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Selkirk marks growth and renewal in headline-making 2025.
Summary
Selkirk's 2025 included downtown redevelopment, the launch of Selkirk Day and provincial approval to exit the Winnipeg-area planning region.
Content
Selkirk experienced a string of civic and development milestones in 2025, with activity concentrated in the downtown core and across municipal services. The city marked its 143rd anniversary by designating June 15 as Selkirk Day and celebrated throughout the month. Officials also adopted a city flag and highlighted infrastructure work and emissions-reduction goals as factors in attracting investment. Small business supports, new services and transit changes complemented larger projects such as mixed-use housing and cultural site purchases.
Key developments:
- The city designated June 15 as Selkirk Day, held month-long celebrations and formally adopted the municipal flag.
- Downtown growth included the Manitoba Métis Federation's six-storey Eveline Street mixed-use building with 49 residential units; the city invested $7.2 million in reconstructing Eveline Street.
- Three businesses used the Façade and Site Improvement Program in 2025, which offers grants covering up to 25% of eligible improvements to a maximum of $5,000.
- The city purchased the historic Garry Theatre; renovations are underway, a call for board members has been issued, an endowment fund was established, and the Rotary Club pledged $87,500 over five years ($17,500 annually).
- Selkirk issued permits for 66 new dwelling units and invited development proposals for up to 20 acres in the West End under the West End Concept Plan.
- Federal capital funding of $57,000 per year for 12 years was committed to Selkirk Transit; weekday service hours were extended to 10 p.m. and an additional stop was added.
Summary:
Selkirk's 2025 progress combined cultural celebration, targeted public investment and planning for future growth. Downtown renewal, new housing permits and the Garry Theatre project proceeded alongside secured transit funding, while council obtained provincial approval in November to withdraw from the Capital Planning Region. Renovations, development proposals and transit planning are moving forward as the city implements these initiatives.
