Castlegar finds partners for Kootenay Gallery project

The City of Castlegar has found two groups to help turn a city-owned downtown property into the new home of the Kootenay Gallery and build new affordable housing.

The city sought expressions of interest last year for partners on the project at 310 Columbia Ave. and 1224 3rd St., the site of the Eremenko block. It said it wanted someone who could move the project forward through the design, construction, and management phases.

Council agreed this week to go with a joint proposal from Steel River Group, an Indigenous-owned Calgary-based group of companies who would be involved on the construction side, and Vancouver-based Lu’ma Native Housing Society, who would manage the residential units.

A staff report said the city also received another strong proposal from the Connective Support Society.

A selection committee made up of three members of city staff and three members of the Kootenay Gallery reviewed the proposals and conducted interviews before deciding to recommend the proposal from Steel River and Lu’ma.

The staff report said Steel River has offices throughout BC and Alberta and has been involved in recent housing projects in Grand Forks, Cranbrook, and Osoyoos. Lu’ma is a non-profit with experience managing a variety of mixed use and mixed tenancy projects in the Lower Mainland.

City planning manager Meeri Durand says one of the things that appealed to them about the bid was that the design team has experience designing museum and art gallery spaces in Banff National Park.

“This was an important consideration given the unique nature and needs of the project combining the two objectives of housing and art gallery space,” she wrote in the report.

City council’s discussion centred less on whether to enter into the partnership and more on whether councillors should have been part of the selection process.

Some, including Sue Heaton-Sherstobitoff and Dan Rye, wished they had been more involved. But Maria McFaddin and mayor Kirk Duff disagreed.

With help from the Columbia Basin Trust, the city bought the property with the goal of redeveloping the site for the Kootenay Gallery, which has long been hoping to find a location closer to the city centre. Its present location is across from the airport, next to the Doukhobor Discovery Centre.

Two concepts have been developed, one that would co-ordinate the funding and construction of the two building components, and the other would see them developed independently.

Greg Nesteroff
Greg Nesteroff
Greg has been working in West Kootenay news media off and on since 1998. When he's not on the air, he's busy writing about local history. He'll soon publish a book about the man who founded the ghost town of Sandon.

Continue Reading

cjat Now playing play

ckqr Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Trail breaks 27-year-old temperature record

According to Environment Canada, the thermometer hit 36.9 degrees yesterday. The old record for Sept. 3 was 36 degrees set in 1998. Record-keeping dates back to 1928.

Two Trail men die suddenly in separate incidents

The men, both in their 60s, died within a day of each other.

Wildsight calls for emergency order on Record Ridge mine

Wildsight says it will seek the order for the endangered mountain holly fern after BC's environmental assessment office decided the Record Ridge project doesn't need to be subjected to a full-blown review.

Out-of-control wildfire shuts down section of Coquihalla highway

Highway 5 between Hope and Merritt remains closed due to an out-of-control wildfire. 

Sinixt Confederacy sues BC government over lack of consultation

The Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation said it has filed two constitutional challenges in response to the way the province has treated them in the wake of a Supreme Court of Canada ruling.
- Advertisement -