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  #1  
Old Posted Sep 5, 2018, 9:45 PM
LeadingEdgeBoomer LeadingEdgeBoomer is offline
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uOttawa Brooks Residence | Decommissioned

uOttawa's Campus Master Plan has had this residence on the hit list. With the opening of the new residence The Annex at Laurier and Friel, Brooks has been sacked. No students were moved in for the new school year. I can only assume that it will be torn down in the near future.


I did not expect this to happen so soon.
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  #2  
Old Posted Sep 5, 2018, 10:02 PM
LeadingEdgeBoomer LeadingEdgeBoomer is offline
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Looks like mold has made it uninhabitable.

Quote:
Posted on Thursday, February 15, 2018


Housing Service undertook air quality testing of all units in Brooks residence last weekend. This testing is now complete and preliminary results indicate the presence of mold spores in some units. Impacted students have been informed and are required to be relocated.
If you have not been contacted by Housing Service, it means your unit is not affected by this measure.
Rest assured that the health and safety of our student residents remains of utmost importance to the University. Active monitoring and testing will continue. We will communicate relevant information if need be.
If you have concerns or wish to be relocated, please contact Housing Service at our 24-hour line at 613-562-5885. New accommodation will be provided.
Please note that the following services are available to you at any time:

Last edited by LeadingEdgeBoomer; Sep 6, 2018 at 8:31 AM.
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  #3  
Old Posted Sep 5, 2018, 10:30 PM
kwoldtimer kwoldtimer is online now
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Do they mean mould spores, perhaps?
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  #4  
Old Posted Sep 6, 2018, 2:22 PM
OTownandDown OTownandDown is offline
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Originally Posted by kwoldtimer View Post
Do they mean mould spores, perhaps?
If its not the mold inside, it's the loose, failed styrofoam cladding mixed with loose bricks on the outside that'll getcha!
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  #5  
Old Posted Sep 6, 2018, 3:55 PM
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Too bad. Brooks is arguably the better looking of the uOttawa residences. I'm hopeful we see a few of the towers replaced sooner than later.
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  #6  
Old Posted Sep 7, 2018, 1:44 PM
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Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
Too bad. Brooks is arguably the better looking of the uOttawa residences. I'm hopeful we see a few of the towers replaced sooner than later.
Take a walk on campus... Brooks looks like a shabby 1990's Barrhaven townhouse development situated in the middle of a modern university campus. Couple that with totally failed cladding...
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  #7  
Old Posted Sep 7, 2018, 2:14 PM
TransitZilla TransitZilla is offline
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Originally Posted by OTownandDown View Post
Take a walk on campus... Brooks looks like a shabby 1990's Barrhaven townhouse development situated in the middle of a modern university campus. Couple that with totally failed cladding...
I always kind of liked the mid-rise scale of Brooks though I agree the cladding made it look somewhat dated.

Hopefully whatever replaces it will have a good street presence along King Edward.
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  #8  
Old Posted Sep 7, 2018, 2:38 PM
LeadingEdgeBoomer LeadingEdgeBoomer is offline
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Originally Posted by bradnixon View Post
I always kind of liked the mid-rise scale of Brooks though I agree the cladding made it look somewhat dated.

Hopefully whatever replaces it will have a good street presence along King Edward.
I agree that Brooks looked shabby. Over the next twenty years the university wishes to build several new buildings, including revitalizing King Eddy.


However, with the completion of The Learning Crossroads (the food court has now opened) and STEM Complex, the university has not announced any immediate plans for the next building. Who knows where the next building will go.? My guess is that they will turn Brooks into green space until they are ready to build on that site. The Master Plan shows a small park and a building taking up the space that is now Brooks.


IMHO, the best uOttawa residences are 45Mann, Hyman Soloway, and especially the new Annex. Honourable mention goes to Henderson and Friel residences.
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  #9  
Old Posted Sep 7, 2018, 4:34 PM
movebyleap movebyleap is offline
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I was an undergrad student at U of O when the Brooks residence was being built. We thought it was such a cool, colourful, "human scale" development among all the brutalist concrete buildings. It even had some grass and trees planted around it. It was really a nice looking res at the time and also suited the King Edward side of the street. That was the late 80s...the campus has come such a long way since then. (In a good way!!)
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  #10  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2018, 2:52 PM
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That's good news. The entire Brooks fronting on King Edward is a deadzone for useability. Will be nice to see added retail and better pedestrian usage on the whole, along with increased height.
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  #11  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2018, 3:26 PM
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Just one building? The Brooks Residences take up at least one city block, don't they?
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  #12  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2018, 3:49 PM
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Originally Posted by FutureWickedCity View Post
Just one building? The Brooks Residences take up at least one city block, don't they?
Yeah, from Thomas More(Osgoode) to Marie-Curie(Somerset) but like I said no details yet (don't know when either). Hopefully something "innovative" and different.
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  #13  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2018, 1:18 PM
LeadingEdgeBoomer LeadingEdgeBoomer is offline
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Originally Posted by FutureWickedCity View Post
Just one building? The Brooks Residences take up at least one city block, don't they?
If they stick to what is shown in the original release of the Campus Master Plan
--and there is no guarantee that they will--the Brooks site will have a taller building plus a portion of it will become King Edward Park.
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  #14  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2018, 1:29 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LeadingEdgeBoomer View Post
If they stick to what is shown in the original release of the Campus Master Plan
--and there is no guarantee that they will--the Brooks site will have a taller building plus a portion of it will become King Edward Park.

https://www.uottawa.ca/facilities/master-plan/precincts
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  #15  
Old Posted Sep 8, 2023, 1:27 PM
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U of O still pouring money into mouldy residence years after shutdown
Brooks Residence closed in 2018 due to mould and other concerns

CBC News
Posted: Sep 08, 2023 4:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: 5 hours ago



A long-closed residence continues to cost the University of Ottawa tens of thousands of dollars a month, internal documents show.

