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  #1241  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2026, 8:21 PM
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I didn't know about the full removal of the berm.
The early plans had the arena buried "under" the berm. Doesn't really look like anything now but maybe a slight elevation. I'm assuming that's why the City wanted to scrap the art piece, since there wasn't a significant enough berm to be able to re-instate it. There were a lot of major changes revealed at the very last minute before the vote, with the parking garage between the podium and the stands being another one (still not shown in any renderings).



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  #1242  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2026, 8:25 PM
Ottawacurious Ottawacurious is offline
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From the latest Engage newsletter, they said this about the berm:

What’s next for the berm?
The berm at Lansdowne has long been a beloved feature of the Great Lawn. A place to sled in the winter, enjoy casual views of events, and spend time outdoors.

Throughout the public engagement of Lansdowne 2.0, we consistently heard how important it was to preserve the berm as Lansdowne evolves. This feedback played a major role in shaping the next steps for the berm and surrounding landscape.

A newly designed six-metre-tall berm will be built once the Event Centre is complete. It will be located on the southeast side of the Event Centre. The new berm will offer safe winter sledding, comfortable seating and viewing areas for summer concerts and festivals, and improved accessibility for visitors of all ages. It will be part of a broader set of upgrades to the Great Lawn, including better lighting, enhanced seating, improved washroom access, and new tree planting, all aimed at creating a welcoming, year-round public space for the community.
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  #1243  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2026, 8:41 PM
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Originally Posted by Ottawacurious View Post
From the latest Engage newsletter, they said this about the berm:

What’s next for the berm?
The berm at Lansdowne has long been a beloved feature of the Great Lawn. A place to sled in the winter, enjoy casual views of events, and spend time outdoors.

Throughout the public engagement of Lansdowne 2.0, we consistently heard how important it was to preserve the berm as Lansdowne evolves. This feedback played a major role in shaping the next steps for the berm and surrounding landscape.

A newly designed six-metre-tall berm will be built once the Event Centre is complete. It will be located on the southeast side of the Event Centre. The new berm will offer safe winter sledding, comfortable seating and viewing areas for summer concerts and festivals, and improved accessibility for visitors of all ages. It will be part of a broader set of upgrades to the Great Lawn, including better lighting, enhanced seating, improved washroom access, and new tree planting, all aimed at creating a welcoming, year-round public space for the community.
The current berm is 10 meters. They may establish a new berm, but it won't be anything of significance like the one we lost or what was part of the early 2.0 plans.
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  #1244  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2026, 9:40 PM
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The current berm is 10 meters. They may establish a new berm, but it won't be anything of significance like the one we lost or what was part of the early 2.0 plans.
Thanks. I assumed that they would want a decent berm for seating for festivals. Hopefully that rendering undersells what it will actually look like.

As for the look of the arena, I am hoping to be pleasantly surprised. There is lots of glass in the renderings, and the interiors look pretty similar to the Slush Puppie Centre. If it turns out like that, I'll be quite happy.

The parking lot sucks.
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  #1245  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2026, 9:08 PM
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CityFolk seeking new home with Lansdowne 2.0 construction underway
Other marquee events like the Ottawa Farmers' Market and 613Flea are also searching for new homes because of the Lansdowne 2.0 redevelopment project and renovations on the historic Aberdeen Pavilion.

By Aedan Helmer, Ottawa Citizen
Published Mar 25, 2026 | Last updated 2 hours ago | 5 minute read


With construction rolling ahead on the massive multi-year Lansdowne 2.0 project and the historic Aberdeen Pavilion shutting down for renovations later this year, marquee events like CityFolk, the Ottawa Farmers’ Market and 613Flea are searching for new homes.

CityFolk, the annual festival that grew out of the Ottawa Folk Festival, had a successful 10-year run at Lansdowne’s Great Lawn, but the looming years-long construction timeline at Lansdowne Park will force the festival to relocate.

City staff involved in the Lansdowne project recently suggested festival organizers had already booked the RA Centre on Riverside Drive for the 2026 edition of the festival. The RA Centre’s expansive outdoor lawns hosted the Escapade electronic music festival in 2025 and are to host that festival again in June.

AJ Sauve, director of media relations for Bluesfest and CityFolk, would not comment on the RA Centre rumour, but confirmed the Lansdowne 2.0 redevelopment had forced festival organizers to “shop around” for a new site.

<more>





https://ottawacitizen.com/news/cityfolk-seeking-new-home-with-lansdowne-2-0-construction-underway
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  #1246  
Old Posted Mar 27, 2026, 12:47 PM
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There's no shortage of places for Folk Fest. They might even find more success elsewhere.

