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Saskatoon

'Feisty' Riversdale fights downturn trend with new summer businesses

While business owners in the downtown core complain of dwindling sales, some so bad theyve had to close up shop, at least three new businesses have or will open in Riversdale this summer.

Owners of 3 new businesses consider future of a changing Saskatoon neighbourhood

Fable Ice Cream owner Jordan Ethridge says he wants to maintain the family-friendly side of Riversdale. (Alicia Bridges/CBC)

Newcomers to Saskatoon are sometimes cautioned to avoid the "alphabets,"the grid section of avenues on the west side of the South Saskatchewan River.

For a long time, the area has been known as a higher-crime district and, for some, an undesirable place to live.

It's no secret that Riversdaleunderwenta revival in the past few years, particularly along the busy cafe and restaurant strip on 20th Street in Saskatoon.

Now the neighbourhood is pushing back against Saskatchewan'seconomic downturn. While some business owners in the downtown core have reported slumping sales, some so bad they've had to close up shop, Riversdalewill become home to at least three new food businessesthis summer.

Hometown Diner owner Kara Bykowy says the Riversdale neighbourhood is welcoming to new businesses. (Alicia Bridges/CBC)

A feisty, gritty neighbourhood

Brad Hamm, who is preparing to open his new Latin-themed restaurant Picaro with his wife Carmen in September, said cheaper rent in Riversdale is likely a factor.

But he said his conversations with other Riversdale business owners made it clear the economic downturn had hit restaurants across the city, not just downtown, and including Riversdale.

Hamm, who also owns Una Pizza + Wine on Broadway Avenue, thinks the passion behind the neighbourhood is part of its appeal, and its strength.

"The neighbourhood is pretty feisty as well and I think people understand that there is some new energy as well as that old gritty characteristic of Riversdale, I don't think that's going to go away," said Hamm.

"I think those two things make it a neighbourhood that can persevere, I think, through some of those downturns."

Fable Ice Cream opened in the Riversdale neighbourhood of Saskatoon earlier this summer. (Alicia Bridges/CBC)

Keep it inclusive

In fact, Hamm believes holding on to the neighbourhood's "gritty" atmosphereis crucial to its success in the future.

He said it's important that business owners theremake efforts to keep it inclusive, adding that the diversity and accessibility of Riversdale is part of the reason people take pride in the neighbourhood.

"It is becoming a little shinier these days but I think if we all are on the same page about making sure that our doors are open to everybody going forward, and seeing that the investments are going into improving the socio-economic side of that neighbourhood too," said Hamm.

"We've all got to get behind that and hopefully everybody wins."

Brad and Carmen Hamm's new restaurant Picaro will open at the corner of Idylwyld Drive and 20th Street in September. (Alicia Bridges/CBC)

Neighbourhood should be family-friendly

For Fable Ice Cream owner Jordan Ethridge, nurturing the family aspect of the neighbourhood is a priority.

He lives in Riversdale with his partner Lauren and, with a baby on the way this summer, he wants to raise his family there.

Ethridge said gentrification was a tough subject for changing older neighbourhoods.

"We want everyone to feel like they belong and so that's kind of our motto, is to bring something to people that everyone can enjoy," said Ethridge.

"And yeah, it's a challenging thing but if we have dialogue with our neighbours and just try to bridge the gaps that exist it could go really well."

Character is key

Ethridge said bringing families together was part of their vision when they opened their ice cream counter on Avenue H S. earlier in the summer. The store is one block outside of Riversdale.

Kara Bykowy, who recently opened the doors to Hometown Diner on 20th Street, believes it's also important to maintain the neighbourhood's visual feel.

She said the existing businesses have succeeded at maintaining the neighbourhood's character, simultaneouslyadding their own modern flair.

Bykowybelievesthe neighbourhood also attracts new businesses by being welcoming to owner operators like herself.

"The amount of support from all the other businesses around us, it's unreal," she said.

"Everybody's excited and everybody supports everybody, it's like a big family.I don't know if it's because it's a new neighbourhood and it is starting to develop, everybody's pumped."

Hometown Diner is one of the newest businesses in Riversdale. (Alicia Bridges/CBC)

Growth restores balance, says RiversdaleBID

RiversdaleBusiness Improvement District executive director RandyPshebylosaid the success thatRiversdaleis seeing now is part of a long-term plan that dates back to 2001.

He said the neighbourhood had always been a "landing pad" for newcomers and startups, partly because of its affordability and small lots.

Pshebylodoes not see the neighbourhood's existing population being displaced by future growth.

Instead, he said growth inRiversdaleis restoring balance to a neighbourhood that was previously in a state of imbalance.

"I would challenge that gentrification is a word that is very loosely and, I would say, callously thrown around without an understanding that gentrification would mean an organized displacement," saidPshebylo.

"What we've been very cognizant of here and worked very [diligently] towards is maintaining the inclusiveness and that edginess and grit, if you will, but it's about bringing that balance back to the neighbourhood."

Pshebylosaid he was pleased to see new businesses opening in the neighbourhood, but said the longevity ofRiversdalebusinesses was an even bigger cause for celebration.

"Ribbon-cuttings are great, having store openings and announcements are wonderful, but I find more success and happiness from having anniversaries and birthdays of those same businesses," he said.