Ottawa Citizen

WALKING THE LINE, AGAIN

Update on LRT progress, a year later

- mpearson@postmedia.com twitter.com/mpearson78

Through a chain-link fence I watch as a ready-mix truck backs into place and lowers its trough. A river of wet concrete flows to the pump truck and up a large robotic arm, the boom, which extends high above a square section of earth. The workers barely say a word to each other. They’ve done this so many times before they could probably do it now with their eyes closed.

I have stood on this side of the fence before, watching the Confederat­ion LRT Line come to life.

I once walked the entire length of it, from Blair Station to Tunney’s Pasture — and even swam across the Rideau River — for a series of stories dubbed Walk the Line. The goal was to see for myself all the neighbourh­oods and nooks the LRT line will touch as it cuts an east-west path across the city centre once it opens in 2018.

A year later, I was curious about what had changed. How is the largest infrastruc­ture project in Ottawa history taking shape?

Only one way to find out.

All 13 stations are active constructi­on sites, with those in the east end — where, once again, I begin the trek at Blair Station — starting to look like the transit hubs they will soon become.

The steel roofs rise up and open where the entrances will be, then bend and twist in the direction riders will ultimately go to reach the train platform.

The architect who designed them, Ritchard Brisbin, explained last year the simple concept was intended to help riders intuitivel­y understand where they need to go.

Brisbin or members of his bbb Architects team visit stations virtually every day. He passes by Pimisi every morning and monitors its progress like a proud father. But even the proudest parent knows every child has an awkward stage.

“There were days when we were doing the convention centre that I couldn’t look at it,” he said in a recent interview. “I would wake up in the morning thinking we’ve created the world’s largest golf ball and I’m going to have to close my shop and go somewhere else.

“You just have to squint, and try to imagine.”

Another sign of progress I spot is a train parked on the tracks near Cyrville Station.

Trains are currently tested on a 1.6-kilometre stretch of line between Blair and Cyrville stations, but this fall, the testing area will extend all the way to the University of Ottawa.

The goal is to ensure all the communicat­ion and electrical systems that operate and power the trains are talking to each other, and to troublesho­ot in the event they aren’t, explained Steve Cripps, the director of O -Train Constructi­on.

Come January, track work on the remainder of the 12.5-kilometre line should be done, he said, and track testing will extend accordingl­y.

There was, however, one thing missing — a giant berm designed to create a grassy ridge between the sprawling Belfast Road vehicle assembly and maintenanc­e plant and the houses in nearby Eastway Gardens.

Proudly built by Carp-based Thunderbol­t Contractin­g, the berm was flattened in recent weeks, with heavy trucks hauling it away one load at a time.

Neighbours were aghast earlier this year when they learned the Rideau Transit Group, the city’s LRT contractor, planned to replace it with a wall as part of a $100-million expansion of the assembly plant.

They were even more peeved after city officials arrived at a public meeting in May with scant details about what the wall would look like.

The brouhaha was settled last month when residents got to vote on options for the seven-metre wall. They picked stone laminate.

If you spend much time hanging around City Hall, you’re guaranteed to hear the acronym TOD. It stands for transit-oriented developmen­t plans. Essentiall­y, these documents express a rather simple notion: We’re spending billions on the LRT line, so let’s make sure we build up — or “intensify,” to use planner speak — the land surroundin­g transit stations.

Case in point: What was once a largely vacant, single-storey retail plaza to the west of Gloucester Centre is now a buzzing constructi­on site dwarfed by a giant crane.

There were days when we were doing the convention centre that I couldn’t look at it. I would wake up in the morning thinking we’ve created the world’s largest golf ball and I’m going to have to close my shop and go somewhere else.

RioCan has begun work on a redevelopm­ent that will be built in phases, beginning with a 30-storey, 308-unit tower located just steps away from Blair Station. Future plans include two more towers.

