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Manitoba

In the Exchange District, a century-old pumping station hopes for an injection of new life

CentreVenture has a plan to inject new life into the 110-year-old James Avenue Pumping Station, one of the most troublesome structures in the downtown development agency's inventory of heritage buildings.

CentreVenture, developer hopes to preserve vintage machinery and create new office, residential & retail space

Exchange District century-old pumping station hopes for an injection of new life

8 years ago
Duration 1:47
CentreVenture has a plan to inject new life into the 110-year-old James Avenue Pumping Station, one of the most troublesome structures in the downtown development agency's inventory of heritage buildings.

CentreVenture has a planto inject new life intothe 110-year-oldJames Avenue Pumping Station,one of the most troublesome structures in the downtown development agency'sinventory of heritage buildings.

CentreVenture is working with a developer to preserve the 1906 pumping station as part of a mixed-use development that would see a pair of new buildings rise to the east and west andoffices installed within the rafters within the original barn-like structure.

The plan calls for a four-storey additionto rise on one side anda six-storeyadditionto be placed at the other, creating enough new commercial, retail and residential space to make the project financially feasible, said Angela Mathieson, CentreVenture's president and chief executive officer.

As part of a redevelopment proposal for the James Avenue Pumping Station, James Avenue will be narrowed south of the heritage structure. (CBC News Graphics)
The massive,machinery within the station, which was manufactured in the U.K. at the dawn of the 20th Century and used to fight fires in Winnipeg for 80 years, would remain in place as part of the proposal, Mathieson said.

The plan calls for the enormous gears, which look like visions from a steampunk novel, to be visible from the rafter-level offices as well as through new windows along James Avenue, which will be narrowed to become more pedestrian-friendly.

"You'll be able to look down to see the pumps. We won't allow people to walk around, because as you can see, it's a little dangerous to do that," Mathieson said during a tour of the building, the subject of no fewer than 14 previous redevelopment efforts over the past 17years.

"It would be very hard to work around these pumps and that's been the main issue," she said. "Any redevelopment proposal has to maintain these (heritage) elements, and so it's not very usable."

The latest redevelopment proposal for the James Avenue Pumping Station calls for offices to rise in the rafters above the vintage machinery - and a pair of low-rise sturctures to be built outside. (Bartley Kives/CBC)
The James Avenue Pumping Station was built in 1906 to draw water from the Red River and use it to fight fires in central Winnipeg. The water source was switched to the Winnipeg Aqueduct in 1919.

The station remained in use until 1986 but has sat vacant since it was decommissioned. Following the formation ofCentreVenture in 1999,developers have come forward with plans to convert the building into everythingfroma brewpub to afarmer's market to a skyscraper towering 24 storeysabove a "machine garden" that would have preserved the gears.

Mathieson said the new proposal will be more in line with theexisting developments on the east side of the Exchange District and will fit into the scale of what is increasingly becoming a residential neighbourhood.

She concedes the disposal of the station has been a major headache for her agency, which infamously sold the building in 2001 and bought it backthree years later at aloss.

"It is a derelict building. There's no two doubts about it. Getting this developed is really about completing this neighbourhood," Mathieson said.

While Mathieson would not disclose the identity of the developer, her agency'splans are far enough along for city council's property, heritage and downtown-development committee to consider narrowing James Avenue at a meeting scheduled for July 5.

A view inside the 110-year-old James Avenue Pumping Station. (Bartley Kives/CBC)
Fort Rouge Coun. Jenny Gerbasi, who sits on the property committeeand also chairs council's historical buildings committee, said she's pleased to learn a promising proposal is coming forward.

"There was some controversy about the size of the previous proposal," she said, referring to the failed skyscraper plan."We've had many different proposals come forward. My hope is we could preserve the heritage, one way or another."

Mathieson said if all goes well, redevelopment work could begin this year.

"It really is an engineering marvel," she said. "It has a real industrial quality."
The James Avenue Pumping Station contains massive machinery built in the U.K. at the dawn of the 20th Century. The station was used to fight fires in Winnipeg from 1906 to 1986 - and has sat empty ever since. (Bartley Kives/CBC)

Janet Stewart, City Hall reporter Bartley Kives talk James Avenue Pumping Station

8 years ago
Duration 3:16
CentreVenture has a plan to inject new life into the 110-year-old James Avenue Pumping Station, one of the most troublesome structures in the downtown development agency's inventory of heritage buildings.