Downtown Bureau

A Big Victory For Downtown Hamilton

Despite the swath of trendy cafes, and restaurants, and art galleries downtown, people still spend all their time talking about Lister.

By Jason Leach
Published May 16, 2005

Well, the news finally arrived - the historic Lister Block on James St North will be redeveloped within two years. We hope.

I'm sure I'm not the only one who is elated about this decision, but still in the back of my mind have those thoughts of "I'll believe it when I'm walking inside it."

Granted, this is the most solid proposal we've ever seen for the site and with the city's agreement to pay $30 million in rent over 15 years, there should be no problem with the developers acquiring the necessary financing to move forward with the project.

For some reason, this building has become the icon of downtown Hamilton. Despite the swath of trendy cafes and restaurants that have popped up on King William St. in recent years and the even newer phenomenon of James St. North becoming a hub for artists and their galleries, people still spend all their time talking about Lister.

Some have called it the single most important site in our entire city. Its redevelopment would signal that Hamilton has turned the corner. Its vacancy and decrepit appearance a constant reminder that this is still the same old Hamilton. Now, I'm not entirely fond of the way in which the deal went down and was saddened to hear that the entire building and neighbouring building to the north will be demolished, although I think Lister may have been in danger of coming down on its own.

A couple of years back I accused the city of having different standards for different people. For example, the owners of the failed loft building on Dundurn Street South have had non-stop notices postered on their front door by the city demanding that every window be boarded up and the building be made secure.

This is supposed to be common practice with all empty buildings, but as we've been able to observe with our own eyes, the owners of Lister didn't come close to complying with this city bylaw and I've never once seen anything posted on the outside wall of the building.

The issue of democracy always seems to come up when dealing with city hall. You and I pay their salaries, yet we are completely left out of the loop when a major decision like this is to be made. Democracy doesn't just give us a voice once every four years. It's supposed to give us a voice. Period. No matter the issue. No matter the buddy-buddy developer involved.

That will always be a thorny issue with me until the city begins to include the public in these types of debates. Look at The Big Idea series that ran recently in the Spectator. There was more creativity jumping off the page from average citizens then you'll see in five years from our city council.

Having said all of that, this project looks good. Actually it looks great. A much needed boost for our downtown and entire city image.

Artist's rendition of the new Lister Block
Artist's rendition of the new Lister Block

Here's hoping we will turn that symbolic corner in the next two years when the 'new Lister' is built. A thousand new dwelling units have been created downtown in the past few years, with many more about to apply for funding under the city's 'convert to residential' loan program.

Head downtown for youself and walk the streets. You'll be amazed at the increasing number of middle aged couples, young couples with children and urban 'hipsters' that are becoming a common sight strolling streets once reserved for folks who lived on them. The mix of people is getting quite healthy.

I am not one to say "we need to get the homeless out of there" or "the young punks with black nail polish and coloured Mohawks are scary." I love the mix of people. From all walks of life and all corners of the planet. It's how cities have always been and how they function the best.

With the positive momentum now growing with the Lister announcement I think it is only fitting to offer my suggestion to city council for the next move that is a critical piece of the downtown puzzle - turn the south leg of King at Gore Park into a pedestrian-only zone.

The timing is perfect for this area of downtown to be allowed to reach its full potential. We have a European-style streetscape with cobblestone and the wonderful Gore Park fountain sitting in the heart of our city. Think of the life that could form on this stretch of King from John to James - buskers, musicians, artists, street performers, children's entertainers, etc. This area of Hamilton could become so much different and so much more fun in a short time if city council will take this next step.

The HSR can easily be re-routed so the buses don't need to turn around here. In fact, they should be going straight up to the waterfront and turning at Burlington Street or the Marine Museum.

With the newly renovated Art Gallery of Hamilton, a new Lister Block with street facing retail space and a pedestrian-only zone from James to John at Gore Park, our city would suddenly have an influx of new life and a new sense of urbanity and culture out on the streets.

