Calgary Herald

Ady saw highs, lows in her time as Tourism Calgary CEO

- MATT SCACE mscace@postmedia.com X: @mattscace6­7

Cindy Ady's tenure at the helm of Tourism Calgary was bookended by two crises: a flood and a pandemic.

In both cases, the city managed to weather the challenges. When the flood hit Calgary in 2013, putting on a successful Stampede was her first major achievemen­t.

“Even though we stuffed some things under the sofa ... it worked,” she said.

Ady, CEO of the organizati­on for the past decade, will retire at the end of this year, sparking a national search for her successor.

During those 10 years, she saw hotel occupancy dip to six per cent at the height of the pandemic. Yet, under her watch, Calgary's tourism industry has gone from contributi­ng $1.6 billion to $3.1 billion to the local economy, while its organizati­on's membership has increased nearly 60 per cent.

With the BMO Centre's expanded convention hall slated to open in spring 2024 — a facility she advocated for since the start of her time as CEO — Calgary is on the verge of being able to host major events that compete with Canada's largest cities, Ady said. It will open at a time when group travel is up, which she called a “fortuitous” developmen­t. Calgary will have hosted six “citywide” convention­s (those that bring in more than 600 hotel guest rooms) by the end of 2023, the agency said.

“The fact that we now can compete with the likes of Vancouver and Montreal and Toronto when it comes to the size of a convention centre, we have not had that opportunit­y,” she said.

The city has seen eight straight months of record numbers of hotel rooms being used, Ady said.

“I actually, in 20 years, haven't seen numbers like this before.”

MORE BOOSTS TO TOURISM TO COME ONLINE

And she marks coming developmen­ts such as the $205-million Glenbow Museum overhaul, the multimilli­on-dollar Arts Commons refresh and the Saddledome-replacing events centre as major landmarks that will add thrust to Calgary's tourism industry, she said.

Missing links are remaining, Ady noted, including a major hotel near the BMO Centre and eventual event centre that can support the crowds that come with them.

Ady said the Calgary Stampede board of directors and the Calgary Municipal Land Corp. are actively working on that file.

“Now we really all need to focus on the sand between the rocks — the interconne­ctivity, the transporta­tion opportunit­ies,” she said.

When the city hosts major events, it needs to improve at connecting visitors to its range of transporta­tion and other tourism opportunit­ies, she said, given more than half of convention visitors also engage in the tourism economy during their stay.

“You can hurt your brand by not being ready,” she said.

The city agency will release its new 10-year strategy in the coming months.

“We got to make sure we can deliver now. That's the key. You can put the facilities up, but you have to deliver.”

Ady's optimism about the city's trajectory makes her retirement bitterswee­t.

“It's time for that next set of legs to kind of pull it into its activation,” she said. “Within six years, this whole downtown core is going to be renewed and different than it is today."

We now can compete with ... Vancouver and Montreal and Toronto when it comes to the size of a convention centre.

 ?? GAVIN YOUNG FILES ?? Tourism Calgary CEO Cindy Ady is set to retire at the end of this year after leading the organizati­on for the past decade.
GAVIN YOUNG FILES Tourism Calgary CEO Cindy Ady is set to retire at the end of this year after leading the organizati­on for the past decade.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada