Former golf course at U of Manitoba set to become massive infill site - Action News
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Manitoba

Former golf course at U of Manitoba set to become massive infill site

The Southwood golf course is poised to become one of the largest infill development projects in Winnipeg, with 25 story apartment blocks, commercial space and a kilometre-long boardwalk along the Red River.

Thousands of residential units, riverfront park, restaurants and shops in Southwood development plan

Development at the former Southwood golf course will stretch over a 40-year period, under a plan now at the land-use approval stage with the City of Winnipeg. The project could add 10,000 or more housing units to the area over that period. (Justin Fraser/CBC)

It's hard to imagine a more prime piece of Winnipeg real estate dozens of acres of land dotted with big trees, bordered on one side by a long, gentle bend in the Red River and tucked next to a campus populated by enough daytime inhabitants to be considered a city.

It hassat fallow for nearly a decade, but now, aone-time golf course adjacentto the University of Manitobais poised to become one of the largest infill developments of its kind in Winnipeg.

The university purchasedthe Southwood Golf and Country Club inJanuary2008, and officiallytook possession of the 120-acre property in2011.

Greg Rogers doesn't have to oversellhis enthusiasm for the raw material at his disposal the veteran developer believeshe has a winner piece of property and intends to make it shine.

"This is a developer's dream, to be honest," he told CBC News on aquick tour of the property. There's "underserved" demand from people who are "hungry for better places to live that are walkable to work and to school," he says.

As the CEO ofUM Propertiesa separate entity from the university with its own board of directors Rogers is in the midst of a project that will add 10,000 or more housing units to the area over its four-decade life span.

UM Properties was formed to act on the development, followinga series of consultations with the community and design ideas solicited from planning and architectural firms.

It will develop the land on behalf of the university, allowing private companies to build the housing and commercial outlets on the property.

The plan, now atthe land-use approval stage with the City of Winnipeg, would see a rolling series of developments over the next 40 years, starting at the edge of the U of M's property along Sifton Road.

UM Properties CEO Greg Rogers says the Southwood lands project is likely the largest infill development of its kind in the city of Winnipeg. (Justin Fraser/CBC )

Rogers says the initial phase will include multi-family apartment and condominium towers, up to 25-storeys high, with commercial space on the main floors, along withrestaurants, small-scale grocery stores, bankingand other services.

As the development expands across the property toward the existing residential neighbourhood, the buildings will get shorter probably no taller than a couple of storeysin heightbut that phase likely won't arrive for many years.

There are plans for a kilometre-long parkwayalong the Red River,connected to other trails through the property, and linkingeverything to the U of M campus.

The connection to the river is anotherelement a developer dreams of,and adds toRogers's enthusiasm.

"Waterfront, baby! Yeah, it's great. Waterfront is a key element of any really successful community," he says, smiling.

"It's typically something that's put in people's backyard and becomes exclusive to the property owner. The intention here is that it's there for the community to share."

Parks, trails and a riverfront walkway are planned to connect the new development pieces. (Submitted by UM Properties)

Rogers ticks off highlights from the plan, and how they'll feedinto improving the university campus.

"You're going to see ponds storing storm water that are naturalized to create more park space. You're going to see active transportation routes for bicycles, for skateboarders, for people skating in the wintertime."

The project, Rogers says, will pay close attention to the Indigenous community that is part of the U of M the plan includes a new home of the U of M-basedNational Centre for Truth and Reconciliation.

It will alsolook to sustainability and its impact onsurrounding residential communities, he said.

Long overdue, says councillor

"It's time we see something happening on the land," says city Coun. Janice Lukes, looking at the massive investment made in the rapid transit line between the U of M and the downtown.

"There's a $500-million transit stop right on your door,"said the Waverley West councillor. "[The property] has been empty for a decade, and the demand is still there for housing."

Lukeshas foughtan ongoing battle against illegal rooming houses in the neighbourhood around the campus.

The Southwood golf course lands will feature multi-family apartment and condo towers, commercial locations and a new home for the U of M-based National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation. (Submitted by UM Properties)

Rogers calculates the total economic valueof the project over four decades to reach approximately $3 billion, and generate perhaps $200 million for the U of M.

"All the universities in Canada and globally are looking to leverage the demand they're creating for real estate and monetize their land holdings that aren't needed for academic purposes," Rogers said. He points to Simon Fraser, UBC, and the University of Calgary as post-secondary institutions deep into similardevelopments.

The first phase of the project could see shovels in the ground by 2022, but Rogers is hopeful things will move more rapidly.

"If we get this set up right,do it well, it will probably go faster. I'm hoping it will go faster than we've presently forecast."

Former golf course set to become massive infill site

4 years ago
Duration 2:27
Development at the former Southwood golf course will stretch over a 40-year period, under a plan now at the land-use approval stage with the City of Winnipeg. The project could add 10,000 or more housing units to the area over that period.