Opening Regina's Scarth Street to vehicles a step in the wrong direction: planning experts - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Opening Regina's Scarth Street to vehicles a step in the wrong direction: planning experts

Scarth Street has operated as a pedestrian walkway in downtown Regina for nearly 50 years. That could come to end as the city looks to revitalize the area.

Businesses want loading zones, deliveries in bid to 'activate' downtown street known for pedestrian path

Two men are shown walking down a pedestrian pathway on Scarth Street in Regina.
Two men walk down Scarth Street in downtown Regina. The city is looking at revitalizing the area, which could mean opening Scarth Street to vehicles. (Alexander Quon/CBC)

The cobblestoned path ofScarth Street Mallhas operated as a pedestrian walkway in downtown Regina for nearly 50 years.

Thatcouldend as the city looks to "activate" the street.Reintroducing vehicles to a street that has been pedestrian only since 1975 is onepotential modification, according to a tender document issued late last year.

Ifthe city moves forward with that decision, it would be doing the opposite of what most city planning experts recommend.Prioritizing people over vehiclesis generally believed tobring peopleinto a city'sdowntown core, according to two experts that spoke with CBC News.

Rylan Graham, an assistant professor at the University of Northern British Columbia'sschool of planning, saidthe downtown cores of many citiesin North Americahave been "reshaped and carved up" to accommodatevehicles.

"The shift now is really how do we design for people and to elevate the human experience so that it is an appealing and interesting place that people want to be in," Graham.

Graham, who grew up in Regina, said any plan that brings cars into the downtown "isthe opposite approach that we need to be taking."

Bob Patrick,chair of the regional and urban planning program at the University of Saskatchewan, provided similar critiques when asked about reintroducing vehicles to a pedestrian-oriented street.

"It seems to be kind of reverse, the opposite of of good urbanism," Patrick said.

"There's certainly a trend to close off streets. I mean thatis happening in Europe, that's happening in Asia, it's happening in North America."

Despite concerns the city is moving forward with its plan to update Scarth Street.

Earlier this month it awarded a contract worth $230,000 to Mississauga's CIMA Canada Inc., for engineering services on therevitalization project.

The City of Regina said in a statementthatCIMA Canadawill "develop a preliminary design of what Scarth Street could look like."

Opportunity for local businesses

The Regina Downtown Business Improvement Districtsaidthey've heard from local business owners who are open tobringing vehicles back downtown.

She says many businesses wantloading zones witheasy access for vehicles to allow for pick-ups, drop-offs and deliveries.

"I think what we're seeing, especially post-pandemic, is the need to have what we call flexible spaces, spaces that can do double duty," said Judith Veresuk, RDBID's executive director.

Veresuk says Regina has tried to update and revitalize its downtown core by carrying out upgrades to major streets. Now, it's Scarth Street's turn.

"So Scarth Street, the pedestrian mall, is the last piece in the doughnut that really needs to be addressed," she said.

A woman with black hair and glasses wears a red, yellow and white pea coat.
Judith Veresuk, executive director of the Regina Downtown Business Improvement District, said many businesses on Scarth Street, have told her organization they would welcome vehicular traffic. (CBC)

Veresukenvisions a streetscapemodelled after Halifax's Argyle Street.

Argyle was transformed from a street that was built for vehicles to a mixed-use model that has extended sidewalks big enough for patios as well as a single-lane,one way street running through the middle.

Just like Scarth Street, with the Globe Threate,Argyle is anchored by its local theatre and features a number of bars and restaurants.

During the summer, or for special events, the road is closed to traffic, letting people walk without fear of being hit by vehicles.

Veresuk says that is a possible future for Scarth Street.

A streetscape made of brick featuring street lights, trees and vehicles is shown in this artists rendering of Scarth Street.
An artists rendering of what the Downtown Regina Business Improvement District would like to see as the City of Regina prepares to revitalize Scarth Street. (P3 Architecture/Downtown Regina Business Improvement District)

Patricksaid allowing vehicles can quickly spin out of control.

"Once you bring cars onto Scarth, there'll be a desire for parking, and that's what the store andowners will probably want too. They don't want cars just passing by. They'll want cars to pass in and stop," he said.

Currently the pedestrian mallis dominated by concrete planters running on either side of a cobblestone roadway.

Veresuk says the planters limit the space available to businesses facing onto the street and are filled with trees that have not done well in the constantly shifting sunlight.

A report commissioned byRDBID found only three of the trees remain viable.

Veresuk wouldlike to see the planters replaced with smaller, more portable greenery.

"So I think that really is the best of both worlds, worlds that we should be looking at before we make a final decision on the future of Scarth Street," she said.

Mayor Sandra Masters is on the record as being in favour of opening Scarth Streetup to vehicles but maintaining the ability to close it down for special occasions.

Graham said that while updating aging infrastructure is good, the history of the city and the pedestrian access is part of the community connection toScarth Street.

That's something that should be taken into account when looking towardthe street's future, he said.

"We have this assumption that to to make this a better street or more accessible, it means that we have to be able to park directly in front," Graham said.

"But through all of thatwe'd be really losing one of the few spaces in downtown Regina that is truly a space where people can go and hang out and socialize."

What happens next

Details on whichpublic consultationCIMA Canada will use haven't been released yet, but they are coming soon, the City of Regina said.

While any changes to how Scarth Street operates would require city council to approve bylaw amendments.

Final designs for the project could come by the end of 2023while construction could begin by 2024.

That timeline would match up with another city project to revitalize the nearby 11th Avenue.

Revitalizing Scarth Street is expected to have a budget of $4.75 million.