Broadway Avenue (Saskatoon)

Broadway Avenue (Saskatoon)

Broadway Avenue is an arterial road in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. It begins at the east end of the Broadway Bridge and continues south until terminating at Glasgow Street in the Avalon neighbourhood.

The original portion of Broadway Avenue, between the Broadway Bridge and 8th Street East, was designed as a business street and was the original commercial center of Saskatoon. It was so named because of its width, and teams of more than two horses could do U-turns without having to go around the block. The southernmost portion of Broadway Avenue in Avalon was intended to have a boulevard and be named Royal Avenue.

Broadway Avenue ceased to be the main commercial street when the present downtown was established with the arrival of the Qu'Appelle, Long Lake and Saskatchewan Railway in 1890. It remained the commercial center for the Nutana and other east side neighbourhoods until the 1950s, when newer shopping malls drew business activity away from Broadway Avenue. The area went into a decades-long period of decline until the mid-1980s. On August 25, 1986, an organization of merchants in the area called the Broadway Business Improvement District (BBID) was formed. One of their first projects was to get the city to pay for half of the estimated $1.1 million to refurbish the street. This included cobblestone medians, park benches, median signs, new paint on the lampposts, antique style lighting and advertisement posts all coordinated in the same theme. It began a period of revitalization that brought renewed commercial activity and gentrification to the Nutana neighbourhood. Broadway Avenue remains an active commercial district to the present day.

Read more about Broadway Avenue (Saskatoon):  Five Corners

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    The name of the town isn’t important. It’s the one that’s just twenty-eight minutes from the big city. Twenty-three if you catch the morning express. It’s on a river and it’s got houses and stores and churches. And a main street. Nothing fancy like Broadway or Market, just plain Broadway. Drug, dry good, shoes. Those horrible little chain stores that breed like rabbits.
    Joseph L. Mankiewicz (1909–1993)

    Along the avenue of cypresses,
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    Of linen, go the chanting choristers,
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    —D.H. (David Herbert)