Near Cyrville Station, Richcraft Homes has already built seven condo buildings and is wrapping up work on a fourth new rental property on a large tract of land between Cyrville and Ogilvie roads. Future plans envision more towers at either end.

To transform this collection of tidy buildings into a thriving community, the large field in the centre seems like the perfect place for a small grocery store, pharmacy, café and outdoor terrace.

Not in the cards, according to Kevin Yemm, Richcraft’s vicepresid­ent of land developmen­t.

“Currently our plans are strictly residentia­l,” he tells the Citizen.

Perhaps some commercial or office space in a tower, but that’s about it. You don’t need amenities at every stop if there are stores and restaurant­s close to other stations, he said. “I don’t see demand right now for adding commercial and retail uses at that location, but I could easily be proven wrong as we see more and more people move to the area.”

At least Cyrville Station will have some people actually living there, which is more than I can say for Tremblay station.

The lettered streets of Eastway Gardens are about a kilometre away, the southern part of Overbrook is more than a kilometre north (across the Queensway) and, though it’s due south, the nearest reaches of Alta Vista, along Coronation Avenue, are close to two kilometres away by foot because there’s no path through Ottawa Train Yards.

Tremblay Station isn’t actually located on a city street — it’s on federal land and exists primarily as a connection to Ottawa’s train station (as did the Train Transitway stop that preceded it). That explains why OC Transpo bus riders from Vanier and Overbrook will connect to the Confederat­ion Line at Hurdman and St. Laurent stations, even if Tremblay might seem closer.

As for a link between Tremblay and the shops at Train Yards, such a thing was contemplat­ed in 2014’s TOD plan for Tremblay, explained Alta Vista Coun. Jean Cloutier.

Planners have looked at the feasibilit­y of pedestrian-only connection­s between the train station and shopping area using an existing tunnel under the Via tracks, as well as a pedestrian and cycling bridge over the train tracks that would land between the train and LRT stations, he said in an email.

Although Cloutier says Ottawa South MP David McGuinty, the folks at Train Yards and the local community associatio­n are all “aware of and supportive of the proposal for a connection,” there’s nothing on the table yet.

Elsewhere along the line, near Pimisi Station — the Algonquin word for eel, which holds a sacred significan­ce as a source of spirituali­ty, medicine and food stretching back thousands of years — negotiatio­ns continue between the National Capital Commission and RendezVous LeBreton to develop 21 hectares of LeBreton Flats left vacant for more than 50 years.

East of there, Trinity Developmen­ts wants to build three towers of 59, 55 and 50 storeys, and create a retail, office and residentia­l complex at Bayview station, when the east-west and north-south train lines meet. If you stand on the Booth Street overpass and look out over the vast constructi­on site below, you can get a good look at the entrance to the 2.5-kilometre tunnel that runs underneath downtown.

Eastbound trains will descend into the tunnel just as the land rises to form a cliff where Queen Street ends. The line then does a straight shot underneath Queen, with stops at Lyon and Parliament stations, before curving slightly north, dipping underneath the Rideau Canal and arriving at Rideau station. After another curve, it runs underneath Waller Street and gradually emerges from the tunnel near the University of Ottawa.

Unless you work in it, the tunnel — and what goes on down there — remains something RTG and city leaders seem determined to keep under wraps (except for the new multimedia show, which I’ll get to).

After a heavy crane tipped over while lifting a small cement mixer into the eastern portal of the tunnel in April, reporters on scene watched as shaken tunnel workers were packed into a van and removed from the scene. An official from the city’s communicat­ions department was dispatched to make sure no one talked to us.

“Anything that does happen in the tunnel stays in the tunnel,” labour leader Sean McKenny said later that day.

The contractor forces workers to sign confidenti­ality agreements, which, in part, prevent them from speaking out about safety concerns, McKenny said.

