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Ottawa Maps
Not really photos but I thought this would be a good place for everything "Map" about Ottawa. I'll start with these very cool wooden maps I saw posted on Reddit this evening. A home decor must for all the SSP forumers in your life :-)
https://www.etsy.com/ca/shop/WoodenE..._shop_redirect This guy does some cool stuff: https://img.etsystatic.com/il/072c02....jpg?version=0 https://i.etsystatic.com/13717244/r/...09906_61kp.jpg https://img.etsystatic.com/il/9e06bb....jpg?version=0 https://img.etsystatic.com/il/cf476c....jpg?version=0 https://img.etsystatic.com/il/d95b38....jpg?version=0 I think I like the zoomed out Ottawa map or the coasters the best. |
Nice! My girlfriend gave me these coasters last Christmas:
https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/07...g?v=1518985399 https://makerhouse.com/products/ottawa-map-coasters Is there a way to resize images on site |
They sell these trivets at ikindalikeithere.com
https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/16...g?v=1504019115 |
You may regret starting this thread because lordy, there are maps. :)
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moved to photos...
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I was doing some local history research and trying to find out more about the history of Ottawa's political borders and got the whole story :D. When the city first became a municipality in 1850, it was carved out of the Township of Nepean, with it's border at the Rideau River to the east, a line corresponding to what is now Gladstone Avenue & Mann Avenue to the south, and Booth Street to the west (except north of Albert, where the city extended a little further to the west to include all of Lebreton Flats). So basically, just present-day Lowertown, the northern two-thirds of Sandy Hill and Centretown, Lebreton, and Chinatown. These were unchanged for nearly 40 years and were Ottawa's borders at the time of Confederation.
Ottawa's borders were expanded in 4 waves. One in 1887-1889, another in 1907-1910, another in 1950, and finally in 2001. The first of these waves, in 1887-1889, brought New Edinburgh, the Glebe, and Little Italy into city limits. At this point, the northeastern border of the City of Ottawa reached its final pre-2001 form. The southern border became the Rideau Canal and the western border became the railway line that is now Line 2. Around this time period, a bunch of villages sprouted up just past the city's borders. Old Ottawa East (then just called Ottawa East), Hintonburg, Mechanicsville, and Westboro were founded in the Township of Nepean, while Janeville, Clarkstown, Clandeboye, and Rockcliffe Park were founded in the Township of Gloucester just east of Ottawa's border. Of these, Ottawa East and Hintonburg became independent municipalities while the remainder remained within Nepean and Gloucester. So the situation in the 1890s and into the first years of the 20th century was one of the City of Ottawa immediately bordered by several village suburbs, the largest of which were independent municipalities. A major amalgamation (the second wave of expansion of the city limits) occurred in 1907. The municipalities of Ottawa East and Hintonburg were annexed to the City of Ottawa; at the same time, more bits of Nepean Township were annexed as well, covering Mechanicsville, what is now Old Ottawa South and the Civic Hospital area. A small triangle around what is now Westgate was added a bit later, in 1909. In the east however, none of the villages were added to the city at this time; the three villages of Janeville, Clarkstown, Clandeboye were merged to form the independent municipality of Eastview (renamed Vanier in 1966) while Rockcliffe Park remianed entirely separate, eventually separating from Gloucester to form its own municipality in 1926. This map below (drawn by me) thus shows Ottawa's municipal borders as they were during both world wars. https://i.postimg.cc/prrvVqcj/Ottawa-1950.png This is the City of Ottawa as its border existed from 1909 to 1948. In orange, I outlined the city's original 1850 borders, and in red, marked the limits of the 1889 annexation. The 1909-1948 City limits roughly incorporated all of what could be called the "urban" part of the city, minus Westboro and Vanier (then called Eastview) which existed as developed communities but were independent. It's interesting to note that what is now Tunney's Pasture and Carleton University were located just outside the city's limits. It's also interesting that the western limit of the Village of Hintonburg that the city annexed in 1907 was at Western Avenue (which is probably how that street got its name--it was the city's western border!); it did not extend to Island Park, which is what people typically think of as the Hintonburg-Westboro border. This actually explains what I call "the great gap"--the sort of dead area along Richmond from about the Superstore to about Western Avenue that isn't really a part of either Westboro's or Hintonburg's urban form--Hintonburg didn't actually extend past Western Ave to directly meet Westboro. By the time World War II happened the city had filled up all the land inside the borders and needed expansion territory. With the rapid population growth and the beginning of the baby boom and the home ownership boom, new land was needed. In 1948, this triggered a major review of municipal governance in the area. A small area consisting of the northern half of what is now Carlington (roughly north of Shillington Avenue from Merivale to fisher) was immediately annexed to Ottawa while this review was underway. The first proposal, published in May 1948, would have had Ottawa annex all of Gloucester, Nepean, Vanier (then Eastview), and Rockcliffe Park; this would have brought into the city all of what is now the urban area minus Kanata-Stittsville and eastern Orleans. Here's an online archived copy