Читать книгу Unbuilt Calgary - Stephanie White - Страница 8
Chapter 3
ОглавлениеThe Shape of Calgary
There is a taxonomy of cities based on their origins: company towns have few civic spaces, as they are not based on demonstrations of democracy but on corporate organization — there is work and there is where the workers live. Usually, such towns remain small, their size dependent upon the technology and labour force needed to maintain the industry. Other cities, such as Halifax, originated as military camps. Laid out and occupied by the British Army in 1754, at Halifax’s heart is a parade square dominated by an Anglican church at its east end and surrounded by a series of small city blocks that were originally barracks. Halifax is still a military town, and although the Citadel is a famous tourist site, it is also Department of National Defence property. The Grand Parade is Halifax’s potent and ceremonial civic space, more so than the lawn in front of the provincial courthouse or the legislature.
On the other hand, both Edmonton and Calgary started as forts, which exist today as historic reconstruction, their sense of civic engagement sidelined to a historical curiosity, part of a deep history of little relevance compared to subsequent civic definitions. This is quite clear in Calgary: historically the conjunction of the Elbow and the Bow Rivers was an aboriginal meeting place. So many of our Canadian cities and towns started at such meeting sites, whether it be a small river meeting a large one, such as all the towns along the South Saskatchewan or the Fraser or the Mackenzie Rivers; or a river meeting a lake, as seen in any of the cities and towns on the Great Lakes; or a river meeting the ocean, in places such as Vancouver and Bella Coola. Settlement needs fresh water. Forts went where native settlements or meeting places had been because of the presence of fresh water, and the remains of forts are generally somewhere at the heart of all Canadian cities.
In Calgary the 1875 North-West Mounted Police fort at the corner of the Elbow and Bow Rivers protected First Nations from the predations of the American whiskey industry, which was making incursions into what was then the Northwest Territories, a generally unpoliced and unsettled area. Its southern boundary, unrecognized by both the Blackfoot and itinerant traders, had been established as the 49th parallel by the Jay Treaty of 1794. The purpose of the NWMP was twofold: to maintain a good relationship with indigenous peoples in the British territories and to maintain British sovereignty in the face of the manifest destiny of the United States. As First Nations compliance was necessary and even vital, forts were placed where those First Nations already had long-established bases.
When the prairies were surveyed by the Dominion Land Survey in the 1870s and 1880s, for both the route of the CPR and the preparatory division of land for settlement that the railway would enable, the location of the forts influenced the route of the railway. The linkage between military use and transportation systems is informative. During the Riel Rebellion of 1885, the NWMP travelled by CPR train from Winnipeg to Duck Lake — a trip of a couple of days rather than the two weeks it would take by horse. The quashing of the Riel Rebellion was facilitated by the CPR, a transportation system, and the linking of all the southern prairie forts by the railway and the telegraph meant that military response could be almost instantaneous. The ancient space-time continuum of the indigenous landscape was irreversibly changed by the coming of the rail.
Although Fort Calgary was the important beginning of the city, the Canadian Pacific Railway set up a rival centre based not on military order but on company influence. In CPR towns the potent site of power was the CPR station. Because the NWMP was not a military force at the scale of the British Army in Halifax or Victoria, and was just a police force meant to keep local aboriginal groups onside and to protect CPR interests, downtown Calgary developed an urban landscape of power that radiated out from the CPR station. The station was on 9th Avenue, and next to it was the CPR hotel, the Palliser. Across the intersection was the Grain Exchange, and across 9th from that was the Robin Hood Flour Mills, a significant landmark which stood until 1975. A block away from the Grain Exchange was the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) store, the particular terracotta design of which was based on Harrods, the famous department store in London that had opened in 1898. Across 1st street was the Bank of Montreal, the bank of the CPR and the Hudson’s Bay. This was Calgary’s component of the extended landscape of Scottish Montreal. Both the Canadian Pacific Railway and the Hudson’s Bay Company were populated by Scots. Lord Strathcona, for example, who turned the North-West Mounted Police into Lord Strathcona’s Horse, a regiment raised in Calgary for the Boer War, was Donald Smith, the financier of the Canadian Pacific and the official who pounded in the last spike at Craigellachie, British Columbia. Both the CPR and the Hudson’s Bay had Canadian headquarters in Montreal. Calgary was a link in the chain of commerce and influence that stretched from London to the Far East.