Being downtown would become an experience with constant entertainment, festivals, parades, music, art and just simply sitting on huge patios all along the Gore enjoying the heartbeat of Hamilton as it grows stronger and stronger.

Council has made a great decision by moving the Lister project forward. Now is the time to take the next steps, not to sit back in comfort. We have an opportunity to seize this momentum and literally make history in our city. Let's go for it!

Jason Leach was born and raised in the Hammer and currently lives downtown with his wife and children. You can follow him on twitter.

7 Comments

View Comments: Nested | Flat

Read Comments

[ - ]

By urbananimal (registered) | Posted None at

Can we afford the "incentive" given for the Lister? I do not think so. But while everything else continues to sink, democracy, the environment, social services, at least we'll have a spiffy new building! This is just another bad deal disguised as the savior of the core. It will also take more than public input but informed public input that is actually listened to. As long as we keep voting the same faces over and over, or those they favour, we keep asking for what we get. An unresponsive government catering to their own desires to the detriment of all else. Until we see a change in the decision making process, nothing will truly improve.

Permalink | Context

[ - ]

By commuter (anonymous) | Posted December 29, 2006 at 23:22:40

I bet the restoration will simply be a facade over a new building occupied by dusty gov't offices built to minimum standards of design since the renters are guaranteed. The labourers have encouraged the inside to rot from no roof so they can justify demolition.

Moving people around does not create new people and jobs, it just moves them and leaves an empty building somewhere else.

I prefer to hand over properties to developers if they create places to live to attract younger spenders. With all due respect the economy of Gore Park went downhill when it was replaced by a bus terminal for the Bingo crowd.

Forget tourism, downtown needs actual people buying more than postcards and bear-claws.

Most people who come cannot believe that the cool old buildings are encouraged to rot so a more profitable parking lot can be 'built'.

Kingston and Guelph (and Dundas) know this and still have something to do and somewhere to go downtown.

-Optimistic Cynic

Permalink | Context

[ - ]

By Pertz (anonymous) | Posted January 09, 2007 at 23:54:13

As a previously regular HSR user and now daily driver, I'd have to say that getting rid of the bus stops in the gore park area would be a very bad idea. In addition to making it easier to get to a future better downtown, the fact that there are always people there for a good reason (waiting for buses) makes it safer.

I would however, support making the south leg of King pedestrian only, and I would take it a step further: King street becomes two lanes starting at Wellington. Why not extend it all the way to Bay? (any good driver coming from the east takes Hunter or Cannon anyways) Extend Gore park north over two lanes, and put the bus stops all along the north side King in front of Gore park. Cannon and Hunter are perfectly fine expressways for those traveling west. King should be for people going to or coming from downtown.

Permalink | Context

[ - ]

By Banphrionsa (anonymous) | Posted July 23, 2007 at 21:07:19

oh look, it's been more than two years, and lister block is still the same. what a shock that this plan wasn't followed through...

Permalink | Context

[ - ]

By Steve (registered) | Posted August 18, 2007 at 02:01:06

Recently I noticed all the graffiti has been cleaned off of the entire building...I guess thats some progress?? The other thing is the second floor large bay window on James next to the Thomas building has been wide open for a while now too. Could it be this is the restoration process starting? Or did some kids or crackheads just want some light inside while they smoke and drink or whatever it is they do in there?

Permalink | Context

[ - ]

By courtneydubbz16 (anonymous) | Posted October 30, 2007 at 09:35:06

stay away from the east side of hamilton!!! yu will end up on crack just like me

Permalink | Context

[ - ]

By quinn (anonymous) | Posted January 04, 2010 at 15:06:05

The progress of the building is awesome!!! It will give life to what is now sad, the care and restoration of this building should be commended!!

Permalink | Context

View Comments: Nested | Flat

Post a Comment

You must be logged in to comment.

Events Calendar

There are no upcoming events right now.
Why not post one?

Recent Articles

Article Archives

Blog Archives

Site Tools

Feeds