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Letter: Tourist centre on prime waterfront is the issue

While Tourism Kelowna says you can walk around the building, you cannot see around it. Our open spaces are not all potential building sitesѻý

To the editor:

Although Tourism Kelowna has responded to the public opposition to their proposed waterfront office with a smaller footprint and without the second floor offices, the original objection was about its location, on Kelownaѻýs vanishing waterfront. That remains valid ѻý the building, at the end of Queensway Avenue, still totally blocks the view of Okanagan Lake.

The viewscape of our unique and beautiful waterfront is vanishing ѻý all that remains from the Yacht Club to the entrance of City Park is about a five minute walk ѻý and while Tourism Kelowna says you can walk around the building, you cannot see around it.  Our open spaces are not all potential building sites ѻý  we have so little open waterfront land left that we are forced to make a point of ѻýgoing to the beachѻý to enjoy it.

The argument that the plan was changed to respect the Simpson Covenant is without merit as, according the 2008 finding of the Supreme Court of BC, the City of Kelowna is required ѻýto use the subject properties for municipal purposes and not for commercial or industrial purposes.ѻý Tourism Kelowna was simply obeying the law, although City Hall seems to be broadening its definition of ѻýmunicipal purposesѻý as it did when allowing the original Tourism Kelowna encroachment. The same may be said of the city-built parkade for Interior Health. The Court ruling did, and still does, prohibit commercial activities from taking place on Covenant lands.

In this fast-changing and expanding world of digital availability and coverage, creating a building to serve todayѻýs tourists is remarkably short-sighted: When we no longer need to pick up a brochure, or inquire about local events or places of interest, we will still have this building. Who will use it then?

There are many available and vacant commercial spaces downtown and if the adjacent Milroy hotel [Westcorp] is eventually built, its location would be wonderfully suitable for a tourism office.

Building on Kelownaѻýs waterfront pretty well commits that space to forever have a built structure on it ѻý and forever block our view of the lake. This space belongs to the whole community, and while tourism is important, so too is our visual access to our lake. This is still the wrong location for this or any  building.

Sharron J Simpson, Kelowna

 

 

 

 

 



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