of the Citizen from May 17th, 1948 in which the proposal was published (scroll to page 13) - https://news.google.com/newspapers?n...rontpage&hl=en. This was rejected as too extensive. Interestingly enough, judging by the newspaper coverage of all this, it wasn't the outlying residents worried about losing autonomy (like in 2001) that caused the complaints; it was actually residents of the City worried about the City having to spend too much money to expand city services out to the newly annexed areas. People in the outlying areas (especially Westboro and Bells Corners) were actually excited about the idea of being amalgamated and getting all the fancy city services. Instead, it was decided that Ottawa would annex large chunks of Nepean and Gloucester (thus bringing Westboro into the city) and Eastview and Rockcliffe would remain independent. This came into force on January 1st, 1950, thus expanding Ottawa's border to its final form pre-2001 amalgamation. At this time, Ottawa thus had a large amount of rural land within its borders which was rapidly developed as suburbs in the 1950s and 1960s. However, Ottawa filled to these borders soon enough, and with the rump areas of Nepean and Gloucester by then seeing rapid development too, they made the decision to form the two-tier Ottawa-Carleton government in 1969. (Aside: one fascinating thing I discovered when poking around all of those newspaper articles from the late 1940s was how different foreign affairs coverage was then. It was way more focused on Britain and the British Empire than it was on the United States--all kinds of details about Atlee's reforms and the situations in dissolving British colonies like India and Palestine were on the front pages but very little about anything happening in the USA). |
There's a new word for us courtesy of Mr. Pomeroy, buried towards the end of that bit of advocacy-via-newspaper: "homologation".
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The map of Ottawa prior to 1950 demonstrates that while Ottawa is located on the south shore of the Ottawa River, it did not form a narrow band following the river at that time. The city's growth was pretty well balanced east-west and north-south. However, even at that point, streetcar routes did dictate city growth. It was transportation policy of the 1950s that resulted in the construction of the Queensway that changed the form of the city onto an east-west axis. This was not inevitable.
The Greber Plan also included a north-south highway more or less along the Trillium Line railway corridor. But why did the Queensway get built while the north-south highway did not? This was a matter of timing. The cross-town railway abandonment required a relatively short piece of track between the Rideau River and Russell Road via Walkley Yards (constructed at that time) to allow the abandonment. This occurred in the early 1950s when momentum to move forward with the Greber plan was strongest. The corridor to build the Queensway became available by the mid 50s and construction commenced shortly thereafter. The corridor where the north-south highway was to be built was more challenging because of the industry on Lebreton Flats. By the time Lebreton Flats was cleared in the mid 60s, the impact of urban expressways was already apparent (expropriations and severed communities). Public interest in urban expressways had already waned even in Ottawa as the Queensway slashed through urban Ottawa at the very same time. It was for the very same reason why the MacDonald-Cartier bridge was not connected to the Vanier Parkway. If the north-south highway had been built, Ottawa would have had a more balance built form. Even though that highway did not get built, southward development was still not stalled and southward suburban expansion had began on a piecemeal basis and reached Leitrim by the late 1950s along the Bank Street corridor. What stopped it? The Greenbelt expropriations. My point in all of this is that Ottawa's layout on an east-west axis was not inevitable but resulted from multiple decisions made in the 1950s. Development in Kanata and Orleans were also planning decisions made by the rural townships and facilitated by the construction and extension of the Queensway. The Queensway was a golden opportunity for real estate developers. |
Fascinating stuff! Thanks for the history lessons CityTech and lrt's freind!!!
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People also need to remember that when the Queensway was built it wasn't built out to its current form. I suspect east-west due to orientation towards Montreal was the main reason than a north-south route.
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I'm sure Ottawa built more E-W as a natural consequence of the river but the 417 itself was built over an existing rail line.
https://kitchissippi.com/2015/06/11/...queensway-416/ Very interesting read about the building of the highway and its effects on local neighbourhoods. Quote:
https://i1.wp.com/kitchissippi.com/w...72%2C457&ssl=1 |
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The original iteration of the Queensway was not so much to facilitate intercity transportation as to bypass congestion on city streets within greater Ottawa. The Greber Plan's N-S highway was to do likewise, by bypassing the city's most congested street, Bank Street. Part of this planned N-S highway became the Airport Parkway. Back in the 1950s and 1960s all the highways into Ottawa were narrow winding goat paths that didn't encourage intercity driving. |
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[IMG]https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...e61f5134_b.jpgQuadrants by harley613, on Flickr[/IMG] |
love that pic / map and explanation - really shows the difference between west and east
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Holland Ave. at the bottom |
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