Regina heritage building with Louis Riel connection headed for the wrecking ball - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Regina heritage building with Louis Riel connection headed for the wrecking ball

Advocates for the preservation of the Burns Hanley Building say that its owners, Harvard Developments, decided against carrying out recommended repairs, leading to 'demolition by neglect.'

Council voted against multiple amendments that would've delayed a decision on demolishing the building

The Burns Hanley Building at 1863 Cornwall St., in Regina, Sask. (Alexander Quon/CBC News)

City council has voted in favour of demolishing a downtown Regina building with historic connections on the condition that its facade is preserved and maintained for use in future developments.

The decision to grant a demolition permitmarks theend to a months-long debate on the fate of the Burns HanleyBuilding, which ismore than a century old andlocated at 1863 Cornwall St.

It's a designated heritage building in the city'sVictoria Park Heritage Conservation District, but fell into disrepair.

Debates around thefuture of the Burns Hanley Building centred aroundthe city's decisions to not use its power under the Heritage Property Act, as well as decisions by the structure's owners, Harvard Developments,to ignore much-needed repairs that resulted in what advocates called "demolition by neglect."

At council, conversations around the buildingroutinely devolved intodiscussions on trust, and whether Harvard Developments could be held to its word.

"Council is being asked to trust Harvard to get this facade back up in a preserved way. I just don't have any confidence they'll do it," said Coun. Bob Hawkins on Wednesday.

'The building is unsafe'

The Burns Hanley Building sits on the site once occupied by St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church, which wasbuilt in 1883.

That churchwas whereLouis Riel's bodywas briefly kept after the Mtis leader's execution in 1885, before it was sent to Winnipeg.

The Burns Hanley Buildingwas constructed on the site in 1912.

In July 2021, Harvard Developmentsapplied for a permit to demolish the building,citing its deteriorating condition.

However, reports presented to council showed that the deterioration was the result of repairs not being completed.

A 2019 engineering report by JCK Engineering found the building had undergone years of sustained water damage due to a damage roof and broken pipes.

The report recommended$200,000 in repairs that would have helped to stabilizethe building.

The fallen ceiling of the second floor of the Burns Hanley Building in Regina, Sask. (JCK Engineering/City of Regina)

No repairs were carried out, and two years later another report foundthat water damage was so severe, and the condition were sopoor, that engineerswere unable to inspect parts of the structure.

"The building is unsafe and should not be occupied for any reason," the report concludes.

Due to the extensive damage, the repair estimatesskyrocketed to$4.7 million.That includes structural repairs, shoring up walls,and removal of debris and hazardous material.

How Regina got here

Council deferred on demolishing the building andreferred the topic tothe province's Heritage Review Board.

In April, the boardpresented a recommendationthat the City of Regina and Harvard Developments consider a redevelopment agreementthat includes the preservation of the facade of the building.

If the facade was not preserved during the demolition of the building, then the agreement could be negotiated to guarantee the reconstruction of the facade, the report said.

Some of the extensive damage recorded by JCK Engineering at the Burns Haley Building in 2019. (JCK Engineering/City of Regina)

Reconstruction was the option that Harvard preferred and it's the option that city council ultimately approvedon Wednesday, after a final decision on the building was delayed twice this spring.

An effortby Coun. Bob Hawkins tohave an independent third-party expert weigh in on the city's options, and a motion by Coun. Daniel LeBlancfor the city to direct Harvard to braceand fence off the facade while it demolishes the rest of the building were both voted down by the majority of councillors.

What comes next

Harvard will now be required to register the use of the facade on the title of the land.

Company representatives have previously told council that it will take apart the facade brick by brick and store so it can be used in a future development.

On Wednesday, Coun. Hawkins expressed doubt about whether that would come to pass.

"I simply believe that brickswill be lost in the process of deconstruction," he said.

"The storage will be difficult, bordering on impossible, and will in all likelihood go on for years and probably more than a decade, and that the reconstruction process itself will be problematic."

Harvard Developmentspresident and CEO Rosanne Blaisdelltold council in May thatthe companywouldlike to begin demolition of the building within 30days if the motion was approved.

Harvard's initial application did not have a proposed redevelopment plan, despite a city bylaw requiring one.

Instead, Harvard said itsinitial plan was to fill in thebasement of the demolished building. It plans to acquire neighbouring properties before developing a high-rise tower.