Reimagining office space, Indigenous investment key to downtown Winnipeg's future, leaders say - Action News
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Reimagining office space, Indigenous investment key to downtown Winnipeg's future, leaders say

Indigenous leaders believe their financial investments in Winnipeg's downtown could revitalize the area while a commercial real estate agent thinks remodeling office space is key to getting a post-pandemic workforce into the area.

Manitoba Mtis Federation plans to turn yoga studio into luxury boutique hotel

Sean Kliewer, vice-president of Colliers International in Winnipeg. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

High above Portage and Main, the 20th floor inside the Richardson Building offerssweeping panoramic views of Winnipeg and rows of empty offices.

On a lower floor in the same skyscraper at 1 Lombard Place is recently renovated modern office space with new collaborative tables to draw employees back into work.

"It's all about what is my experience in my office," said Sean Kliewer, vice-president of Colliers International in Winnipeg.

Kliewer, who specializes in leasing commercial space on behalf of owners, said there are myriad reasons why employers want to maintain offices for employees to work in, including privacy and security.

But with the normalization of remote work during the COVID-19 pandemic, he said incentives have to be provided. Interior designers are adding collaborative space for employees.

Reimagining office space, Indigenous investment key to downtown Winnipeg's future, leaders say

2 years ago
Duration 2:45
CBC Winnipeg News has been focusing our attention on downtown Winnipeg. It's an area of the city that's long struggled and been hit particularly hard by the pandemic.Indigenous leaders believe their financial investments in the downtown could be a game changer, while others think office space has to be reimagined.

Standing tables, couches, games and nap rooms are all being added to encourage people to come to work.

Kliewer said 13 per cent of the Richardson Building is currently vacant, which is in line with the overall office vacancy rate in the city. He said it's important to note there's been a lot of new commercial space built in Winnipeg in the last three years including at True North Square.

For example, he notes the 20th and 19th floors, which were most recently occupied by the KPMG audit firm, became empty after the company moved into new modern digs nearby at 360 Main St.

"This is the building blocks of a legitimate downtown," he said.

David Chartrand, president of the Manitoba Mtis Federation, shares Kliewer's optimism for Winnipeg's downtown. The MMF is investing at least $50 million in the area.

"I think it's going to come back. I think suburbia can only go so far," Chartrand said.

The MMF is planning to spend $14 million to turn this building at 280 Fort Street, which currently houses Yoga Public, into a luxury boutique hotel. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

The MMF is planning to convert a three-storey building at 280 Fort Street, which currently houses Yoga Public, into a luxury boutique hotel.

The MMF bought the building about a year ago and Chartrand says he hopes to have the 36-room hotel, which will include a specialty coffee shop, juice bar and bakery, open by 2025. The cost of the project is about $14 million.

"We want to make sure that when we have our visitors coming into this city of ours that if they stayed in our boutique hotel they're going to remember that hotel. They want to come back just to be at that hotel."

Nearby at Portage and Main, the MMF is turning the historic 1912 Bank of Montreal building into a Mtis heritage centre it hopes will attract tourism.

David Chartrand, president of the Manitoba Mtis Federation, inside an old bank vault in the historic 1912 Bank of Montreal building at Portage and Main. The MMF is turning the building into a Mtis heritage centre. (Austin Grabish/CBC)

"When they come here firstly I hope they'll really reflect upon the history and contribution the Mtis made in bringing western Canada into Confederation," Chartrand said.

The centre will feature 1,000 books on Mtis history purchased for $250,000, holograms, and a bank museum in the basement where the building's safes and vaults are located.

Grocery store could go into the Bay

Down the street on Portage Avenue, another historic building the Bay is set to be transformed into a mixed-use development with housing, a health and healing centre, a rooftop garden, restaurants, a museum and possibly a grocery store.

Lawyers are still working to finalize the deal, announced in April, said Jerry Daniels, Grand Chief of the Southern Chiefs Organization, which is set to receive the ownership of the iconic building soon.

A man wearing an orange ribbon shirt smiles.
Jerry Daniels, Grand Chief of the Southern Chiefs organization, said a community consultation for the future of the Bay building is planned soon. (Austin Grabish/CBC)

"We want to be able to show that First Nations could be prosperous, that we can establish strong, accountable, transparent governance that are best practice-based," said Daniels.

The project, which is slated to take 3-4 years to develop, is estimated to cost about $135 million, Daniels said. He said they have 80 per cent of the costs raised and will need to secure funding for the rest.

Back at Portage and Main, Kliewer is confident the old KPMG space, which has been sitting empty for about a year, will be rented out.

The office tower at 433 Main St. in Winnipeg is an example of a building where some office space was converted into residential space. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

And although there is a push to turn vacant office space into residential units, he doesn't think the building would ever undergo that transformation because it's not "functionally obsolete"unlike 433 Main Street down the road.

The tower, which houses the federal passport office, had its 10 upper floors converted a couple of years ago into residential units while the first five floors remained as offices.

"It's great. It's a good news story," he said of the conversion of office to residential space.