JDI continues effort to demolish Saint John heritage property
CBC
J.D. Irving is again facing barriers to tearing down a dilapidated 81-year-old building, despite a new pitch to replace it with a park instead of a parking lot.
The Paikowsky Residence, also known as the Brown House, sits on the corner of King Street East and Carmarthen streets in the south-central peninsula area of the city, on land owned by JDI.
The six-unit apartment house has been vacant, boarded up and disconnected from the electrical grid for six years.
The company has requested that it be allowed to demolish the building, but the Heritage Development Board recommended Wednesday that the application be denied.
Paula Radwan, a city councillor and heritage board member, said Irving has owned the building since 2003 and is the reason it's deteriorating. At Wednesday's meeting of the board, she asked Irving representative Douglas Dean to speak to the heritage arguments for demolishing the building.
"I felt very disappointed that he couldn't even speak to why he thought that it should be taken down, other than the fact that it has become dilapidated because of their neglect," she told Information Morning Saint John.
The heritage board made the same recommendation to deny the request in 2016, and Saint John council accepted it at the time. In 2016 Irving proposed demolishing the building and replacing it with a parking lot and a small park.
Now council will review the case next month and decide if Irving is still barred from demolishing the building. In this proposal Irving said the plan now is to install a playground and "historical park" in its place.
The heritage staff report said the building represents a unique time in Saint John history. It was built in 1941, which is much later than the Victorian and Queen Anne buildings in that area. But that doesn't take away from its heritage importance, staff wrote, because it shows an example of simplified Colonial Revival style.
This style of building was popular between 1880 and 1960, the report said. The Paikowsky building has a hipped roof, symmetrical façade, wooden shutters and other elements that make it a genuine example of that style.
"All the character-defining elements of its façade are still intact," the report says.
"Given the limited domestic residential construction during the early years of the Second World War, the Paikowsky Residence represents a rare, intact, and quintessential example of this unique simplified Colonial Revival style in Saint John."
Irving bought the property about 25 years ago and, for a while, rented out the apartments.
In response to a CBC News request, Irving spokesperson Anne McInerney said that in 2016, the house was deemed "unfit for human habitation by our engineer and the last tenant was evicted for that reason."