Work starts on Cowboys Park renovations in downtown Calgary

Posted Mar 6, 2025 10:48 am.
Last Updated Mar 6, 2025 6:54 pm.
Work has started on renovations to the newly-renamed Cowboys Park in downtown Calgary.
Fencing was up and shovels were in the ground at formerly known Millennium Park — the renovations are part of a naming sponshorship deal with Cowboys which wants the area for its outdoor concert series.
The city says phase one of work will transform the popular location into a “plug and play” festival space to host outdoor events year-round.

Alison Fifield, leader of the city’s Community Parks Initiative, says it’s the area’s first upgrade in nearly 30 years.
“It’s really going to support us in terms of Olympic Plaza coming offline, and having a hardened space that’s more accessible,” she says.
A concept map reveals much of the space will be paved over.

A resident who has been living in the neighbourhood for over 30 years says the commercial redevelopment of the public park will bring unnecessary noise and foot traffic, disrupting the area’s peaceful atmosphere.
“If you have to have improvements, that’s not the right way to do it,” says Tor Camren. “Why cover up green grass totally with asphalt. We deserve better than that.”
Camren has started an online petition against the Cowboys Park’s redevelopment. But he is not the only one frustrated by the coming changes.
Calgary Bluesfest organizers say they were initially told they were being evicted from the park in December 2023 because of a new sponsor, but then were later told they could retain the park as the venue for the festival.
Bluesfest’s Cindy McLeod says she and her team are still looking for answers. She has said the city was not forthcoming on what was happening with the area after the 10-year naming and sponsorship deal with Cowboys was announced last year.
“I have suppliers, I have artists, we’ve been selling passes since last fall, and people are expecting to come to a park, not a parking lot,” she says.
The 2025 Calgary International Bluesfest is scheduled to run from July 31 to Aug. 3.
It’s still unclear who will be paying for what. Terms in the city’s 10-year contract with Penny Lane Entertainment have not been disclosed.
Discussions on phase two construction are scheduled for later this month.
With files from Henna Saeed