Yesterday morning, I had a breakfast meeting at Connie’s Corner Cafe on Main and Selkirk. With the wind-chill, it was a brisk -44C. Yet ten minutes after opening, the place was hopping with regular old timers and construction workers, as someone got the jukebox going with early Cash and Metis country-rock tunes.
The day before that, I walked from my house down through the Exchange District, Graham Ave and West Broadway to my church in Wolseley... It was -30C with the wind-chill that day, but people were on the streets: well-dressed men in suits (a rarity in this golf-shirt city) going up and down Albert Street, transit riders going about their business on Graham Avenue, student hipsters walking home from the U of W through West Broadway, and cyclists riding everywhere...
It is a reminder that urbanity still survives in the centre of Winnipeg in the face of wholesale opposition by traffic engineers, sprawl developers, politicians, the media, fairweather cheerleaders on internet forums, and yes, even the bitingly cold winds.
As William H. Whyte said of Winnipeg pedestrians in his book City, they “are a hardy lot". It is not at all comfortable on winter days like these, but it still works. Seeing all kinds of people on the streets through this cold snap, demonstrates that this city of ours can operate today in the same basic arrangement of urban life that made Winnipeg great in it's first 80-90 years. Downtown streets, storefront commerce, and neighborhood corner stores are not things that need to be discarded simply because our winters are cold.
Just dress in layers and keep on moving.

nice picture...
ReplyDeletethis weekend, i'm building an igloo, then sleeping in it - i'll keep you updated on how thigs turn out(i heard your not suppost to drink very much water bdfore bedtime)
james