Calgary

Residents vote against Banff's annual pedestrian zone

Unofficial results have been tallied at 1,194 votes in favour, with 1,328 votes against, according to the Town of Banff website.

1,328 votes against narrowly beat out 1,194 votes in favour

A photo of a tree-lined paved street
The majority of restaurants and businesses have reopened in the town of Banff, Alta., but some are reporting tourists arriving from south of the border. (Helen Pike/CBC)

Residents of Banff, Alta., have rejected an annual pedestrian zone in a public vote that ended Monday evening. 

Unofficial results have been tallied at 1,194 votes in favour, with 1,328 votes against, according to the Town of Banff website.

Nearly half of the votes were cast during three advanced voting days held throughout July. 

Council must now pass a bylaw to rescind their original decision to have an annual summer pedestrian zone at the next council meeting on Aug. 26. 

The Town of Banff website notes that pedestrian zone public amenities will be dismantled after the bylaw has been passed, including the removal of extra public seating, bicycle parking, flower planters and restaurant patios. 

In the vote, residents were asked whether or not they would support council's decision to close a section of Banff Avenue to vehicles every year from the May long weekend until the Thanksgiving long weekend. 

In mid-April 2024, residents circulated a petition calling for council to repeal the annual pedestrian zone decision. That petition received over 1,000 signatures and, under the stipulations of Alberta's Municipal Government Act, forced council to take the decision to a vote of the electors.

The town said the vote will be made official on Tuesday. 

With files from Lily Dupuis