Documents obtained by Radio-Canada through a freedom of information request also suggest the university had suspected the presence of mould inside Brooks Residence years before it was closed in September 2018.

The university shut the building after mould spores were detected in some apartments, a spokesperson told Radio-Canada in an email.

According to the school, the mould was likely caused by construction defects that allowed water to infiltrate the building.

The university sent Radio-Canada the estimated electricity costs for the complex during each month from June 2019 to April 2023.

The bill for February 2023 alone was $43,000. The lowest monthly bill during that time period was $9,500 in September 2019.

Built for $23 million, the large residential complex on King Edward Avenue between Thomas More and Marie-Curie privates housed more than 700 students each year from 1987 to 2018.

Although its lifespan was estimated to be 60 years when it opened, the complex was only occupied for half that time.

Today, it sits nearly empty.

Only the Garderie Bernadette Child Care Centre, a parking lot and a few law school classrooms remain. Those facilities are housed in a building adjacent to the residence that's been unaffected by mould.

Much of the rest of the complex is cordoned off by yellow fences.

The University of Ottawa Students' Union has denounced the lack of information available about the residence.

Amine El Idrissi, the union's acting commissioner for Francophone affairs, said the university has lacked transparency and kept students in the dark on the future of the property.

He said he hopes the land the building occupies can be used to rehouse students facing obstacles to finding accommodations.

"To see this empty and dilapidated building is a pity for the university, but especially for our students," El Idrissi said.

This year, the University of Ottawa is expecting a waitlist of about 100 students once its 4,000 residence apartments have been filled.

Six years before the closure, the University of Ottawa suspected a considerable mould problem had developed between the walls of Brooks Residence.

In a draft letter to students dated December 2012, the university said inspections would be carried out between Christmas Day and New Year's Day. The problem, it said, "could lead to the evacuation of these buildings, if the health of the occupants is at stake."

Student relocations did not begin until February 2018, more than five years later.

Marcelle Desmornes, president of the union that represents support staff at the University of Ottawa, said in a French-language email she was "aware of the health and safety problems" that contributed to the closure of the residence.

"We have communicated our concerns to the employer," she said. "To date, the problems have not been resolved."

In an email to Radio-Canada, University of Ottawa spokesperson Jesse Robichaud said in French that water damage had been reported in the Brooks complex before 2018, but the decision to close the facility permanently was based on several factors, including the presence of mould spores.

Robichaud said the entire complex will eventually be demolished and replaced but a construction date has not yet been set.


With files from Radio-Canada's Gabriel Le Marquand Perreault

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...sing-1.6959759
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  #16  
Old Posted Sep 8, 2023, 2:30 PM
OTSkyline OTSkyline is offline
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Meanwhile we're living with a housing shortage crisis and the university is sitting on all these derelict residential buildings... The presence of privately-owned university residences around OttawaU would also suggest that student housing around campus is very much in demand.

Wonder why the University is taking so long to do anything about these.
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  #17  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2018, 12:42 AM
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Yeah, I really hope they step up their game and come up with a unique design.
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  #18  
Old Posted Mar 24, 2023, 2:20 PM
LeadingEdgeBoomer LeadingEdgeBoomer is offline
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Originally Posted by OTSkyline View Post
Are there any talks of replacing the Sandy Hill arena and redeveloping the 2 lots to the north? Between this development & Mann Ave and the main OttawaU campus?

That would be ideal, to better integrate the development and making it more walkable and feel like part of the campus. Surface parking, what looks like a very dated ice rink and a baseball diamond are probably not the best use of space here.
Re: The Sandy Hill Arena.

The Arena is old and energy inefficient. The City has long said that it wanted to get rid of/replace it. However, the land the arena sits on belongs to the NCC and is leased to the City. Sources at uOttawa have told me (I am a donor to Gee-Gee Sports) that the NCC has agreed to transfer/sell the land to uOttawa when uOttawa is ready to build a new Athletic Center on it (to replace the aging substandard Montpetit Hall). At the snail's pace that the university is gathering the resources for building an Athletic Center, it is still pretty far away.
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  #19  
Old Posted Nov 10, 2025, 8:44 PM
OTownandDown OTownandDown is offline
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Originally Posted by LeadingEdgeBoomer View Post
Re: The Sandy Hill Arena.

The Arena is old and energy inefficient. The City has long said that it wanted to get rid of/replace it. However, the land the arena sits on belongs to the NCC and is leased to the City. Sources at uOttawa have told me (I am a donor to Gee-Gee Sports) that the NCC has agreed to transfer/sell the land to uOttawa when uOttawa is ready to build a new Athletic Center on it (to replace the aging substandard Montpetit Hall). At the snail's pace that the university is gathering the resources for building an Athletic Center, it is still pretty far away.
Also, once the new residences are complete, that's the death-knell for Stanton and Marchand, right?
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  #20  
Old Posted Nov 10, 2025, 8:50 PM
LeadingEdgeBoomer LeadingEdgeBoomer is offline
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Originally Posted by OTownandDown View Post
Also, once the new residences are complete, that's the death-knell for Stanton and Marchand, right?
Brooks decommissioned, LeBlanc and Thompson are said to be the residences that will be replaced in the at this time. Will Stanton and Marchand follow in the future? Who knows?

Last edited by LeadingEdgeBoomer; Nov 10, 2025 at 9:05 PM.
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