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Downtown East Village, Calgary


FieldValue
official_nameDowntown East Village
settlement_typeNeighbourhood
image_skylineFile:East Village Calgary 201807.jpg
imagesize300px
image_captionOverview of Downtown East Village (2018)
pushpin_mapCanada Calgary
pushpin_mapsize225
pushpin_map_captionLocation of Downtown East Village in Calgary
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1
subdivision_type2City
subdivision_name2Calgary
subdivision_type3Quadrant
subdivision_name3SE
subdivision_type4Ward
subdivision_name47
government_footnotes
leader_titleAdministrative body
leader_nameCalgary City Council
leader_title1Councillor
leader_name1Druh Farrell
established_titleEstablished
established_date1900
area_total_km20.5
population_as_of2016
population_footnotes
population_total3242
population_density_km26484
population_blank1_titleMedian Income (2005)
population_blank1$17,253
timezoneMountain Time
utc_offset-7
timezone_DSTMountain Daylight Time
utc_offset_DST-6
coordinates
elevation_footnotes
elevation_m1043
postal_code_type
area_code_typeArea code
area_code403
website[East Village Experience](http://www.evexperience.com/)

Downtown East Village Info Site Downtown East Village more commonly known as simply East Village, is a mixed-use neighbourhood within the eastern portions of downtown Calgary, Alberta, Canada. It is contained within the city's Rivers District. Containing the earliest-settled land in the Calgary area - Fort Calgary - East Village was for years a mixture of high-rise residential, commercial, and industrial development. Much of the parkland currently surrounding Fort Calgary was industrial as recently as the 1960s. Construction of the city's light rail transit Blue Line, coupled with the closure of 8th Avenue at Macleod Trail in the early 1980s by construction of the massive Calgary Municipal Building, resulted in East Village being "cut off," from the rest of downtown. It became home to many rundown properties and vacant lots over the years, and a severe crime problem.

Plans to reshape this neighbourhood were approved by Calgary City Council in March 2005 (East Village Area Redevelopment Plan). In Spring 2007, Calgary City Council approved the formation of a wholly owned subsidiary known as Calgary Municipal Land Corporation (CMLC) with the mandate to revitalize and redevelop the Rivers District, which includes the East Village. Construction began in earnest within the Rivers District by the new corporation in 2007 with the undertaking of a rare downtown Calgary stormwater treatment pond in the NW corner of Fort Calgary. Many of the dilapidated buildings were torn down, to be replaced by modern structures, and the Jack and Jean Leslie RiverWalk along the south bank of the Bow River was completed in the summer of 2012. As of January 2017, several luxury condominium towers have been completed, along with two new hotels, while construction is underway on several more condominium towers, retail buildings, with additional commercial and residential development planned. As of 2017, the neighbourhood has attracted $2.7 billion worth of investment.

Demographics

In the City of Calgary's 2016 municipal census, Downtown East Village had a population of living in dwellings, a 14.2% increase from its 2015 population of . With a land area of 0.5 km2, it had a population density of in 2016.

Residents in this community had a median household income of $17,253 in 2005. As a reference, in 2005 the median household income for the whole city of Calgary was $67,238.

In 2005 there were 53.1% low income residents living in the neighbourhood. As of 2006, 31.9% of the residents were immigrants. A proportion of 94.7% of the buildings were condominiums or apartments, and 83.8% of the housing was used for renting, this being the highest renting/owning rate in the city.

Crime

In the May 2023-May 2024 data period, Downtown East Village had a crime rate of 15.605/100, an increase from the previous data period.

This puts it at this comparison to other Calgary communities: Saddle Ridge (1.358/100), Whitehorn (1.741/100), Rundle (2.342/100), Brentwood (2.348/100), Acadia (2.542/100), Bowness (2.934/100), Shawnessy (3.296/100), Inglewood (3.438/100), Sunnyside (3.650/100), Marlborough (4.703/100), Southwood (5.147/100), Sunalta (5.307/100), Montgomery (5.483/100), Forest Lawn (6.528/100), Rosscarrock (7.049/100), Downtown Commercial Core (12.705/100), Downtown East Village (15.605/100), Manchester (43.368/100).

Crime data by year

YearCrime Rate (/100 pop.)
20184.2
201910.2
20209.6
202110.0
202210.7
202315.1

Archeological discovery

In the spring and summer of 2008, archeologists made several rare discoveries in East Village: two historic dumps from the early 20th century, as well as a native stone circle and fire hearths dating back over 3,300 years. Calgary archeologist Brian Vivian says it's the first pre-contact site of its type that archeologists have discovered in inner-city Calgary.

Area redevelopment

Infrastructure

In 2007, Calgary Municipal Land Corporation (CMLC) invested $357 million in infrastructure upgrades to the neighbourhood. These upgrades included elevating the roads above the flood-plain of the nearby Bow and Elbow rivers, paving the new roads and sidewalks with stone bricks, building the award-winning Jack and Jean Leslie RiverWalk, major utility upgrades, the construction of plazas, and much more. These infrastructure upgrades were completed in 2015, with the completion of Celebration Square located along Riverfront Lane, between 6th and 7th Avenues SE.

Residential buildings

Since 2012, the East Village has seen the construction of several residential buildings, which have increased the population of the neighbourhood substantially. The first building to be completed under the guise of CMLC was Fuse in 2015. Fuse is the shorter of two towers that make up the Evolution development. As of January 2017, there are six residential buildings under construction in the East Village. N3 is the city's first parking-free condominium.

Institutional buildings

East Village is home of the National Music Centre, the first national cultural institution dedicated to celebrating music in Canada in all of its forms. The $191 million building houses the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame, broadcast facilities, a museum of impressive musical artefacts such as the Rolling Stones Mobile Recording Studio, and a 300-seat performance hall. The new National Music Centre building has incorporated the 120-year-old King Edward Hotel building into its structure. The King Edward Hotel was, for a long time, a famous jazz and blues venue, thus continuing the tradition of this site as a centre for musical development in Canada.

The village is also home to the New Central Library of the Calgary Public Library, which opened on November 1, 2018. The library houses children's books, performance venues and activity rooms on its lower floors, together with an extensive fiction section and reading room on its upper floor. CMLC held a design competition for the new library. American-Norwegian architecture firm Snøhetta and Canadian firm DIALOG won the competition to design the 240,000 sqft building. The $245 million structure will house 600,000 titles, a reading room, a cafe, a 340-seat theatre, and conference rooms, as well as many activity centres and reading areas.

Retail buildings

Much of the East Village redevelopment consists of mixed-use buildings, housing both residential and retail uses. This will be most apparent on ‘The Riff’. The Riff will be a pedestrian street bisecting the neighbourhood from the northeast to the southwest, from the George C. King Bridge to 8th Avenue SE. The Riff will be a major retail street, housing an as yet unknown collection of retailers.

In late 2016, RioCan Developments started construction on a major new retail destination known as 5th and Third. This development is an entire city block and will include two full floors of underground parking, 2 full floors of retail, along with two large residential condo towers on top. Confirmed tenants as of January 2017 are a full-sized Loblaws City Market and Shoppers Drug Mart.

So far, two of the neighbourhood's major historic structures have been redeveloped for retail uses. The Simmons Mattress Factory building has been redeveloped into the home of Charbar, Phil & Sebastians Coffee Roasters, and Sidewalk Citizen Bakery. While the newly completed revitalization of the St. Louis Hotel building has yet to receive any retail tenants as of January 2017, its upper floors are home to the offices of the Calgary Municipal Land Corporation.

As of January 2017, construction is imminent on a new 4-storey retail building located directly between the RiverWalk and Confluence Way. This building is intended to host restaurants and will be in a key location, right along the riverbank.

Historic buildings

East Village plays host to several of Calgary's oldest buildings. The Simmons Mattress Factory building, constructed in 1912, is a leading example of adaptive reuse in Calgary. It has been carefully restored and repurposed from its original industrial use as a mattress factory to house Charbar, Phil & Sebastian Coffee Roasters, and Sidewalk Citizen Bakery, right along the RiverWalk. The city's oldest running hotel, the King Edward Hotel, built in 1905, has been deconstructed and rebuilt as part of the National Music Centre. The St. Louis Hotel has been revitalized and now hosts the headquarters of Calgary Municipal Land Corporation and a rental venue. The Hillier Block has been restored and is now home to the Calgary Public Library Foundation, ADD-IN, and the New Central Library Discovery Centre for the duration of the NCL construction project happening next door.

Parks and plazas

Calgary Municipal Land Corporation has built three plazas in the neighbourhood, these are RiverWalk Plaza next to the Simmons Building, Fifth Street Square at the intersection of 5th Street SE and 7 Avenue SE, and Celebration Square along the C-train's Blue Line between 5th and 6th Avenues SE.

CMLC was also responsible for the revitalization of St. Patrick's Island Park. The park revitalization was coupled with the construction of the George C. King Bridge for a total price tag of $45 million. The George C. King Bridge connects the island park south to the East Village and Bridgeland to the north.

References

References

  1. "Fort Calgary The City’s Sacred Ground". Everyday Tourist.
  2. "Will Development Of The East Village Succeed". Avenue Calgary.
  3. [https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20070809134558/http://www.calgary.ca/docgallery/bu/planning/pdf/east_village_arp/8027_east_village_arp_part1o2.pdf East Village Area Redevelopment Plan] - from the City of Calgary website
  4. "Construction". EV Experience.
  5. (2016). "ComparativeCommunityResults". City of Calgary.
  6. "Community Boundaries". City of Calgary.
  7. City of Calgary. (2010). "Ward 7 Profile".
  8. City of Calgary. (2009). "Downtown East Village Community Statistics".
  9. Service, Calgary Police. "Calgary Police statistical reports".
  10. Strategies, Community. "Community Profiles".
  11. "Data".
  12. Jeremy Klaszus, [http://www.ffwdweekly.com/article/news-views/news/pieces-of-western-canadiana-dug-up-in-east-village/ "Pieces of western Canadiana dug up in East Village"] {{webarchive. link. (November 21, 2008 , ''Fast Forward Weekly'', September 4, 2008.)
  13. "Projects Completed". Calgary Municipal Land Corporation.
  14. "Millennials and seniors start moving into car-loving Calgary's first parking-free condo". Calgary Herald.
  15. "Studio Bell Home of the National Music Centre". National Music Centre.
  16. "Heritage Buildings". EV Experience.
  17. "Project". Calgary Public Library.
  18. "Verve". EV Experience.
  19. "The Shops at East Village". RioCan.
  20. "Simmons". EV Experience.
  21. "M2". EV Experience.
  22. "Simmons Mattress Building - Building Conversation and Heritage Restoration - RJC Engineers".
  23. "HeritageBuildings". EV Experience.
  24. "Urban Parks". Calgary Municipal Land Corporation.
  25. "Patrick’s Island". Calgary Municipal Land Corporation.
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