Calgarians get back personalized 1988 Olympic bricks: ‘We’ve done the impossible’
Global News
In an 11th-hour turnaround last month, after getting an earful from people dismayed their beloved keepsakes would be trashed, the city said it would at least try to return some.
Some people say it with flowers. Some with an engagement ring.
For Keith Beggs, it was a brick surrounded by mortar and placed at Calgary’s Olympic Plaza that showed his true intent for the woman who would become his wife.
“She was saying, ‘Are we serious or not?’ So I said, ‘I know, I’ll buy a brick,'” Beggs recalled Friday as he and his wife, Barb, picked up the brick inscribed with their names.
Looking back, he said, there’s only one reason he bought the brick.
“So she’d marry me.”
As part of a fundraiser ahead of the 1988 Olympics, people could purchase and personalize a brick to line the ground of the plaza on the east end of downtown for $19.88. Over the decades, some of the bricks became so eroded, the writing was barely visible, while many others were cracked and gouged.
The Beggs’ brick was one of some 33,000 slated for destruction, as the aging plaza and adjacent performing arts complex undergo a $660-million overhaul. The city had said the bricks would be too fragile to salvage.
But in an 11th-hour turnaround last month, after getting an earful from people dismayed their beloved keepsakes would be trashed, the city said it would at least try to return some.