Ottawa Citizen

NEW CONNECTION­S

There’ll be many public sites with river access

- DON BUTLER dbutler@postmedia.com twitter.com/ButlerDon

LEBRETON FLATS

Since its proposal was rated highest in a competitio­n earlier this year, Eugene Melnyk’s RendezVous LeBreton team has been trying to negotiate a developmen­t agreement with the NCC. If its plan proceeds, 7,000 people will call LeBreton Flats home — as many as lived there in the early 1900s — by the time the final phase is complete, two decades from now. Another 12,000 could work there.

While a “major event centre” is the centrepiec­e of the RendezVous plan, other elements would connect to and expand existing federal park space along the river. The result would be a continuous public realm from the Nepean Bay inlet, where a boardwalk would extend over the water, along a heritage aqueduct lined with cafés and shops to the Fleet Street Pumping Station tailrace, then out to and along the river.

Further west, in the final-phase Bayview neighbourh­ood, the Place de la Gare boardwalk would connect pedestrian­s to the Ottawa River pathway system and a new “Waterfront Promenade.”

ZIBI

The $1.2-billion developmen­t spans 37 acres near Chaudière Falls. When completed around 2025, there will be 1,200 condo apartments, retail and office space and new parkland on two Ottawa River islands and the Gatineau waterfront.

There will be public access to the water everywhere except where four preserved heritage buildings are tight to the waterline. “Other than those, the entire waterfront is publicly accessible,” says Jeff Westeinde, executive chairman of the Windmill Developmen­t Group. As part of the developmen­t, the east and west ends of Chaudière Island will become “sunrise and sunset” parks.

“We hope to create something like a Granville Island in Vancouver, plus a really interestin­g mix of arts, culture, industry as well as tourism and entertainm­ent,” Westeinde says. “We have the opportunit­y to do that for Ottawa.”

SIR JOHN A. MACDONALD LINEAR PARK

While it could take as long as two decades to fully develop the nine-kilometre riverfront park between LeBreton Flats and the Mud Lake Conservati­on Area, the NCC plans to create four “animation nodes” in the short-to-medium term.

At two connected nodes, called Westboro Beach and Atlantis, there will be improvemen­ts to the facilities at the beach, offering such things as a rental and repair shop for kayaks, skis, snowshoes and bicycles, as well as a small restaurant. The adjacent Atlantis site could be transforme­d into a conservati­on centre.

At another node, Rochester Field, the NCC aims to create safe and enhanced access across the parkway to the river and a new shoreline lookout. Up to twothirds of Rochester Field could be made available for developmen­t. The rest will be parkland that will include a central water feature and a history loop with public art and interpreta­tion.

The other short-to-medium-term node would be the Deschênes area. The NCC is planning a pricey boardwalk, partly over the water, that would include a viewing tower, lookout and public art. In the longer term, the NCC wants other animation nodes at Remic Rapids, near Parkdale Avenue and around the Champlain Bridge. An equivalent, yet-unnamed linear park is also in the works for the Quebec shore of the river.

CHAUDIÈRE FALLS

Ottawa Hydro is spending $150 million to build a new 29-megawatt hydroelect­ric generating facility below grade at Chaudière Falls. It will feature three viewing platforms atop the generating station and a new bridge for pedestrian­s and cyclists across the intake channel.

Once the station opens in 2017, people will be able to walk or bike to view the falls, long hidden from public sight. Hydro also wants an interpreti­ve centre highlighti­ng green energy and the historical significan­ce of the site for indigenous peoples, says president and CEO Bryce Conrad.

“We recognize that we’re the custodians of this asset in the near future, and we recognize it as being a responsibi­lity,” Conrad says.

“Part of that responsibi­lity is to honour and remember the aboriginal heritage that’s down there, as well as to open up this facility and this area for the citizens of Gatineau and Ottawa so they can actually see this magnificen­t space and magnificen­t vista.”

RICHMOND LANDING AND THE PULP MILL RUINS

The NCC has already begun to improve access to Richmond Landing — the site of a small settlement in 1808, even before the founding of Bytown — and the nearby Bronson Pulp Mill ruins, just west of the Mill Street Brew Pub. Some elements will be finished in time for the 2017 sesquicent­ennial.

Bridges will connect Richmond Landing, Victoria Island and Amelia Island to provide access for pedestrian­s and cyclists. The NCC will also provide universall­y accessible routes from Wellington Street at the Portage Bridge to Richmond Landing and the pulp mill ruins.

Interpreti­ve elements in the area — which the NCC calls one of the capital’s hidden treasures — will also highlight the aboriginal and natural heritage of the islands, recognize the area’s military past and showcase the manufactur­ing and power generation industries that helped build Ottawa.

NORTH SHORE PARK IMPROVEMEN­TS

The NCC plans to improve existing riverfront parks in Gatineau, including Jacques Cartier Park, and add new parkland and connection­s on all federally owned land bordering the river shore in downtown Gatineau, including both mouths of Brewery Creek. The intent is to make the shoreline more accessible and increase the appeal of the riverfront parks.

Among other things, the plan will transform an existing parking area near the Kruger plant into a shoreline park, develop a boat launch for non-motorized watercraft, create a recreation­al pathway around Ile-de-Hull and develop Scott Point as a panoramic lookout.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/BUILD GREEN SOLUTIONS ?? A rendering of Booth Street looking towards Board Mill, part of the “Zibi” developmen­t.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/BUILD GREEN SOLUTIONS A rendering of Booth Street looking towards Board Mill, part of the “Zibi” developmen­t.
 ??  ?? An artist’s rendering of the LeBreton Flats $3.5-billion developmen­t proposal by RendezVous Group, dubbed IllumiNATI­ON LeBreton.
An artist’s rendering of the LeBreton Flats $3.5-billion developmen­t proposal by RendezVous Group, dubbed IllumiNATI­ON LeBreton.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada