WEATHER ALERT

‘The new Corydon’

Two-block strip along south Osborne Street rising fast

Advertisement

Advertise with us

Snarky types call the far end of south Osborne Street "the poor man's River Heights."

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 23/09/2012 (5041 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Snarky types call the far end of south Osborne Street “the poor man’s River Heights.”

“That’s just not true!” says Jane Wilson, chairwoman of Osborne South BIZ, who owns Pinqk hair care in the area.” We attract people from all over the city and restaurants like 7 1/4 and Deseo’s attract a high-end clientele!” For good measure she adds: “Many of the businesses, like the Mexican food store BMC, (initials of owner Beatriz Marivel Calderon) — attract people from all over the city!”

So there.

MAUREEN SCURFIELD / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Scott Tackaberry of GameKnight.
MAUREEN SCURFIELD / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Scott Tackaberry of GameKnight.

Other folks call this increasingly competitive area “the new Corydon Avenue.” Whatever you call it, something exciting is building up between Oakwood and Rosedale avenues. The two-block strip is crazy-busy in the daytime, and visitors compete for parking spots on the long side streets at night. New owners are replacing old businesses with trendy new restaurants in the last two years such as Deseo’s restaurant (Scott Bagshaw, Alejandro Mora), three-month-old All About Thai owned by two working engineers, Pinita Pirompak and Helix Li, who cook and serve every evening. Then there’s the intimate Cafe D’Amour coffee shop right across the street for people who like their java hot and fancy.

Bistro 7 1/4 gave the neighbourhood a boost when it bet on the area and moved into a former second-hand clothing store at 725 Osborne St. in 2006. They’ve been enticing a large upscale crowd of foodies from all over the south end of the city to their dining room with a viewable bar-style cooking station.

Luxalune Gastropub, which specializes in all kinds (many unusual) of beer, popped up across the street with its jazzy patio loaded all summer with patrons They offer suds-tasting nights and educational classes on beer given by a beer expert on a travelling microphone. And, the gastro part of the name means they sell food, too.

Of course, old Riverview faves such as Monticchio Italian restaurant and Oakwood Cafe are still hopping.

Most area people point to Erick Casselman as the entrepreneur who inspired the first stages of a big renaissance in the district when he bought the Park Theatre in 2007. It’s now one of the busiest music-booking venues in Canada. “We have about 100 to 250 people a night for different events, seven days a week,” says Casselman. He says he bought the forlorn looking empty theatre when he was desperate for a change in his life.

“For three or four years, I’d been renovating and flipping houses — you could still buy them for $20,000 to $40,000 then. But it got to the point where I couldn’t stand my job anymore and I was in a good place (financially), so I just bought it. With permission to make necessary nighttime noise from the neighbours, he reopened the Park Theatre as a live music, film and event venue. This week it is up for the Best Music Venue in Western Canada award at the WCMA Western Canadian Music Awards in Regina. Casselman says the neighbourhood supported him big time from the get go — and he lives in the neighbourhood himself.

“I have an absolute love for this area, and I like to give back,” he says.

A neighbouring businessman, Gary Nerman, says Casselman is very considerate of the people around him. “He spent thousands of dollars on a (sound-proof) door, so the noise wouldn’t bother a neighbour who had complained.”

Many business owners live within a block of their businesses, some right on top of them. “I love, love, love this area and I will never move away from it again,” says Scott Tackaberry of GameKnight.

Some people can’t can’t get close enough. Barb Gerrie, a long-time resident, helped spearhead the trend to live on top of businesses in along this stretch of Osborne Street. “I have a very large apartment on the third floor,” the owner of Baltimore Insurance says proudly.

MAUREEN SCURFIELD / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
All About Thai owned by two working engineers, Pinita  Pirompak (left) and Helix Li.
MAUREEN SCURFIELD / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS All About Thai owned by two working engineers, Pinita Pirompak (left) and Helix Li.

… and there’s more

People visit south Osborne Street come to the area for more than food and music these days:

Park Alleys bowling lanes has been taken over by new owner Sat Sharma and his young relative and manager Vishal Sharma. They reinvented bowling in the Riverview neighbourhood with a desert mural motif, glow-bowling, a big music system and LED lights, not to mention the liquor licence and new patio.

Board games lovers and aficionados of games such as magic cards and Dungeons and Dragons hang out on the three levels of GameKnight and Cool Stuff owned by Scott Tackaberry. The store seems to have every game ever invented.

Across the street, Metaphysical Sands store offers psychic readings; for quieter folks, classes in the lower level on chakras and healing; and a huge crystal collection that draws people from all over the city. “People come in here because they love the ambiance from the crystals,” says owner Denis Prairie. “It’s very relaxing.” Metaphyscial Sands has “the largest collection of medicinal herbs in Winnipeg.”

Nerman’s Books & Collectibles has one of the largest collections of used children’s books in North America, about 35,000 titles in the basement plus all other genres. “We have 100,000 books listed on Amazon and AbeBooks.com. And we have the best science-fiction section in the city.”

Maureen Scurfield

Maureen Scurfield
Advice columnist

Maureen Scurfield writes the Miss Lonelyhearts advice column.

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

History

Updated on Monday, September 24, 2012 11:28 AM CDT: Corrects spelling of name.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Top prospect Viggo Björck plans future with Jets

Mike McIntyre 5 minute read Preview

Top prospect Viggo Björck plans future with Jets

Mike McIntyre 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:19 PM CDT

The stage appears to be set for Viggo Björck to make an immediate impact with the Winnipeg Jets.

A significant development occurred this weekend when Djurgården — the Swedish team Björck was under contract for the coming season — announced the 18-year-old was departing the organization under very positive terms.

“Viggo Björck has chosen to leave Djurgården to continue his career in the Winnipeg Jets organization next season,” the news release stated.

The announcement prompted vastly different reactions depending on your perspective.

Read
Yesterday at 2:19 PM CDT

A Winnipeg police cruiser was involved in an incident with a passenger car early Sunday morning on the northeast side of Cumberland St. and Balmoral Ave.

A video circulating on Facebook shows the damaged cruiser adjacent to a white passenger vehicle, both of which appear to have their airbags deployed. The Winnipeg police car appears to have crashed into a fence.

Winnipeg Police Service Const. Claude Chancy confirmed the incident on Sunday morning and said it occurred around 6:15 a.m. He said the Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service arrived and checked out the passengers, adding that it did not appear anyone was transported to hospital. The officers were not injured. Cumberland St. was closed for roughly two hours afterward.

The service did not share information on the cause of the accident.

U of W falls back on tuition hikes amid budget crunch

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Preview

U of W falls back on tuition hikes amid budget crunch

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read 6:00 AM CDT

The University of Winnipeg has joined other public post-secondary institutions across the province in hiking tuition rates by four per cent — as high as possible — for the fall.

Domestic fees are increasing by more annually in 2026-27 than they have in eight years in Manitoba.

International rates, which are unregulated and roughly four times those paid by their Canadian peers, are rising even higher.

U of W’s board of regents approved a $180.7-million budget on June 22 that increases costs in undergraduate and graduate programs and phases out “low rate” courses on the downtown campus.

Read
6:00 AM CDT

If it works in Ontario, why not in Manitoba?

James Wilt 5 minute read Preview

If it works in Ontario, why not in Manitoba?

James Wilt 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Grid-scale battery storage has fundamentally changed the global energy landscape — and Manitoba needs to get on board.

Battery systems store large amounts of excess electricity for when it’s most needed. While they can be charged from any generation source, they are especially beneficial for integrating wind and solar power, which vary with weather and time of day. Batteries allow electrical grids to meet the need for firm, dispatchable and affordable capacity using renewable energy, rather than relying on coal, nuclear and fossil gas. They also provide numerous other benefits, including reducing overloading of transmission infrastructure and helping to regulate the grid’s frequency and voltage.

Average costs for grid-scale batteries plummeted by more than half between 2023 and 2025 and installations have skyrocketed in China, the U.S., Australia and Europe. Texas now has 16,500 megawatts (MW) of battery storage, while California has 15,200 MW. Closer to home, Ontario recently awarded 640 MW of contracts to three battery storage projects in a competitive auction, with batteries beating out fossil gas-fired power plants on cost every time. One of these projects will be built near Dryden, only four hours east of Winnipeg.

Each battery system will provide eight hours of capacity but will cost considerably less than Ontario’s previous battery procurements, which provide only four hours of capacity. With this latest auction, Ontario has now secured 3,600 MW of battery storage capacity, including the operational Oneida (250 MW), Hagersville (300 MW) and Napanee (250 MW) projects. Almost all have significant Indigenous participation, with the latest procurements boasting 50 per cent First Nations ownership.

Read
2:00 AM CDT

Former Manitoba MP charged with firearms offences

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Preview

Former Manitoba MP charged with firearms offences

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Updated: 12:10 PM CDT

A former member of Parliament from Manitoba has been charged after a stockpile of ammunition and firearms — including an antique cannon — and $300,000 in cash were seized from a Dauphin home last week.

Manitoba RCMP charged Inky Mark, 78, with a dozen firearms-related charges, including firearms trafficking, possession of property obtained by crime, unsafe storage and careless use of a firearm.

In total, RCMP seized 439 firearms from Mark’s property, Mounties said at a news conference Monday morning.

It is expected to take investigators weeks to sort through the arsenal and determine how many of the weapons were illegally possessed, but police have already identified three guns that are believed to have been illegally trafficked, and one that had a tampered serial number, RCMP Cpl. Barry Kirby said.

Read
Updated: 12:10 PM CDT

Bombers go the distance, get under Argos’ skin to secure win

Taylor Allen 6 minute read Preview

Bombers go the distance, get under Argos’ skin to secure win

Taylor Allen 6 minute read Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026

Now that looked like Winnipeg Blue Bombers football.

It wasn’t always pretty, but the Blue and Gold finally sent their droves of paying customers home happy with a 30-21 win over the visiting Toronto Argonauts on Friday.

“Osh was on it all week that we had to have a great three-phase game and tonight we did that,” said left tackle Stanley Bryant.

“If we can do that each and every week, we will be a great team.”

Read
Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026