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THE GUARDIAN
October 27, 2001
By Wayne Thibodeau
Province gives
developer Tim Banks permit to demolish the Eric Found Centre
for new housing
Ex-medical facility set to face demolition
The axe will fall on the Dr. Eric Found Centre. The Guardian
has learned that on Friday the province handed Tim Banks and
his APM Group the deed for the Charlottetown building and
hours later the city delivered its demolition permit. That
mean that work will begin to take down the former sanatorium
to make way for the 19 homes that will be known as the
Brighton Commons.
Tim
Banks said his staff started work on the site immediatley
after they received the necessary paperwork Friday. He said
that by Monday demolition work will be well under way. "We
are the title hold of the property now," Banks confirmed
Friday. "We will be proceeding immediately with the plans
that we had set out." Ron Martin, a Charlottetown developer
who had hoped to save the centre and renovate it into
seniors housing, said he was disappointed to hear the
demolition would be going ahead.
Martin went to court to try to stop Banks. He filed an
application with the Supreme Court of P.E.I. asking it to
overturn city council's Sep. 10 decision to rezone the
centre's McGill Avenue property from institutional to
single-family zoning. While waiting for a decision on his
challenge, Martin wanted a court order to prevent the APM
Group from demolishing the building, but he failed to get
that court order.
Martin said if there was anything else he could do, he
would. But he said if the building is demolished, it's too
late no matter what the court decides. "I can certainly tell
you that I'm disappointed," Martin said, after being
informed about the deed and demolition permit being issued.
"I'm only one block away from it and I can see what's
happening up there. I'm very, very disappointed. The
neighbourhood does not want the R1 (zoning). They want to
see the seniors' complex but it's politics at this point --
that's where it's at." Martin contended three city
decision-makers, including Coun. Kathleen Casey, Coun. Bruce
Garrity and City Hall staffer Donna Waddell were all in
conflicts of interests because of their ties to a law firm
that represented the APM Group.
With the paperwork now in order, Banks and his company will
focus first on removing the asbestos-laden floors, plaster
and piping. That will be carried out under controlled
conditions under the watchful eye of provincial environment
officials.
They will also remove the 5,000 gallon petroleum tank which
continues to sit, nearly full, under the building. The
environmental clean up will take three to four weeks,
demolition will take another three weeks, and four to six
homes will be under construction in the spring and ready for
occupancy in the fall. |