Huge 3-year-old hole in the ground at prime corner tests patience in Saint John - Action News
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New Brunswick

Huge 3-year-old hole in the ground at prime corner tests patience in Saint John

The former Woolworths store building in uptown Saint John was torn down in 2021 with promises of a 12-floor, mostly residential building. Almost three years later, it is still an empty, fenced-in hole.

'I want to see a building there ASAP,' says Mayor Donna Reardon

Giant hole in the middle of the city hurts business, says Saint John restaurateur

6 months ago
Duration 1:45
Billy Grant says business at his seafood restaurant just hasnt been the same since the building next to him was torn down in 2021, leaving a gaping hole in the heart of the city.

It's been nearly three years since a building, still referred to as the former Woolworth's store, was torn down to make way for a new development at a prime uptown corner in Saint John.

Today, instead of a promised 12-storey, multi-use building or even a start on onethe site at the head of King Street remains agiant, empty hole in the ground.

Saint Johners can't see it filled fast enough.

"I just wish something was done with it," said restaurant owner Billy Grant. "Either fill it in and put a lawn there, or do something soon."

Billy's Seafood Companyis right next to the gaping construction site at the top of King Street, across from King's Square. He said being next to the empty lot for so long has hurt business.

Man standing in front of his restaurant smiling at camera.
Billy Grant says that his restaurant, Billy Seafood Company, has suffered business losses as a result of being right next to the hole. (Nipun Tiwari/CBC)

"Going on three or four years, this is not acceptable," he said. "It's really affected my company a lot. Business is down from it. I mean, we have other factors as well.

"I know we went through COVID and all that, but I think the building came down with COVID. It's just been one perfect storm after the other for me."

Grant saidtourism season has been his restaurant's financial saving grace,but the development, or lack thereof,in the area has been a barrierfor the restaurant to accessthe tourismmarket, with sidewalks being gone as well.

"[They say]'Billy, it's hard to get into your front door.' They want to meet me," Grant said.

Developer Percy Wilbur bought the lot at King and Charlotte streets in late 2020.In the past, hehas attributed theproject delays to large cost increases but would not be interviewed for this story.

His project's plan is for commercial space on the lower floors and apartments above. When the building was demolished in June 2021,Wilbur said it would take2 years to build.The site has not seen any significant development, however.

There isan empty foundation fromthe old building surrounded by barriers and chain-link fences.

The City of Saint John's communication department also refused to provide someone to talk to about where things standand said one would be presented at a city growth committee meeting next week.

City officials want to see a building

Grant isn't the only one eager to see the project completed. The site is in Coun. Gerry Lowe's ward and he just wants to "wake up and see a beautiful building there."

"We take the flack. It's my ward and the mayor lives uptown and we get flack all the time," he said.

Lowe saidthat last he heard, Wilbur was trying to get a commercial tenant as an anchor for the property,something that, according to Lowe, has been a struggle for the developer.

"We've been told that something's going tohappen in the fall and he's trying to get a tenant."

"It's just a situation where [Wilbur] tore it down, and he had some verbal commitments as to who was going to go in the first couple floors and it never worked out, and it's been a problem ever since."

"I want to see a building there ASAP," said Mayor Donna Reardon after the city's most recent common council meeting.

A white man in a red fleece with grey hair stands outside a building.
Councillor Gerry Lowe says he just wants to wake up and see a beautiful building there. (Radio-Canada)

Last year,Reardon said the vacant lotwas holding up two separate revitalization projects in the area, includinga bilateral project with funding that would be lostif not used by 2026.

But she said that project, which aims to revitalize Charlotte Street, is going to continue.

"We have to use the money by a certain date. So those [upgrades] are going to proceed, I believe, this year," she said.

The city's communications department confirmed that the Charlotte Street upgrades are to begin construction in July and areexpected to be completed by November of this year.

It's sad,says Saint John resident

Jayme Gray-Watson has lived in the city for 17 years and finds the pit in an otherwise beautiful city sad.

"It's one of those things where people that's all they're seeing right now when ... driving through King Square," she said.

"We have beautiful buildings up here. You pass the market and all of a sudden you're in a deep hole and they've had to cut out some of the sidewalks.

"So waking up on Charlotte Street is atrocious because they've had to cut back on the three lanes up there to make it walking accessible to the City Market."

Woman standing in front of empty construction lot.
Jayme Gray-Watson says the area looks sad in an otherwise beautiful city and that the hole should be filled in if nothing else can be done. (Nipun Tiwari/CBC)

Gray-Watson says that if the owner can't do anything with it, heshould consider selling it so someone else can.

"Something beautiful should be made," she said.

"I understand it's a residential area, but even if there's nothing that can be done, fill it in, let people sit there. It could be a park."

Grant agrees.

"They should fill it in, make a park until some structure can go up."