The Farmers Market and 613 Flee will have a harder time since they need a building. The old St. Charles Church on Beechwood could be an interesting spot, though not particularly accessible.
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  #1247  
Old Posted Apr 10, 2026, 5:14 PM
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New Ottawa pilot targets local, diverse hiring at Lansdowne 2.0 construction
A showcase at TD Place brought together the construction company behind Lansdowne 2.0 and local providers for a new pilot project

By Sophia Laporte, Special to the Citizen
Published Apr 10, 2026 | Last updated 1 hour ago | 4 minute read




https://ottawacitizen.com/news/ottawa-pilot-local-diverse-hiring-landsdowne-2
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  #1248  
Old Posted Apr 10, 2026, 7:28 PM
OTownandDown OTownandDown is offline
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What's the reason for going across the football field? Connection to existing infrastructure?
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  #1249  
Old Posted Apr 10, 2026, 9:40 PM
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What's the reason for going across the football field? Connection to existing infrastructure?
Think so, and there is no parking under the field.
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  #1250  
Old Posted Apr 27, 2026, 12:38 AM
Tariq20 Tariq20 is offline
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crane is up
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  #1251  
Old Posted Apr 27, 2026, 12:59 AM
kwoldtimer kwoldtimer is online now
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Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
There's no shortage of places for Folk Fest. They might even find more success elsewhere.

The Farmers Market and 613 Flee will have a harder time since they need a building. The old St. Charles Church on Beechwood could be an interesting spot, though not particularly accessible.
Far too small.
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  #1252  
Old Posted May 6, 2026, 7:42 PM
yotajoe yotajoe is offline
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Second crane went up today
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  #1253  
Old Posted May 7, 2026, 11:13 PM
CastlesintheSky CastlesintheSky is online now
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Second crane went up today
Two cranes. That should go up pretty fast.
Any idea when they will demo the north side seats. I go to the Goodlife that's in the basement. Wonder where they will relocate when construction starts.
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  #1254  
Old Posted May 8, 2026, 12:44 PM
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Deachman: New CFL playoff format tells me Lansdowne 2.0 backed the wrong team

Ottawa is struggling to keep up with the fortunes of two professional sports franchises heading in very different directions.

By Bruce Deachman, Ottawa Citizen
Published May 07, 2026


If 90 per cent of the sports teams in a league qualify for the playoffs, what exactly is the regular season for?

That’s the question Canadian football fans might be asking following the recent announcement by the CFL that, starting in 2027, eight of the league’s nine teams will advance to the post-season.

The league is citing more meaningful games, more fan engagement, and more teams staying alive longer into the year as pluses.

But there’s another way to look at it: getting in really doesn’t mean much — and may, in fact, make more games matter less.

This feels less like innovation than survival.

Last year, league commissioner Stewart Johnston noted that only two CFL teams had turned a profit the previous season. “That’s not a sustainable business model,” he said.

And perhaps that’s of particular interest in Ottawa these days, where two professional sports franchises appear to be heading in very different directions and, increasingly, at very different speeds — and where the city may be struggling to keep up with the fortunes of each.

One league — the CFL — is not-so-quietly lowering the bar to keep teams, and the league itself, relevant. It has adjusted rules and formats in an effort to, in Johnston’s words, “win in the attention economy.”

The other — the PWHL — is finding that its problem is not too little interest, but too much.

In remarkably little time, the Professional Women’s Hockey League has become one of the city’s hottest properties in sports. The Ottawa Charge have drawn crowds and a level of enthusiasm that most teams, and leagues, would kill for.

In the attention economy, it’s doing gangbusters.

And yet, when it came time to plan the future of Lansdowne Park, the city effectively sent two very different messages.

It went to considerable lengths to “right-size” the site for the CFL and OSEG — the Redblacks’ owner — ultimately relying on Redblacks projections that may have been overly optimistic.

But when it came to the arena, “right-sizing” meant reducing capacity to the point where the PWHL and Charge effectively said, “We can’t play here. It’s too small.”

The result is that the team has had to look elsewhere — not because of a lack of demand, but because the plan didn’t anticipate its success.

So here’s the $419 million question: why is the city investing hundreds of millions in a Lansdowne 2.0 project that is backing a dying league, and potentially evicting a winning one?

The Charge are looking for a new home. Throughout these PWHL playoffs, their home games will be at the Canadian Tire Centre — an arena that solves the capacity problem while creating another: geography.

For many fans, it’s a long haul. For a team whose early success has been partly built on accessibility, it’s not ideal, and season ticket-holders I’ve spoken with are not excited by the prospect of the team leaving downtown.

Meanwhile, the Senators’ future downtown arena, where the Charge will hopefully one day play, remains years away, leaving Ottawa with a hot ticket and nowhere quite right to stage it.

Yet, when the Charge do play in a larger venue, the response is unmistakable. At its April 3 game at the CTC, an announced crowd of 17,114 turned out — a figure that almost exactly matched the Sens’ home average of 17,123 last season. Not bad for a league that by just about any measure is still just getting started.

True, the game had the feel of a one-off special event. And yes, the familiar Kanata drawbacks were all there, including $26 for parking and the slow, bottleneck crawl out of the parking lot afterwards.

