1.
Ability to reinvest revenue (donations) directly into infrastructure and land stewardship (with transparency and community involvement folded into operations)
This land was for sale as residential. Someone thought it was extraordinary, and wanted to conserve/rezone it, but also open it as a public greenspace. Thanks to support from family, friends, and the community, it happened.
The following is the hoop jumping we chose to legally, transparently, turn private land into an outdoor community hub. Please consider the waiver and do not look for blood from a stone.
The Hill is zoned RC: Rural Cultural. The City of Castlegar Official Community Plan Bylaw 1427 (OCP) and What We Heard Report 2023 (WHR) outline the vision and goals for Castlegar for the next ten years. There are 7 Guiding Principles and 5 Key Priorities to support the overall community vision (WHR, pg. 30).
The Hill hits all of the 5 Key Priorities. It establishes growth in a key neighborhood node, diversifies it, protects and restores ecosystems, adds green gathering space in close proximity to the downtown, and nurtures an active city (WHR, pg. 30). Of the 7 guiding principles, it promotes ecological protection, is a parks and recreation opportunity nearby to where people live, fuels community well-being through F.A.C.E, and is actively working to reduce the natural hazard risk to surrounding residents the land presents unmanaged (OCP, pgs. 2-7).
If this land stewardship strategy is successful, it provides a blueprint to build on and improve. Outdoor Community Hubs might form in other places, but with unique public benefits reflective of the area. For example, a different hub using a benefit company for a public greenspace might have S.T.M.H. initiatives (sport, trades, mental health); whereas The Hill promotes F.A.C.E. (fitness, art, community, education).
People crave interaction with nature. Not just as a view, but as something to move through and touch. Some places meant for preservation are seeing interactions never meant for those places. Painted rocks sprout up, shelters and bird houses are built or gathering places cleared. The Hill invites this crave (interaction? creation? creativity?), but asks you to consider how you affect the land when you interact with it.
Outdoor community hubs fill the niche where it is getting harder for economic, societal, environmental, and legal reasons to access or hands on immerse in your environment. If you cannot afford to buy land, or find a community garden plot, you can visit parks, but have little say in their design or the possibility to add to the space.
Graphs found on pg. 26 of the Castlegar Plan What We Heard Report.
Speak to the small portion of property zoned in the ALR and potential to use this to guide the direction of land-use (mushroom log inoculation, organic compost from trail maintenance?). Discuss cultural aspects of the project.
See ALR guidelines at, https://www.alc.gov.bc.ca/permitted-uses-in-the-alr/.
https://castlegar.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Castlegar-What-We-Heard-Report.pdf
https://castlegar.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/1427-Official-Community-Plan-Bylaw.pdf