Between 1880 and 1900, Calgary existed as a company town, and the company was the Canadian Pacific Railway. Notice there was no dominating church or military presence, and City Hall was a couple of blocks away, in what was, at the time, a relatively insignificant location across the street from the market. Changes in transportation after the Second World War, such as the emergence of commercial air travel, an increase in car ownership, coordination with the U.S. trucking industry, and the building of both the Interstate Highway System and the Trans-Canada Highway, diminished the importance of the public rail services, and with that diminution came the loss of the importance of the train station. In the 1960s, passenger service was severely curtailed, and by the late 1960s, the CPR separated various branches of its operations — freight, hotels, real estate, express services, its airline CP Air, and its extensive telecommunications network — and sold most of its subsidiaries off over the next twenty years.
Figure 3-1. The front of the CPR Station on 9th Avenue. The Palliser is on the right edge of the photograph. This is an example of a busy and vital corporate urban open space, rather than a civic space such as those found in front of city halls or public parks. The forecourt to the railway station is largely used for parking and deliveries. Railway stations are double-fronted: one side faces the city and the other is the platform facing the train, where emotional welcomes and farewells are held. This street front is not emotional. It is a service space, although probably one of the largest formal open areas in the city at the time.
University of Saskatchewan Archives, Keith Ewart Photograph Collection, Railway Stations.
Unlike Winnipeg and Vancouver, both of which had huge stone neo-classical railway stations for both the CPR and the CNR, Calgary had a long, low, linear platform station. Calgary in its early days wasn’t a big player in the overall CPR network; it was really just a stop between Winnipeg and Vancouver and the link to the provincial capital in Edmonton, which was served by the Grand Trunk and Pacific Railway, later the CNR.
When, in the early 1960s, Canada’s centennial appeared on the new horizon of national identity, many cities felt that they must come up with major centennial projects by 1967 to mark the new postwar Canada, to attract tourists travelling the country in ever-increasing numbers, and, in the process, to brand their cities. Projects such as the Sudbury Nickel or the Wawa Goose, and many other celebratory markers of cities across Canada, often have their origins in a centennial project. For its part, Calgary built the Husky Tower on 9th Avenue and Centre Street, replacing the old Canadian Pacific Railway station, which was relocated underneath a shopping centre and office complex, Palliser Square, built by the CPR beside the Palliser Hotel.
However, just before this act of erasure, in 1962 the Canadian Pacific Railway hired a New York planning firm to replan their land holdings on the south side of 9th Avenue between 1st Street East and 1st Street West. At the same time, the City of Calgary commissioned the Robinson Hanson Report and the 1960 Transportation Plan, which recommended the removal of the barrier that the CPR railway tracks presented to southward downtown expansion. The CPR main line, and the CPR ownership of the block-wide swath through downtown Calgary, was like a river with a couple of bridges across it: downtown was effectively an island surrounded by the Bow River on the north and west edges, the Elbow River on the east and the CPR tracks on the south. One recommendation was to relocate the tracks to the south bank of the Bow River and allow the downtown to then flood south. This was an era when rivers and lakefronts were seen as barriers rather than amenities and were thus suitable for transportation corridors. A well-known and notorious example of this attitude underpins the Gardiner Expressway in Toronto, which, among other things, separates downtown Toronto from the shore of Lake Ontario. By 1960 the site of Fort Calgary, long gone, had become a Canadian National Railway terminal yard forming the industrial east end of downtown, bordered by two rivers and the tracks. With the removal of CNR activities, the land could easily become a freeway interchange. In the early 1960s, it was inevitable that transportation led planning, an ethos that sank deep into many cities, the results of which we still live with.