Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Alberta's Sky Palace Unveiled, But In Revised Form As Spartan Meeting Room

The Canadian Press, 30 Jan, 2015 10:58 PM
  • Alberta's Sky Palace Unveiled, But In Revised Form As Spartan Meeting Room
EDMONTON — Former Alberta premier Alison Redford's so-called sky palace had its grand coming out party Friday, but in its revised role as a buttoned-down meeting room.
 
The penthouse suite was opened to the media as part of a tour of the renovated Federal Building on the legislature grounds. 
 
The suite, on the 11th floor, does not have furniture or all the finishings yet, but is nevertheless an impressive series of rooms done over in wood and glass with panoramic views of the city to its outskirts.
 
Its legacy is a public relations headache for the government, going millions of dollars over budget and years past its deadline.
 
Infrastructure Minister Manmeet Bhullar admitted that if the government could do it all over again, it probably wouldn't have renovated the 1950s art-deco style Tyndal stone structure.
 
"The needs and priorities of the people of Alberta are schools, health infrastructure or road infrastructure. That's where I would have made this investment," Bhullar told reporters prior to the tour. "This is a fine building, I'm not arguing with that.
 
"(But) it is what it is. The prudent thing now is limit cost increases."
 
Work began in 2009 with an original end date for 2012.
 
The original $356-million budget was immediately ratcheted back to $275 million when oil prices dropped, then crept back up again over the years to the current price of $403 million on a budget of $410 million.
 
Those costs secretly took another bump starting in 2012, when Redford's office began secretly ordering up changes to the penthouse to convert it from meeting rooms into a swank apartment retreat for her and her daughter.
 
The "premier's den" — modelled after the blue chip Hay Adams Hotel in Washington D.C. — was to have bedrooms, bathrooms, a dining room, lounge area, room-by-room temperature controls, a fireplace, a powder room and a butler's pantry.
 
Redford had quit as premier just before the project, later dubbed sky palace, became public last March.
 
The government said only preliminary work had been done on the penthouse before it was secretly cancelled in January 2014 at a total cost of almost $240,000. The Opposition Wildrose has said, depending how you crunch the numbers, the actual cost could be four times higher.
 
Redford quit amidst an escalating spending scandal and, in the months that followed, sky palace became a symbol of self-entitlement and a focal point of black humour, public scorn and confusing government behaviour.
 
Two cabinet ministers, Ric McIver and Wayne Drysdale, each announced they had killed the penthouse, but at different times. That prompted the Wildrose party to rename it the zombie sky palace.
 
An Alberta gaming company even created an app for gamers to move an Alison Redford figure toward the sky palace while leaving behind a trail of burned taxpayer dollars.
 
After the penthouse was cancelled, it became a hybrid suite with meeting rooms next to showers, leaving an incongruous visual invitation to shower off after meeting with government officials.
 
Under Premier Jim Prentice, the showers were taken out.
 
Prentice has said he has never set foot in the penthouse and likely never will.
 
Redford has never explained what happened on her watch, except to say "mistakes were made."

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta Mountie was being proactive when he was fatally shot in casino

Alberta Mountie was being proactive when he was fatally shot in casino
ST. ALBERT, Alta. — RCMP say an officer who died Wednesday was being proactive in a stolen truck investigation when he and another officer were shot inside a casino.

Alberta Mountie was being proactive when he was fatally shot in casino

Defrocked Arctic priest says he's sorry for sex abuse of children

Defrocked Arctic priest says he's sorry for sex abuse of children
IQALUIT, Nunavut — A courtroom swelled with weeping, cries and 35 years of bottled-up grief Thursday as a defrocked priest who abused dozens of Inuit children told a judge about to sentence him that he's sorry for his crimes and won't commit any more.

Defrocked Arctic priest says he's sorry for sex abuse of children

Federal Government Announces $35 Million For Research At Universities

Federal Government Announces $35 Million For Research At Universities
SASKATOON — The federal government has announced more than $35 million in research infrastructure funding for 37 Canadian universities where scientists are pushing the boundaries of knowledge in areas such as breast cancer prevention, intelligent drone technology and better pet food.

Federal Government Announces $35 Million For Research At Universities

Edmonton woman wins $15 million in Lotto Max draw from last October

Edmonton woman wins $15 million in Lotto Max draw from last October
EDMONTON — An Edmonton woman has won $15 million playing the Lotto Max.

Edmonton woman wins $15 million in Lotto Max draw from last October

Finance Minister Joe Oliver vows balanced budget in 2015

Finance Minister Joe Oliver vows balanced budget in 2015
DAVOS, Switzerland — Finance Minister Joe Oliver says he will not budge from his plan to deliver a balanced budget come April, even with the recent decline in crude oil prices.

Finance Minister Joe Oliver vows balanced budget in 2015

Royal Bank to buy U.S.-based City National in US$5.4-billion deal

Royal Bank to buy U.S.-based City National in US$5.4-billion deal
TORONTO — Several years after selling its U.S. retail banking business, the Royal Bank of Canada (TSX:RY) is venturing south of the border again, with a US$5.4-billion deal to acquire Los Angeles-based City National Corp.

Royal Bank to buy U.S.-based City National in US$5.4-billion deal