Ottawa Citizen

Owner appeals decision on Château plan

- JON WILLING

The owner of the Château Laurier is appealing a committee of adjustment decision rejecting part of the company’s plan to build an addition on the north side of the heritage hotel.

Heritage Ottawa is also appealing the decision, ensuring that the advocacy group is a party during the hearing.

Larco Investment­s, through its affiliate Capital Hotel GP Inc., filed the applicatio­n with the province’s Local Planning Appeal Tribunal (LPAT), one of the company’s planning and communicat­ions consultant­s, Suzanne Valiquet, confirmed on Wednesday.

The company awaits a hearing date.

A five-member panel of the committee of adjustment last month released a decision that refused a request by the hotel to reduce the protected setbacks in the northwest part of the property.

Under the current design, the hotel’s proposed addition would jut out toward Major’s Hill Park along 16.5 metres of the expansion’s facade. The committee of adjustment ruled that the area of the addition would represent an increase in density on the site and therefore was not “minor.”

The committee of adjustment, whose membership doesn’t include politician­s, considers applicatio­ns for minor variances to property zoning rules.

The committee, however, allowed a variance when it comes to a retaining wall planned inside the setback zone at the edge of Major’s Hill Park. The mandatory setback for a building on the hotel property is three metres.

Michael Polowin, one of the lawyers representi­ng Heritage Ottawa, confirmed the group was also filing an appeal to LPAT.

The group believes Larco’s minor-variance applicatio­n wasn’t properly brought before the committee of adjustment, but the procedural play is important since Heritage Ottawa could be a full party to an appeal, rather than applying to be a party to Larco’s appeal, Polowin said. jwilling@postmedia.com twitter.com/JonathanWi­lling

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