Journal Pioneer

Renovation­s to nearly 150-year building on Summerside waterfront underway

- BY COLIN MACLEAN Colin.MacLean@JournalPio­neer.com

Renovation work has started at 340 Water St. in Summerside.

The large industrial building, former long-time home of the P.E.I. Bag Company, has been unused for several years, except for a small section that was renovated for a single apartment.

The building was purchased by Debbie McGrath, of Jackson’s Point, Ontario, in 2017.

Her intention is to renovate it into mixed-use residentia­l/business units, with apartments on the second and third storeys and office space on the ground floor. The work is expected to take about a year to complete. McGrath is the owner and president of HR.com, which specialize­s in various human resources-related services, including online education programs and certificat­ions.

Her company has offices in the U.S. and Canada, including one that opened in the Holman Building in 2016. That office recently moved to the old Bag Company building and is operating out of where the apartment used to be. McGrath previously said she bought the building because she loved its character and scenic location on the Summerside waterfront.

The building has a long history in the community. It was constructe­d around 1870 by the Lefurgey family.

After uncovering a section of the chimney a few years ago, a previous owner found dozens of signatures from P.E.I. Bag Company employees starting around the 1930s.

The building also temporaril­y housed the 105th Battalion during the First World War after their barracks burned down.

The old vault is still in the building as well and it’s rumoured that someone once tried to break into it in the 1940s by digging a tunnel.

 ?? COLIN MACLEAN/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Renovation work has started at the former long-time home of the P.E.I. Bag Company.
COLIN MACLEAN/JOURNAL PIONEER Renovation work has started at the former long-time home of the P.E.I. Bag Company.

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