Brandon's downtown showing signs of turnaround, advocates say - Action News
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Manitoba

Brandon's downtown showing signs of turnaround, advocates say

Over the last 12 months businesses in Brandon's core have increased by more than seven per cent with around 25 new businesses opening, says Emmanuel Ahaneku, executive director of the Brandon Downtown Development Corporation. Now, more than 400 full-time businesses are operating in the district.

Downtown Development Corporation says businesses in core grew by 7% this year

A man stands smiling.
Emmanuel Ahaneku, the executive director of the Brandon Downtown Development Corporation, says there's been a more than seven per cent jump in the number of businesses in Brandon's core, with around 25 new businesses opening. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

Brandon is seeing a business resurgencein what was once a languishing downtown core, say advocates including the head of a development organization insouthwestern Manitoba's biggest city.

Over the last 12 months,there's been a more than seven per cent jump in the number of businesses in Brandon's core, with around 25 new businesses opening, said Emmanuel Ahaneku, the executive director of the Brandon Downtown Development Corporation. Now, more than 400 full-time businesses are operating in the district.

"This is the most prosperous we've been post-COVID," Ahaneku said. "These are brand new businesses moving from other parts of the city to downtown, some of them [from] outside the city of Brandon to downtown."

Corey Trumbley, owner of I Want That Stuff, recently moved his gaming and collectibles store to the downtown after 13 years of operations in Brandon. The shopneeded bigger space for itsgrowing businesses, and downtown seemed like the right fit, he said something that would have been unimaginable a decade ago.

"It's been big improvements over the last few years," he said. "Five to 10 years ago downtown might not have had quite the glow up it's experienced."

A man stacks little boxes in a store.
I Want That Stuff owner Corey Trumbley says part of the reason he chose to move his business downtown is because there's more support from organizations like the Brandon Downtown BIZ and the Brandon Downtown Development Corporation. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

One of the area'sbiggest challenges remains countering stigma, saidEmmy Sanderson, the executive director of Brandon's newly established Downtown Business Improvement Zone, but showcasing downtown as the heart of the city has started to change that.

"I understand people maybe they don't feel safe," she said. "There's not the traffic on the sidewalks and all that. The solution to that is more people."

That means the core needs more businesses and more housing, she said.

Amanda Dupuis, the City of Brandon's community housing and wellness programmer, also saidperception remains an issuea stigma the core has faced since she moved to Brandon 25 years ago.

But "that public perception piece is often not based in reality. It's based on what other people have told you," Dupuis said.

The key to change is to "get people to come down and actually experience on their own what it's like to be down here, and get to know people," she said.

Dupuis also said she'sseeing more pride in the core, pointing to thecity's graffiti removal program, which had 71 applications when it startedin 2022 and grewto more than 90 in 2023.

That's proofpeople want to change the face of downtown, she said.

And Sanderson said businesses like I Want That Stuff are getting new people visiting the core, and the BIZ is already seeing improvements.It'sgrown from a handful of members at the start of 2024 to around 120 as of November.

Trumbley hopes getting people to visit and have fun in the district will help change perceptions.

"A big push going forward is going to be, you know, kind of rehabilitating the image of downtown Brandon," hesaid. "[There are]new and exciting things down here."

City support

Trumbley also said partof the appeal of moving downtown is abusiness community that is keen to collaborate, notingI Want That Stuff has worked closely with theDowntown BIZ, and also worked with the Brandon Downtown Development Corporation to landgrants that helped pay for updates to flooring, walls and signage.

Opportunities like that create incentive to choose downtown, withthe support givingbusinesses an extra edge, he said.

In 2024,the development corporation supported 85 downtown projects, worth about $2 million in total, with about $500,000 in funding,Ahaneku said. The corporation can provide help with improvements to commercial spaces, facades and storefronts, givingqualifyingbusinesses access to up to $140,000 in support.

"The key thing is to make sure they succeed, they survive, they thrive, they're able, they're profitable," Ahaneku said. Those businesses, in turn, becomeadvocates for the downtown.

A woman stands by a tree looking up.
Brandon Downtown BIZ executive director Emmy Sanderson says growing the downtown core helps grow the city's tax base. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

That growth also encourages economic investment in the core district's commercial and residential properties a key tax base for the city, Ahaneku said.

The tax boost helps payfor services citywide, said Dupuis.

The city would also like to see more market housing in the core, she said.

Sanderson also said ahealthy downtown, with both residential and commercial residents, "has such a strong tax base that it feeds the whole city."

That sort of density growth helps the city's coffers by increasing commercial and residential property values, while also generatingmore jobs that build up the economy, said Sanderson.

A healthy downtown, she said, becomes an "absolute economic powerhouse for the entire city."

Brandon's downtown core sees resurgence since pandemic

8 days ago
Duration 1:32
Advocates for Brandon's downtown say the district is seeing a resurgence. The Brandon Downtown Development Corporation says the core is the strongest it's been since COVID-19.