

Surrey Mayor Doug McCallum didn't respond to requests for comment by deadline.

The Surrey Board of Trade says parts of the Fraser River could be transformed to attract more tourism and cultural opportunities. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

But Metro Vancouver's Regional Planning Committee rejected the board's $300,000 request in September, opting instead tooffer staff time to support the initial phase of project development.

A committee report presented to the Metro Vancouver board on Fridaysays theFraser River waterfront revitalization project doesn't align with the region's current strategies, like concentrating major developments along transit corridors in urban centres and discouraging themelsewhere.

The report also emphasized the region's policy of protecting its few remaining industrial lands, which account for only four per cent of the region's land use but create 27 per cent of its 1.3 million jobs.

No 'whiff of inspiration'

Meg Holden, professor of urban studies at Simon Fraser University, says she wasn't surprised Metro Vancouver shot the the project down.

"I don't see any whiff of inspiration in this plan," Holden said.

The proposal refers to the creation of affordable housing but doesn't specify how it would achieve that, she says.

Developing the area around the Fraser River would attract new opportunities for jobs and education, according to the Surrey Board of Trade. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Cities like New Westminster, which has successfully developed its waterfront, have clear policies in place to protect rental homes. Too often, Holden says, waterfront developmentsresult in gentrification.

"Planners are wise to a plan that says it's going to create a place for everyone when clearly it's going to push out the people who are currently there," she said. "I think that we're smarter than that in the region now."

'Huge potential'

Holden also points out that a lot of the area along the Fraser River, including in Surrey, is marshy and would be costly to develop into highrises.

But urban planner Afia Raja says waterfront redevelopment projects can create significant economic growth.

A lot of the area around the Fraser River is used by the Metro Vancouver Port Authority. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Raja, a professor at the University of the Fraser Valley, says waterfront development projects are often a tradeoff between environmental, recreational and housingaspects.

The key to any successful project of this scale, Raja says, is to work closely with various stakeholders and levels of government to garner support.

"If all this is in place, I think it has got huge potential," Raja said.