We have moved to www.chnaottawa.ca
The Civic Hospital Neighbourhood Association (CHNA) is a volunteer, non-profit community group comprised of residents living near the Civic Hospital campus of the Ottawa Hospital in Ottawa, Ontario. To find out more about the CHNA, go to the blog archive for August 2010 on the right and choose “About us”, “Get involved” and ”Get on the CHNA email list".
Friday, April 12, 2013
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Open House about City's draft plan for Preston-Carling Area on February 5th
A message from the office of Councillor Katherine Hobbs follows:
You're Invited: Open House on Carling-Preston District CDP
Urban design consultant George Dark’s recommended development plan for the Preston-Carling district, one of the fastest growing neighbourhoods in the city, will be presented at a public information session on Tuesday, February 5.
The Preston-Carling strategic directions will complement two community design plans in the Preston Street corridor: One for Bayview Station District at the north and Gladstone Station District farther south.
This information session will be a chance for residents to see and comment on the Mr. Dark’s recommended approach for redevelopment of the Preston-Carling district, including project timelines, and to view the results of a recent public design charette. The Preston-Carling district plan was commissioned to ensure orderly development after the City received a number of applications for major developments in the area.
The charette was conducted by Mr. Dark and resulted in a model showing possible buildings, greenspace and transportation links. After the public information session, City Planning staff will review the public comments and present their recommendations to the City’s Planning Committee and Council for consideration in March.
Date: Tuesday February 5, 2013
Time: 7 to 8:30 p.m.
Location: Tom Brown Arena, 141 Bayview Road, Ottawa
For more information on the Carling-Bayview Community Design Plan and to review and comment on the results from the design charette, please visit ottawa.ca/carlingbayview.
Note from CHNA: See January 25th posting called "Ottawa’s tallest buildings, highest density: coming to streets near you." Please consider completing the CHNA 'Survey Monkey' questionnaire on this issue by going to http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/R772VTW
Friday, January 25, 2013
Ottawa’s tallest buildings, highest density: coming to streets near you?
-City releases draft
development plan for Preston-Carling Area
-CHNA seeks community input
The City has just released a draft development plan for
the Preston-Carling area, which includes the eastern section of the Civic
Hospital neighbourhood. The central theme: major “intensification.”
You will be affected by the plan if
. . . you live in the Civic Hospital neighbourhood . . . travel on our streets . . . use our parks . . . send your
kids to a neighbourhood school . . . swim at the Plant Recreation Centre . . .
enjoy the ambiance of Little Italy . . . live near a patch of development land,
etc., etc..
Among the draft plan’s highlights:
- It calls for the area to have the tallest buildings and highest population density in the entire city.
- It calls for the area to have the tallest buildings and highest population density in the entire city.
·
·
- It would allow construction in the area of at
least 23 condo and office towers of between 15 and 40 storeys (3x40, 3x30,
6x25, 2x20, 7x18, 2x15 — for a total of 556 floors of high-rise development).
· -
It would
allow construction in our own Civic Hospital neighbourhood of one 30-storey
tower, five 25-storey towers, and one 15-storey building. That’s 170 floors of
high-rise development (mainly condos), all to be clustered on the block of land
between Champagne St. and the O-Train trench, north of Carling.
· -
It says there should
be a height transition from the towers “towards the surrounding stable residential
neighbourhoods", but there
isn't one. The maximum height of the “transitional” buildings on our side of
the trench will be over nine storeys, putting high-rises adjacent to
one and two storey buildings.
· -
It recommends new
road/bridge connections over the O-Train trench at Young and Hickory
Streets, encouraging more
traffic to flow on residential streets between our
neighbourhood, Little Italy and
points further east.
·
- The plan calls for
traffic calming projects throughout the study area. No details are provided.
· -
It calls for “the
provision of a sufficient and generous high quality public realm.” That means traffic calming projects, parks,
public squares, sidewalk improvements, etc.
It says the details “should be prepared and implemented through
collaboration between the City and all stakeholders.” However, public realm
projects appear to be dependent on money from developers.
· -
It proposes expanding
Ev Tremblay Park to include the lot to the west of the park on Champagne Avenue
(where the Beechgrove Apartments are). It suggests making part of Champagne
Avenue into a pedestrian-first area (cars must give way to people) to allow
passage between the two halves of the park.
· -
It recommends the establishment of a new,
large-scale federal government building complex in the green space south
of Carling Avenue between the O-Train and Sherwood. This would eliminate a space
that is currently used for recreation by the community.
·
You can find further details here: http://ourkitchissippi.ca/development/draft-plans-for-carlingpreston-have-your-say/and here: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/Plan+rein+development+Little+Italy+still+threatens/7809335/story.html
So, what do you think?
The Civic Hospital Neighbourhood Association
(CHNA) is seeking input. Please complete our short 'Survey Monkey'
questionnaire by going to http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/R772VTW
We’ll share the results with our Councillor,
Katherine Hobbs.
The association is also encouraging residents
to send comments directly to Councillor Hobbs and City planners. You can email
Hobbs at Katherine.Hobbs@ottawa.ca and City planners at Carling-BayviewCDP@ottawa.ca
Whatever you think
of the plan, NOW is the time to speak
up!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)