Major 12-storey development proposed for uptown Saint John - Action News
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New Brunswick

Major 12-storey development proposed for uptown Saint John

Plans are in the works for a major 12-storey retail, office and residential development at the top of King Street in Saint John as a replacement for the abandoned Woolworth's store.

Grocery store, offices and up to 90 residential units are part of the plan for old Woolworth's site

The building at 91 King St. has been vacant for the last 10 years, and fallen into disrepair. Plans to develop the property in 2018 fell through, but local builder Percy Wilbur bought the building in November and says he will begin work this winter. (Robert Jones/CBC)

Plans are not finalized, but a major 12-storey retail, office and residential development at the top of King Street in Saint John is being put together by developer Percy Wilburas a replacement for the abandoned former Woolworth's store he bought in November.

That's substantially larger than his original plans for the property.

"It's been pretty exciting," said Wilbur.

"There'sa lot of people in the city anxious to see something happen to that eyesore of a corner that's been sitting there for so long."

Percy Wilbur, left, is shown in 2018 with local Saint John MP Wayne Long at the site of his renovation of the 150-year-old abandoned building at 1 Charlotte St. Wilbur has taken on a number of troubled properties in Saint John as a developer. (Facebook)

Current plans call for two floors of underground parking and amain floor retail space that Wilbur is hoping will be a grocery store.Above that will be two levels of office space sitting underneath up to 90 residentialunits on nine upper floors, many with unobstructed panoramic views of the city.

Wilbur believes there is demand for that much more living space in the uptown area, but can scale the number of apartments back to 70 on seven floors if required.

He is currently deep into construction of an 85-unit residential building on Wentworth Street and said it's already 25 per cent taken nine monthsbefore it will be finished.

Postcards from 1960 show the Woolworth's building in better days at the top of King Street. Next to the Saint John City Market and across from King's Square, it is in a prime uptown location but has fallen on hard times. (Submitted by New Brunswick Museum Muse du Nouveau-Brunswick)

"People are wanting to come back into the city.If you look through some of the city's research, the growth of Saint John in the downtown core is quite phenomenalover the next few yearsand to meet that demand they are going to need more apartments," he said.

Drawings of the King Street building have not been released publicly yet, but local architect Malcolm Boyd has been hired to design the structure. Wilbur promises it will fit in with the brick and sandstone facades used by other large buildings aroundKing Square.

Boyd's firm, Murdock Boyd, previously designed the Saint John Law Courts building.

"We're going to respect the surroundings.It will be a combination of the red brick and sandstone look," said Wilbur.

In January, to make room for his growing plans, Wilbur bought the building next door at 85 and 87 King St., currently home to the popular restaurantTaste of Egypt,and a local insurance broker.

Percy Wilbur bought the property next to the old Woolworth's building at 85 and 87 King St. in January to make room for his development plan. Both buildings are to be torn down. (Robert Jones/CBC)

The pair of properties cost $1.4 million to acquire, but because engineering work on the old Woolworth's building showed it to be "unsalvageable," according to Wilbur, both buildings are to be torn down.

Restaurant owner Paula Radwan-Donovan said she already has plans to move to a new, larger location and she hopes to make an announcement about that later this week.

Wilbur said he is in talks with grocery stores and other businesses to lease space and will need firm commitments before construction can begin.

"It is essential we have a couple of tenants in there first, so that is what we are focusing a lot of our attention on," he said.

"We'd like to have shovels in the ground by summer andhave something well underway by fall."