Survey: Resilience and adaptation
Resilient neighbourhoods are able to adapt to changing conditions and adverse events. How will the Exchange District need to adapt in order to maintain and increase the neighbourhood’s health in the years ahead?
Resilient neighbourhoods are able to adapt to changing conditions and adverse events. How will the Exchange District need to adapt in order to maintain and increase the neighbourhood’s health in the years ahead?
Tell us about the Exchange District’s “Connectivity”— the way the area interacts with various modes of transportation within and connected to the area.
Many people say the Exchange District’s best quality is its “character.” How do you see its character, and what aspects of it should we focus on in the years ahead?
Weigh in on the Exchange District’s potential to become a sustainable neighbourhood.
Former Winnipeg Mayor Glen Murray imagines celebrating his 93rd birthday on a patio in an Exchange District transformed by innovation.
Longtime Exchange District resident Deborah Zanke describes a thriving neighbourhood in 30 years via a note to those house-sitting her condo for the summer.
In the third of a series of 5 Future Vision essays commissioned by the Exchange District BIZ, Shelley Cook imagines an Exchange District 30 years in the future full of greenspace, history, art and most importantly: people.
Acclaimed Hip Hop artist Anthony Sannie (Anthony OKS) returns to his hometown after years away to visit the Exchange District — buzzing with energy, his neighbourhood has only blossomed as the Winnipeg’s arts and cultural hub.
Little Brown Jug founder Kevin Selch kicks off our week of 5 “Future Vision” essays by laying out the Exchange District’s innate potential.
A public conversation about the future of the Exchange District begins on February 1st with essays that imagine what it might be like in 30 years.