Gtk-Message: 07:55:57.680: Failed to load module "canberra-gtk-module" Gtk-Message: 07:55:57.672: Failed to load module "atk-bridge" Gtk-Message: 07:55:57.672: Failed to load module "gail" (gimp:7310): GLib-GIO-WARNING **: 07:55:48.502: Error creating IO channel for /proc/self/mountinfo: Permission denied (g-file-error-quark, 2) snap/gimp/x1/usr/bin/gimp: Gimp-Widgets-WARNING: parse_iso_codes: error parsing '/root/parts/gimp/install/usr/share/xml/iso-codes/iso_639.xml': P Gtk-Message: 07:55:40.468: Failed to load module "canberra-gtk-module" Gtk-Message: 07:55:40.418: Failed to load module "atk-bridge" Gtk-Message: 07:55:40.418: Failed to load module "gail" snap run gimp ln: failed to create symbolic link '/home/heather/snap/gimp/x1/.config/gtk-2.0/gtkfilechooser.ini': File exists But to be clear, the application runs just fine either from the command line or by launching the desktop icon. The building came down in 1982.When I run the gimp snap, it runs just fine but I see that a GeglBuffer leaks when I close the application. ![]() After a four-year legal and political battle, the city rescinded a bylaw that would have declared the Tegler a historic resource. The business community insisted the Tegler had to come down in the name of progress and urban redevelopment. When the Bank of Montreal bought the Tegler building in 1978 to demolish it, heritage advocates gnashed their teeth. When it opened in 1912, it was the tallest building in Edmonton, one of the largest in Western Canada. The irony? Once, this site was home to the historic Tegler Block. Now, the bank that replaced the Tegler may soon be demolished itself. Article content The historic Tegler Building, erected in 1912, was demolished in 1982, to make way for the new Bank of Montreal building. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Meantime, they’re still looking for tenants to occupy the space in the short term. The city has already granted Regency permission to upzone the site for high-rise redevelopment. Or we could do it Regency-style, and be aggressive.”Īggressive in this case, he says, might be a tower 40 or 45 storeys tall, with a mix of retail, office space, hotel and condominiums. But Regency applied for a demolition permit earlier than planned, he says, because the Valley Line LRT is planned to run right past the property, and they want to be sure they can demolish the bank building before LRT construction begins in earnest. Their original plan was to find tenants, lease the space out for the next five years, and wait for the current glut of downtown office space to be absorbed. #yegdt /dDQiAd8qye- Tim Querengesser October 23, 2017 Imagine a Saks here or that level of retailer. We just knew it was a great parcel, a great corner in our city.”īMO building no longer has branding. ![]() But when the bank site became available, they didn’t want to miss the chance to snap up a premier property. Raj Dhunna says the company has plenty of projects on the go. The Dhunnas are best-known for their ambitious super-highrise developments, including the 36-storey Pearl at 119 Street and Jasper Avenue, and the 45-storey Emerald, planned for Jasper and 114 Street. 16, has allowed them to consolidate retail banking services in a “state-of-the-art” building.īut while it’s great to see a solid main floor tenant for the Enbridge Tower, the bank’s move left its old glass box without a purpose.īack in April, the site - four city lots, valued by the city for tax purposes at $17.1 million - was sold to new owners: Rakesh and Raj Dhunna, the father-son team who run Regency Developments. It’s moved next door into new digs on the first two floors of the Enbridge Building.īMO branch manager Gladys Balcarce says their Enbridge space, which has its grand opening Nov. ![]()
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