THE
PROVINCE

Friday, July 30, 1999
Banks eyes Stratford as future
location for his headquarters
Company had
plans to redevelop the former Woolworth property on Queen
Street, which was rejected by Charlottetown council.
BY DOUG
GALLANT
Developer Tim Banks said he now plans to sell the former F.W.
Woolworth property in downtown Charlottetown he had hoped to
redevelop as the new corporate headquarters for his APM
Group.
Banks said he
will now look at locating his company's head office in a new
building he proposes to build on land the company has
optioned in Stratford.
Banks had
proposed a major renovation for the former department store
but city council did not share his vision for the property.
"We felt we had a good plan," Banks said. "We felt it was
good for us and good for downtown Charlottetown, but council
voted unanimously against it. So we've moved on.
"We're in the
business of retail development, we've got $30 million worth
of development underway from Kingston, Ont., to Digby. We've
got major projects in Halifax, in Cape Breton. We'll focus
our energies on other projects."
Banks said he
thought it was time to do some things in downtown
Charlottetown but city council seemed to have other ideas.
"They were in a different mode than we were. I don't want to
put APM in an us-versus-them situation so we'll just move on
to other projects."
Banks said he
will continue to invest in Charlottetown In the future
because, after all, it is his home, he likes this city and
APM has a lot of money invested here. "But, for now we'll
look to another PEI community for development
opportunities."
"Stratford is
in a good location for development. It's close to the
Charlottetown airport, it has many of the same amenities
that Charlottetown does, there's a new golf course under
construction, a lot of new home construction, and it has a
lower tax rate than Charlottetown."
Banks noted
his company recently purchased the Southport Home Hardware
property and has plans for that area. And his company has
optioned a six-acre parcel of land on the corner of the
Kinlock Road and the Trans Canada Highway. That’s where it
hopes to establish the companies head office.
Banks said he
would like to see a mix of development on that property,
which is why he applied to have the property rezoned.
As for the
queen Street property, Banks is currently renting the
property to a business, which is utilizing the building as a
clearance centre. |