It s woefully underfunded : City heritage program has not seen significant funding increase since 1996 thestarphoenix.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thestarphoenix.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SASKATOON As Saskatoon Public Schools moves ahead with its plans to amalgamate three core neighbourhood schools, questions remain about the future of two of the schools in particular, due to their historic nature with many in the community advocating for their preservation. King George and Pleasant Hill schools, constructed in 1912 and 1913 respectively, are classified as castle schools. According to Saskatoon Heritage Society president Peggy Sarjeant, David Webster was the official public school board architect from 1911 to 1914 and designed all but two of the ten large schools built at the time. Webster designed the buildings in the true British tradition with solid brick and often a classic turret-top. Large hallways and wood floors were the norm.
(Lara Fominoff/650 CKOM)
Saskatoon’s iconic Knox United Church needs money, and its board of directors is hoping for permission to subdivide its lot.
But a change to the municipal heritage bylaw is needed first.
At a public hearing Monday, city councillors voted 10-1 to refer the matter to the Municipal Heritage Review Board.
Knox United Church board member Marcel de la Gorgendiere told councillors allowing development on the parcel where a gravel parking lot currently sits would allow the church to maintain service to the community.
Without income from the proposed new development which includes residential and retail space he suggested the church would have a difficult time maintaining its building in the future.
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A downtown church, a local developer and dozens of concerned residents will have to wait to learn whether a contentious 19-storey tower proposed for a Spadina Crescent parking lot can go ahead.
Knox United Church and Meridian Development Corp. want to subdivide off the church’s adjacent parking lot for the tower, with the church receiving 40 covered parking stalls to supplement its revenues.
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Try refreshing your browser. Knox United subdivision application headed to provincial review Back to video
That application was the subject of a public hearing Monday night, a necessity given the church’s heritage designation. But a notice of objection means it is now headed to a provincial board for review.
Knox United subdivision application headed to provincial review thestarphoenix.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thestarphoenix.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.