Ottawa Citizen

OTTAWA’S 25-YEAR PLAN

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City staff released a slew of policy directions Monday designed to guide municipal decision-making and growth between 2021 and 2046. While the plan has yet to be finalized, the Citizen has identified five points of interest. Jacob Hoytema offers this take.

Ottawa is fresh off of celebratin­g its one-millionth resident, but city staff are already thinking another 400,000 ahead. The municipal government is working on a new master plan to guide its decision-making and growth between 2021 and 2046, during which time the population is expected to reach 1.4 million. This new plan is supposed to prepare for that shift by broadly designatin­g how that growth will be spread out, and how it will affect different parts of the city.

A finalized version of the plan isn’t expected to be set in stone by council until spring of 2021. Nonetheles­s, city staff outlined on Monday a slew of suggested policy directions under five themes that, if approved, will guide the discussion around the remaining stages of the plan’s developmen­t. Staff have released the so-called “five big moves” so that members of the public can familiariz­e themselves for future consultati­ons.

Briefly summarized, the five themes are: intensific­ation, transporta­tion, “sophistica­tion” in urban and community design, environmen­tal and public health, and economic developmen­t.

1

Encouragin­g more sustainabl­e commutes

In 2016, 41.5 per cent of commuters listed a sustainabl­e mode of transporta­tion — cycling, transit, walking or carpool — as their main way to get around. The city wants to push this even further by ensuring that, by 2046, most trips in Ottawa are sustainabl­e. They recommend new developmen­ts be built near existing transit infrastruc­ture like O-Train stations, and that the focus on light rail should continue even after Stage 2 and a possible Stage 3 are completed. There’s no policy direction calling for an overhaul in the city’s approach to cycling, though a lot of the other directions include bullet points recommendi­ng things like a focus on cyclist connection­s to transit hubs and including cycling infrastruc­ture in new streets.

2

Building up instead of out Rather than directing population growth to new suburban developmen­ts further and further into green space, the city wants to concentrat­e on “intensifyi­ng ” already built-up areas. City staff say this would mean less effect on outlying agricultur­al lands, more access to services and businesses in those neighbourh­oods, and shorter commutes for residents — what they refer to as “walkable 15-minute neighbourh­oods.”

3

Nod to affordabil­ity

With a shrinking rental market and soaring property prices, some groups have said that Ottawa is experienci­ng an affordable housing “crisis.” The new plan includes just a couple notes on affordabil­ity, proposing that new city-owned facilities should come with built-in affordable housing, and that close placement to transit should reduce mobility costs for residents.

4

Change in deciding where to locate industrial space

City staff are suggesting the municipal government could do a better job of integratin­g workplaces into the same urban areas where workers live, rather than lumping office space into a segregated campus or business park.

Ottawa’s employment is “primarily knowledge-based,” the document says, referencin­g office jobs in the public service, research and academia. The city wants to ensure these jobs “are not segregated into separate lands away from other areas of the city, but rather that they locate in lively areas such as main streets and transit nodes.” 5

Protecting the skyline

There are a few proposed policy directions for strengthen­ing the city’s heritage protection to ensure that old buildings like churches and schools find new occupants as they live beyond their original use.

And opponents of the Château Laurier extension will be interested to hear that, in the context of “the city’s evolving skyline” and “the rising interest in addressing city image matters,” the plan recommends identifyin­g views of the city skyline that should be placed under protection.

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