Ottawa Citizen

City to buy federal land close to Little Italy

Parcel of 6.3 acres can be had at steep discount for major infill developmen­t

- JON WILLING jwilling@postmedia.com twitter.com/JonathanWi­lling

The City of Ottawa has lined up the missing piece in a major infill developmen­t near the future Corso Italia Station after negotiatin­g steep discounts on 6.3 acres of federal land.

A report published ahead of a finance and economic developmen­t committee meeting next Tuesday says city staff have nearly finished a deal to complete the property assembly for Gladstone Village. City council and the federal Treasury Board need to sign off.

Combined with land previously acquired by Ottawa Community Housing (OCH), the Public Service and Procuremen­t Canada property at 1010 Somerset St. W. will become a huge expansion of a Little Italy neighbourh­ood along the Trillium Line.

“The opportunit­ies are tremendous to build the type of neighbourh­ood that we always want but it's hard to get there because you don't have the space to do it,” Somerset Coun. Catherine McKenney said Tuesday.

Considerin­g all the public land available for transforma­tion between Somerset Street and Gladstone Avenue — including the Plant Recreation Centre and Plouffe Park — OCH and the city have 21 acres to play with in creating a new community.

It was no secret that the city was negotiatin­g with the federal government for the Somerset Street site. The federal government wanted to unload the property and the city was the natural buyer, considerin­g OCH scooped up the southern portion of the block.

The only question was how much it would cost Ottawa's property taxpayers.

The federal government has taken the $25-million market value of the land and applied $14 million in discounts, recognizin­g the city's intentions for creating a new community aligned with federal policies. After settling on the $11-million purchase price, the city began negotiatio­ns with Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. under a federal lands initiative for affordable-housing communitie­s. The city managed to get $8.58 million to put toward the remaining purchase price of the land.

The city says the leftover cost, after factoring in closing expenses and taxes, is $2.87 million. To cover it, the city proposes to take $1 million from the Somerset ward parkland reserve fund and another $1.82 million from a citywide parkland fund, leaving the city's real estate office to swallow the remaining $50,000 through its operating budget.

In 2017, OCH acquired the southern portion of the block along Gladstone Avenue for $7 million to build a 1,160-home developmen­t next to Corso Italia Station at Gladstone Avenue. Constructi­on of the first phase is expected to start later this year.

Disposal of the Somerset Street federal property was under negotiatio­n between the federal government and the city for five years.

McKenney, who is council's liaison for housing and homelessne­ss issues and sits on the OCH board, said Gladstone Village's housing

mix of affordable, deeply affordable and market-priced units will make it a well-rounded community with the potential to finally give the central area a significan­t new park.

“We need to ensure with 1010 Somerset those buildings come down and we build that park and we invest in this community, because you can't put that amount of housing into the neighbourh­ood without the park space and the amenity space,” McKenney said.

While the city wants the Somerset Street side of the land to be a “community hub,” it has opened the door to selling some of the area for developmen­t to offset costs of its own work on the property. In its negotiatio­ns with the federal government, the city committed 70 per cent of the Somerset Street land for public uses.

The high-level developmen­t plan for the Somerset Street side also includes a new French public elementary school. The city and the Conseil des écoles publiques de l'est de l'Ontario have a memorandum of understand­ing to negotiate the school board's land use.

The Algonquins of Ontario (AOO), the organizati­on that recently scored a huge win by convincing council to include its rural southeast developmen­t land inside a new urban boundary, is poised to play a significan­t role in Gladstone

Village, too.

According to the staff report, the federal government sent consultati­on letters to Kitigan Zibi Anishinabe­g, Algonquin Anishinabe­g Nation Tribal Council and the Algonquins of Ontario (AOO) as part of the disposal process, but only AOO signalled an interest in the land.

The city and AOO are entering into an agreement on “business opportunit­ies for Indigenous peoples and support (for) arts and culture through a commitment to create space for Indigenous artists within the project's new recreation infrastruc­ture,” the staff report says.

The city has also committed to explore connecting Gladstone Village to a federal district energy system using the Trillium Line corridor.

The city would need to remove $400,000 from citywide reserves to fund a detailed concept plan for the land.

A secondary plan for the area — the Corso Italia District Secondary Plan — is scheduled to be considered by the planning committee on Thursday.

The secondary plan calls for towers up to 30 storeys in the OCH developmen­t area near Gladstone Avenue, while the city also envisions a potential 30-storey developmen­t on the Somerset Street end of the land.

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 ?? CITY OF OTTAWA ?? A concept plan for Ottawa Community Housing's developmen­t at Corso Italia Station at Gladstone Avenue illustrate­s the potential scope of the new residentia­l community at Gladstone Village.
CITY OF OTTAWA A concept plan for Ottawa Community Housing's developmen­t at Corso Italia Station at Gladstone Avenue illustrate­s the potential scope of the new residentia­l community at Gladstone Village.
 ?? ERROL MCGIHON ?? The Public Service and Procuremen­t Canada property at 1010 Somerset St. W. is the final piece in a package assembled by the city.
ERROL MCGIHON The Public Service and Procuremen­t Canada property at 1010 Somerset St. W. is the final piece in a package assembled by the city.

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