Calgary Herald

FLAMES TO UNVEIL MEGA COMPLEX

Arena, stadium and field house will be combined on West Village site

- JASON MARKUSOFF

The Calgary Flames’ vision for its new arena project is a blockbuste­r that would take up several blocks’ worth of prime land west of downtown — bringing together a new hockey arena plus a football stadium and an amateur sports fieldhouse, the Herald has learned.

It’s a megaprojec­t that could easily cost more than half a billion dollars, and features a component more likely to draw in civic funding support than if it were merely new stand- alone homes for the Flames and Stampeders.

By bundling in a fieldhouse designed for track meets, indoor soccer and other amateur sports, Flames CEO Ken King is proposing to build something on the top of the city’s own project wish list, and potentiall­y gives the proposal the sort of public benefit that Mayor Naheed Nenshi has said is essential if city hall is to become a project partner.

The indoor multi- sport complex could make the Flames project more “palatable” to the city, said Jason Zaran, incoming chairman of the Calgary Multisport Fieldhouse Society.

“A multi- sport facility is needed in this town, and I think if they can be the ones to bring it to the table and get it done, it looks good on them as well,” Zaran said.

His group has been working with the city’s recreation department on a $ 202- million, publicly- funded developmen­t at Foothills Athletic Park, just north of McMahon Stadium. In February, city staff ranked it at the top of the city’s unfunded infrastruc­ture projects.

King has offered the fieldhouse society a tantalizin­g Plan B — constructi­ng the facility as part of the stadium for the Canadian Football League team, which the Flames own. According to one source familiar with the plans, the football complex and fieldhouse would be part of the same convertibl­e building.

King shared his plans with Nenshi in mid- March, then the mayor relayed it to council in a closeddoor session Monday evening, multiple sources have confirmed. But there’s still no formal proposal submitted to council, and it’s unclear when King will finally reveal the ambitious concept to the public, though he did say a month ago the release was a “couple of weeks” away.

This three- in- one idea spawns numerous questions pertaining to Stampede Park’s Scotiabank Saddledome, the University of Calgary’s McMahon lands, and, of course, the City of Calgary, whose West Village lands the Flames are said to covet.

Combining an arena with a stadium/ fieldhouse takes up a much larger swath of the property around the Greyhound Station.

The city has been acquiring those lands for several years, and recently purchased the four- hectare GSL car dealership site for $ 36.9 million.

But it’s never been for sports facilities. The land would become part of the West Village blueprint for a future community of condo highrises and office buildings, akin to what’s under developmen­t in East Village.

Several councillor­s have said they’d be open to giving the Flames free land for a new arena, though the Herald could not confirm whether that’s what Ken King is asking for. Nenshi and council unanimousl­y oppose direct taxpayer subsidies for profession­al sports buildings, and King tried to head off talk of a massive funding request in a radio station interview last month.

“Before any of your listeners have conniption­s, when you see our project, people are just going to love it. And we’re not going to sneak in here and steal money from the city,” he told KISS 95.9.

In a voicemail Wednesday, King said he’s not yet prepared to discuss the proposal, which he’s been working on since at least 2007.

“I’m still in the quiet zone,” he said.

The Flames organizati­on now owns the Stampeders, Flames, Calgary Hitmen ( minor- league hockey) and Calgary Roughnecks ( lacrosse) — but they’re playing in some of their respective leagues’ oldest facilities, the 1960 McMahon Stadium and the 1983 Saddledome.

In Edmonton, the Oilers’ $ 480- million new arena will be complete by fall 2016. That city’s tax- backed loan, ticket tax and parking revenue will cover much of its cost.

Nenshi has been skeptical about the need for a new arena or for any city cost- sharing. In 2011, the mayor’s office refused to help set up an independen­t committee to study the project.

The mayor’s tone appears to have shifted slightly last month, after his meeting with King.

When asked about the arena at a Rotary Club speech, Nenshi reiterated that it must have some public benefit if it’s to garner public funding, and he praised the Flames’ six owners as “deeply committed” to Calgary and thoughtful about their process.

“Whatever solution we end up with is a solution we’ll get with great respect for one another and figuring out together what’s best for the community,” Nenshi said.

When you see our project, people are just going to love it. And we’re not going to sneak in here and steal money from the city.

 ?? TED RHODES/ CALGARY HERALD ?? The West Village section of downtown Calgary, west of 14th Street S. W., as seen Wednesday. The Calgary Flames organizati­on is reportedly interested in building new sports facilities here.
TED RHODES/ CALGARY HERALD The West Village section of downtown Calgary, west of 14th Street S. W., as seen Wednesday. The Calgary Flames organizati­on is reportedly interested in building new sports facilities here.
 ?? DEREK LEUNG/ GETTY IMAGES ?? The Scotiabank Saddledome opened in 1983, which makes it one of the oldest arenas in the National Hockey League. Two of the older rinks — in Edmonton, where a new building opens next year, and Long Island, where the Islanders are moving to Brooklyn —...
DEREK LEUNG/ GETTY IMAGES The Scotiabank Saddledome opened in 1983, which makes it one of the oldest arenas in the National Hockey League. Two of the older rinks — in Edmonton, where a new building opens next year, and Long Island, where the Islanders are moving to Brooklyn —...
 ?? CRYSTAL SCHICK/ CALGARY HERALD ?? McMahon Stadium, the home of the Calgary Stampeders, dates back to 1960 but there were major renovation­s last year, including new scoreboard­s and turf, as well as upgrades to the concourse and concession areas.
CRYSTAL SCHICK/ CALGARY HERALD McMahon Stadium, the home of the Calgary Stampeders, dates back to 1960 but there were major renovation­s last year, including new scoreboard­s and turf, as well as upgrades to the concourse and concession areas.

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