One of Calgary's oldest motels could be rezoned for high-rise residential towers - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:13 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

One of Calgary's oldest motels could be rezoned for high-rise residential towers

The owner of a distinctive northeast Calgary motel is asking the city to rezone the property in favour ofmultiple new residential towers.

The Ambassador Motor Inn has operated since 1962, but its owner is seeking a rezoning

The Ambassador Motor Inn has operated at the corner of 16th Avenue and Moncton Road N.E. since 1962. (Google Maps)

The owner of a distinctive northeast Calgary motel is asking the city to rezone the property in favour ofmultiple new residential towers.

LenardPerozni, owner of the Ambassador Motor Inn, says the motel has been hanging on through COVID-19but times are tough in the industry.

"We've been there [since 1962]," Perozni said. "But things have changed. People are travelling, and they don't know what Calgary is, and just go to the [hotel] chains."

Conceptual drawings for the redevelopment show two 20-storeymixed-use buildings, along with a shorter six-storey multi-residential building to the north.

The owner of the Ambassador Motor Inn on 16th Avenue N.E. wants the city of Calgary to rezone the land the motel currently sits on for multiple new residential towers. (Abugov Kaspar Architecture)

The area's city councillor Druh Farrell said the site would be a good one for increased density in the area.

"It's on a major transit corridor, bus rapid transit, as well as being quite centrally located with lots of amenities around it," Farrell said.

"So I would say that it's an appropriate redevelopment site, and it's really down to the detail of the scale and design."

Ambassador Motor Inn

The Ambassador Motor Inn has operated since1962, initially built by Mike and Jean Porozni, Lenard's parents.

Mike had a number of successful small business ventures, including a motel in Banff and a14-suite apartment block, before building the Ambassador Motor Inn in Calgary.

When he was 17, Perozni remembers his father dealing with significant painfor a period of months prior to learning he had kidney stones.Inthe interim, Perozni essentially ran the motel.

"So it was a little tough for about four months. I had to get out of school early," he said.

"But it was no problem. We [also] ran the motel in Banff. We did have maids, but my mom and I did probably 30 rooms a day, plus the laundry and everything else."

Mike Porozni and his wife, Jean. Mike and Jean operated the Ambassador Motor Inn in Calgary until 1968. His son, Lenard, now owns the motel. (Romanian Pioneer Museum of Boian)

Growing up in a family that ran motels,Peroznididn't really know any other lifestyle. It wasn't like most jobs, where people leave the office at 5 p.m. to go home.

"My dad had his first hotel when I was born," Perozni said.

"You don't have to think about it, because you grew up that way."

Mike and Jean operated the inn until 1968, and Perozni ever since. He said while theAmbassador Motor Inn has been lucky given its location off 16th Avenue, the hospitality industry has changed.

"Everyone is going to hotels, rather than motels," he said. "[A lot of places] just closed up, and can't make it, especially with this COVID."

Site specifics

Farrell said the site could also complement a new residential andcommercial area planned across the street on the former Midfield mobile home park land.

On the websitedetailing the proposal to rezone the site of the Ambassador Motor Inn, it's mentioned that nearby residents may have concerns regarding building shadowing and parking requirements.

The proposal notes that the bulk of parking would be underground and street parking should not be necessitated.

An aerial view of the Ambassador Motor Inn, located on 16th Avenue N.E. in Calgary. (Abugov Kaspar Architecture)

As far as building shadowing, Farrell said there would be enough room to mitigate impacts on northern neighbourhoods.

"It does have the benefit of being large enough, there's enough space for it to have an appropriate transition," she said. "So those are the kinds of things that the city planning department will be looking at when examining the details of the proposal."

The website for the proposal is currently accepting survey responses and feedback. A potential application for the rezoning would potentially be looked at by the city next spring.

Given the current state of the market, timelines for approved construction would be contingent on a number of variables.

"It all depends on the density they give us,"Perozni said. "But all of these new buildings will benefit the look of Calgary."

With files from Scott Dippel