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PEI

Summerside project could bring city 2,000 new homes eventually

A new neighbourhood with the possibility of more than 2,000 homes is in the works for Summerside, P.E.I., as the first stage of a long-discussed east-west connector goes out for tender.

What started as a traffic connector has evolved into a housing development pitch

Map showing easy-west housing corridor.
The re-imagined east-west housing corridor is expected to free up 140 hectares of land for development in Summerside. Phase one is shaded in red on this map, stretching north from Water Street East. (City of Summerside)

A new neighbourhood that could someday host thousands of new homes is in the works for Summerside, P.E.I.

The official plan for a re-imagined east-west housing corridor, formerly called the east-west connector, was presented to city councillors Tuesday night.

Promoters called it agrowth- and development-focused project, opening 140 hectares of land with the potential of 2,000-plus new housing units to follow.

It would also improve traffic flow, augment the city's active transportation network, and enhance the delivery of emergency services, said Mayor Dan Kutcher.

"We're not road building; we're city building," he told the council meeting.

For more than two decades, people have been talking about the potential of a new east-west roadto connect the easternportion of the city and Summerside's commercial district. Better traffic flow was the big motivator at first.

However, Summerside is now in the midst of an unprecedented growth spurt that has brought a significant demand for new housing. The old east-west corridor ideatook on a new role as a source of newly accessible building lots.

Issuing tenders

Summerside is about to begin issuing tenders for construction of phase one of the project, with the first 1.6 kilometres of roadway beginning on Water StreetEast and heading northward, with a short connection eastward to a subdivision.

The thoroughfare will then turn toward the west and eventually reachRotary Park and continue up to Ryan Street.

Summerside Mayor Dan Kutcher.
'We're not road building; we're city building,' Summerside Mayor Dan Kutcher told his fellow members of council this week. (Laura Meader/CBC)

Work on the road project is set to begin later this fall and be completed in late fall of 2024.

"The overall vision is the creation of essentially a new neighbourhood and a corridor in our community," Kutcher said.

"I think if you just look around the city right now, you get a really good idea of how much need there is from a housing perspective and how much interest there is from a development perspective."

With files from Kerry Campbell