The rush is on to make sure the $2.1-billion Confederat­ion Line is completed next year, but city officials say safety will not be compromise­d to meet that deadline. (If RTG misses its May 2018 deadline for completion, the organizati­on faces stiff financial penalties, such as the deferral of a $202-million payment and a reduction in the 30-year maintenanc­e contract.)

When I pass by on a sunny Tuesday at lunch-hour a few months after the crane kerfuffle, I chat up the worker managing traffic coming and going from the site.

The pace of work, he explains, is more manageable and controlled than it was a few months ago.

“It’s all good, not as crazy as it was,” he says with a smile and a nod.

I came to the conclusion last year that the city is doing a terrible job of telling this story of its coming of age. And my fear remains that if we don’t document who the tunnel workers are and what they have seen and felt down there, it will be lost forever.

At least now there’s Kontinuum, the $4-million, Moment Factorypro­duced multimedia show in the unfinished carcass of Lyon Station.

More than 15,000 people checked it out in the opening week and thousands more will see it before it closes in September.

And the reviews, at least judging by social media, have been enthusiast­ic.

“That, to me, is the best reward,” says multimedia director Yael Braha, who spent a month in Ottawa setting up the show.

As a way of showcasing the future LRT line in an original way, Kontinuum is a glittering, swirling spectacle you shouldn’t miss. Just being inside the tunnel and standing on the platform was cool enough, but when the train pulled into the station and my likeness flickered on the screen, I got a fleeting glimpse of my future self as passenger.

Writing about the ramificati­ons of an LRT line that isn’t yet open inherently means writing about a future one can only speculate about.

How Ottawa will look and feel in a few years’ time is still coming into focus, though projects such as Zibi, the LeBreton Flats redevelopm­ent and the new central library all suggest that what we think of as the city’s core will likely expand.

Between now and when the Confederat­ion Line opens sometime next year, there is much to be done on it, as well as the behind-thescenes plans to make it smooth and reliable for thousands of OC Transpo passengers.

Yet even as Ottawans embrace the Confederat­ion Line’s promised future, vestiges of the Transitway’s past will remain, perhaps none more visible than the pedestrian bridge over Highway 174, which connects to Blair Station.

Curved roofs and red steel pipes dominate an aesthetic that hasn’t aged particular­ly well. But replacing the bridge — or even giving it a facelift — is not within the scope of the Confederat­ion Line’s budget.

There’s nothing he can do about, admits Brisbin, the station architect. “Wherever possible, we’ve done our best to take it down or incorporat­e it or change it,” he said.

Future phases of Ottawa’s lightrail expansion may see the bridge replaced, but for now, it stands as a physical reminder of where the city has been — and where it is going.

As a way of showcasing the future LRT line in an original way, Kontinuum is a glittering, swirling spectacle you shouldn’t miss.

 ?? JULIE OLIVER ?? Matthew Pearson walks down Queen Street toward the new Lyon Station last summer, as he traced the Confederat­ion LRT Line.
JULIE OLIVER Matthew Pearson walks down Queen Street toward the new Lyon Station last summer, as he traced the Confederat­ion LRT Line.
 ?? PHOTOS: JULIE OLIVER ?? Reporter Matthew Pearson at the Bayview LRT Station off Scott Street, with the Peace Tower and downtown Ottawa in the rear.
PHOTOS: JULIE OLIVER Reporter Matthew Pearson at the Bayview LRT Station off Scott Street, with the Peace Tower and downtown Ottawa in the rear.
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 ?? JULIE OLIVER ?? Constructi­on work continues inside and in front of the tunnel where the new LRT will come through at the Pimisi Station.
JULIE OLIVER Constructi­on work continues inside and in front of the tunnel where the new LRT will come through at the Pimisi Station.
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 ?? JULIE OLIVER ?? Blair Station will anchor one end of the LRT Confederat­ion Line when it opens next year.
JULIE OLIVER Blair Station will anchor one end of the LRT Confederat­ion Line when it opens next year.

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