I attended the 40th annual Heritage Winnipeg Preservation Awards on April 1, 2026 in the Crystal Ballroom of the Fort Garry Hotel. Many great people and buildings honoured. You can read about all of them in here at the Heritage Winnipeg website.
If there was a theme this year, it was "a labour of love", which came up in most of the acceptance speeches. None of these projects were particularly high profile, and in each case the owners could have found a cheaper option to do what they did. Instead, they all chose the long-term future of their buildings over short-term return on their repair dollars.
These are some of my additional notes about the awards.
Residential Conservation Award: Roslyn Square (formerly Roslyn Court), 40 Osborne Street.
The Roslyn is owned by Globe Properties. Richard Morantz, CEO of Globe, said his father bought the building in 1969, and it has been the jewel in their portfolio ever since.
The award was primarily for the preservation of the building’s 500 windows. It was all custom work, of course, as nothing was standard sized, and took two years.
If I heard correctly during the owner’s acceptance speech, the project cost over $1.5m, or about a third of the building's assessed value. The owner said this illustrated that to renovate a building like this using proper methods, it a long-term investment.
Residential Conservation Award: Ches-Way Apartments at 240 Chestnut Street
I've followed this history of this building since 2020 and had a tour of it when it was completed last year. It took about three years from the time the owners got possession to it reopening. This was due to the amount of work that had to be done inside the brick potion of the block, which was a gut job due to it sitting vacant with a hole in the roof for a couple of years.
The amount of time and money that went into such a small building was enormous. What saved it was that it was over engineered, so there were no foundation issues to deal with, and it found a champion. New owners who felt that the neighbourhood deserved to have the Ches-Way around for another century.
Commercial Conservation Award: Saddlery Building, 284 William Avenue
I scratched my head about when I saw the program and wondered what building this was. When I Googled the address, I realised that I wrote about its history back in 2021. I'll have to update that post now that it has been renovated!
The building was literally on its last legs when CentreVenture stepped in to broker a deal to save it. Many surprises greeted the architects, engineers and construction workers after work got underway, but they worked together to save the structure and ready it for another century of use.
Commercial Conservation Award: Fort Garry Hotel, 222 Broadway
What can you say about the Fort Garry Hotel? It is Winnipeg's gold standard when it comes to heritage conservation by a private owner. This award was primarily for the painstaking restoration of the old Palm Room, now known as the Oval Room Brasserie.
Ida Albo and Rick Bell have been the managing partners of the hotel for 33 years. Albo she said what restored the hotel's fortunes was that all the money made by the hotel were plowed back into the building. The Laberge family of Quebec did not expect a return on the hotel, they just wanted not to lose money with it, and Albo and Bell even lived at the hotel for their first thirteen to save money.
One of the recipients, the master plasterer responsible for much of the plaster restoration, says most of his career has been spent at the Fort Garry, starting with a years long project to restore the Crystal Casino space on the 6th and 7th floors back to its former glory.
A great business study could be made by comparing the city's two "grand old dame" hotels. The Marlborough, which sits vacant and may be turned into lower income housing, and the Hotel Fort Garry, which made itself into city's premiere hotel.












No comments:
Post a Comment