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The GUARDIAN
September 5, 2001
By: Jim Day
Developer says the proposed site of his development on
Government Drive is more appropriate for a seniors' complex
than on the site of the Eric Found Centre on McGill Avenue
Developer Tim Banks is pitching a 50 unit seniors' housing
complex for the Brighton area in Charlottetown. Banks said
Tuesday his APM group is proposing working with the PEI
government and the city of Charlottetown in a
"public-private partnership" to create a housing complex
exclusively for seniors.
He said the proposed site - a 4.4 acre provincial owned
vacant lot Government Drive adjacent to the Jones Building
parking lot - is more appropriate for a seniors' complex
than the site of the Eric Found Centre on McGill Avenue.
Banks has been locking horns with the Martin Group over
developing the Eric Found Centre site.
Banks wants to tear down the McGill Avenue building to build
on 19 single family residential lots. The Martin Group wants
to construct a $3-million "seniors friendly" complex that
would house 50 apartment units. Banks said the Brighton site
is ideal for the proposed 3.5 million seniors' housing
complex. "Seniors prefer to be within walking distance of
the downtown amenities such as banks, drug stores, doctors'
offices and health services while living in a familiar
residential neighborhood," he said.
Banks said the Martin Group can't guarantee that its
proposed complex for McGill Avenue would only house seniors.
"As a private developer, I couldn't go along and take the
Eric Found Centre and just say that it is a seniors'
building because that is against the human rights
regulations here on Prince Edward Island as it is anywhere,"
he said.
Banks admitted the timing of his announcement Tuesday was
strategic. "I wouldn't have made it as quickly but I was
going to make it anyway," he said when asked if he would
have made the proposal if the Martin Group had not come
forward with a competing plan for the Eric Found Centre
site. Ron Martin of the Martin Group said he is confident
his proposal for the Eric Found Centre has far greater
public support than the APM proposal. "Every day people are
coming up to me and they are suggesting that the building
not come down," said Martin.
"I would suggest that APM should pull their proposal for the
Eric Found Centre." Martin said he had no comment concerning
Banks' proposed seniors housing complex Tuesday. "I'll just
let people see it for what it is," he said. "I'm more
concerned about what is happening up here (at the Eric Found
Centre)".
Banks said his proposed plan for a complex in the Brighton
area could be strictly a seniors' housing complex if the
appropriate arrangement was struck with the municipal and
provincial governments. "We could develop this particular
site (to be) site-specific for seniors and the way the
agreement would work is the province would underwrite it
that the building itself could only be used for seniors'
housing and they have within their legislation the ability
to do that," he said.
Banks stood on the property alongside developers and next to
an architect's conceptual drawing of the complex as he
heralded the attributes of the proposed project. "We are
proposing a brand new structure with all the amenitities
that seniors are telling us they are interested in," he said
in a statement distributed to the media.
"We will have a fitness centre, meeting rooms, patios,
security entrances and an elevator. The building will be
designed to fit the character of the Brighton neighbourhood,
but more important, it will be functional for those seniors
who have mobility challenges, such as using a wheelchair.
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