City pulls plug on Bowfort interchange public art - Action News
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City pulls plug on Bowfort interchange public art

Plans for public art at the Bowfort interchange were paid for, but more than a year after the piece was partially unveiled, CBC Calgary has learned it will never be completed.

Landscaping art meant to accompany Bowfort Towers cancelled

An artist rendering, left, showing drumlins (in green), which were planned for the north side of the highway as part of the Bowfort Towers public art project. (Left photo: courtesy Patricia Leighton, right photo: CBC)

Plans for public art at theBowfortinterchange in Calgary were paid for, but more than a year after the piece was partially unveiled,CBCNews has learned it will never be completed.

This week, the city pulled the plug on the landscape piece, known as drumlins, originally planned for the opposite side of the highway.

The original pitch was made by artists DelGeistand Patricia Leighton along with landscape architectTaewookChaofSupermassStudio.

Plans for the complete package were approved in 2015.

BowfortTowers, one of the artistic elements, was unveiled at the intersection of Bowfort Road N.W. and the Trans-Canada Highway in the summer of 2017.

The drumlins were planned for the north side of the highway. According to details from the city's website, which have since been removed, these "earthworks" elements would create a fusion of past and present by echoing the spirit of the land.

From the highway, drivers would have seen rounded moundswithmarkings like those left behind by the movementof glacial ice sheets. Both elements once completed were meant as a comprehensive gateway to the city, leading the viewer eastwardinto Calgary, and westward to the Rocky Mountains.

Budget concerns and economic considerations

Initially, Jennifer Thompson, the lead for public art with the City of Calgary, said the budget for the project fell within $500,000. But that changed during the process of buildingBowfortTowers.

According to Thompson, there was only about $80,000 left in the budget to finish landscaping that they say would cost $200,000.

On Friday, Mayor Naheed Nenshi said the complications with the artwork included unforseen costs with utility lines, future sanitary lines and a nearby berm.

He said it was decided money could be better served by using for something else that would be "more accessible to the public."

In the end, for the towersand any design workGeist, Leighton andChacompleted for the drumlins, the city spent $411,000.

Decision not made lightly

"We certainly don't take theBowfortTowers decision lightly," Thompson said. "This decision wasn't made in a room isolated or, you know, under the cover of night or anything like that."

She went on to say the city's senior administrative leaderswere involved.

Thompsoncouldn't say whether or not the city has ever pulled the plug on a public art project in the past. She said that in the program's 15-year history there could have been times when projects were tweaked or changed, based on a number of factors, to align to budgets.

An artist rendering of the Bowfort Towers project. (Courtesy Patricia Leighton and Taewook Cha)

While the artists, citycouncillorsand public art board were notified this week, Thompson said the final decision to pull the remaining plans for the interchange happened about a week ago. The city had to bring in its legal team tosussout if, according to contracts, the city was within its rights to end the project without completing the plans.

Leighton, the artist behind the piece, said she was surprised and saddened when the city called her to say the piecewouldn't be finished after three years of work.

She said earth meant to form the drumlins had already been moved to the site.

'This can be discussed'

In an interview withCBC, Leighton said the cityhadn't given her any indication there were concerns.

"I just assumed it was sitting in with the public art program and once it started up again...."

Leighton said she hopes the city will reconsiderand allow her to build part of the artwork with the remaining budget.

"I do feel it can actually enhance the entrance and exit from Calgary," she said. "I would like to think that this can be discussed."

Artist wants to complete work

The work was designed to stand out as vehicles went by at high speeds. But, Leighton said, there is still a design that could work on a nearby site, and have the same desired effect with fewer mounds and less money.

"The design was meant as a holistic approach," she said, "almost like ayinand yang, the artworks to one another and the landscape."

On Friday, Nenshi said he hadn't heard the artist's perspective before, and hinted there could be hope for the work, just not at BowfortInterchange.

"There might be an opportunity to use a similar model, because it was nice art, in a place that's more accessible," saidNenshi. "On a scale that makes more sense for people."

Thompson said the remaining money will be put back into a pool of cash that's part of the city's public art review.

News comes as a surprise to councillor

This news came as a surprise toCoun. ShaneKeating, who said his officehadn't been notified about the decision.

The Ward 12 councillor put forward a notice of motion in September 2017asking that the city review its public art process again.

The motion asked that administrators find better ways to consult and engage with the public on the public art program, how to prioritize public art dollars during a downturn, and how to make the program more local.

Project had already kicked off

In June, council asked, as part of that review, that the city look at pooling public art cash so that works don't need to be geographically tethered to their respective infrastructure projects.

While the review happens, council decided to freeze funding for any new projects. At the time, they said, ongoing projects would still move forward. TheBowfortinterchange project had already kicked off before the freeze took effect.

"I would have thought that he would have the budget for both components ironed out and set and ready to go before you would actually award the contract,"Keatingsaid.

The city is still figuring how that money pool would work, reporting back to council in March.

One of two pieces of public art is now on display as part of the new Trans-Canada Highway and Bowfort Road N.W. interchange. (CBC)

The towering tale ofBowfort

The first phaseof the project spurred a lot of public and political backlash.

At the city's original messaging and unveiling in 2017, when the art was shown to the media without the artist there to take questions, SarahIley, manager of culture for the city, said the four towers related to the Blackfoot cultural symbolism for the four elements, four stages of life and four seasons.

The Indigenous community pointed out that the art four slabs of Rundle rock suspended in the air amid steel beams looked like a traditional Blackfoot air burial. One Indigenous artist called the piece "theft of culture."

Later, in a joint statement released bythe City of Calgary and Treaty 7 chiefs, it was stated the artwork was "never meant to be an Indigenous artwork" and that itwasn't inspired by Indigenous themes.

Then, there were those who simplydidn't like the workand claimedit cost too much and was an eyesore. The city, at that time, pushed back, reminding citizens that the art projectwasn't complete.