And while the crowd was much bigger, the atmosphere wasn’t necessarily better. As TD Place Arena has shown for three seasons now, 8,000 fans in the right building can feel louder, closer and more connected than twice that number spread throughout a much larger venue.

The energy at CTC was still strong, rivalling or even exceeding Sens’ games. Fans waved oversized cutout heads of players. One young girl holding a sign that read “Future PWHL goalie” drew a huge ovation when she was shown on the jumbotron, as did a man proudly hoisting a copy of Heated Rivalry.

But it felt different — more diffuse and less like the compact shared buzz that makes games at TD Place feel electric.

That said, even in a building that’s too far, too inconvenient and, for many, in the wrong place entirely, it still worked. The Charge and their fans brought the goods.

The stakes will be even higher when the Charge return to the CTC for Games 3 and 4 of their best-of-five semifinal series against the Boston Fleet — the kind of meaningful games leagues are often talking about.

The city has spent years trying to make Lansdowne work, finding the right scale and use. It decided on a new smaller, more efficient arena, one less prone to empty-seat optics.

When the city’s auditor general examined the last Lansdowne report, it warned that some of the financial projections tied to the Redblacks — including how often the team might host playoff games — were optimistic.

With the CFL changing its playoff criteria, those assumptions might now seem more likely. But that may not mean what it once did, if those games lack urgency, if they’re closer to Participaction than playoffs.

I’m not a gambling man, but I would wager a hefty sum of money that the CFL doesn’t survive anywhere close to 2075, which is how long the city is projecting on receiving revenue from its deal with OSEG for Lansdowne 2.0.

Which makes the contrast with the PWHL harder to ignore. Women’s hockey doesn’t need help filling seats. It needs more seats. And the city didn’t just underestimate the demand; it didn’t figure out — or care to figure out — what size arena that demand required. And so the arena it is building may be too small for the team most want to see there, while the arena that is big enough is one many fans don’t want to go to.

The city didn’t back the wrong horse. Turns out it was in the wrong race.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-news/cfl-playoffs-pwhl
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  #1255  
Old Posted May 8, 2026, 1:30 PM
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I'm sure the soccer teams are reading this article and saying what the hell. Not a mention of them using the stadium.

Weird article. I'd get it if he argued that the City chose the 67s/Blackjacks over the Charge, though that would be a stronger argument if the Charge existed when the plans were made or had some skin in the game. I don't get how the Charge would be in opposition with the Redblacks or any team that uses the stadium.
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  #1256  
Old Posted May 8, 2026, 1:39 PM
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I'm sure the soccer teams are reading this article and saying what the hell. Not a mention of them using the stadium.

Weird article. I'd get it if he argued that the City chose the 67s/Blackjacks over the Charge, though that would be a stronger argument if the Charge existed when the plans were made or had some skin in the game. I don't get how the Charge would be in opposition with the Redblacks or any team that uses the stadium.
I agree that the complete lack of mention of any of the other teams is weird.

That said, soccer teams only need half the stadium, and I'm assuming the 67s aren't projected to make any profit for the Lansdowne Partnership.
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  #1257  
Old Posted May 8, 2026, 2:26 PM
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That said, soccer teams only need half the stadium, and I'm assuming the 67s aren't projected to make any profit for the Lansdowne Partnership.
Not sure that the soccer teams would agree that they only need half of the stadium. For one, the ambiance for soccer would be entirely different with only one grandstand. And two, the teams already use both sides for bigger games and would undoubtedly say that they plan to grow their attendance to a point where they need it regularly.

As for the 67s, I don't think that profit expectations are relevant (though I do think they were probably profitable this year.) They are owned by OSEG, which has put tonnes of money into the project and the value of the team is part of the equity that is included in balance sheet. That puts them in a very different category than a secondary tenant that has invested nothing into the facilities.

Last edited by phil235; May 8, 2026 at 2:36 PM.
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  #1258  
Old Posted May 8, 2026, 2:34 PM
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Not sure that the soccer teams would agree that they only need half of the stadium. For one, the ambiance for soccer would be entirely different with only one grandstand. And two, the teams already use both sides for bigger games and would undoubtedly say that they plan to grow their attendance to a point where they need it regularly.

As for the 67s, I don't think that profit expectations are relevant (though I do think they were probably profitable this year.) They are owned by OSEG, which has put tonnes of money into the project and the value of the team is part of the equity that is included in balance sheet. That puts them in a very different category than a tenant that has invested nothing into the facilities.
I was under the impression that the soccer teams only used the south side stands outside of playoffs. I wasn't aware they use both sides regularly.
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  #1259  
Old Posted May 8, 2026, 2:38 PM
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I was under the impression that the soccer teams only used the south side stands outside of playoffs. I wasn't aware they use both sides regularly.
I think that's right, but they do play in various non-league competitions that draw bigger crowds, particularly when they play higher level teams, so I doubt that they would be good with cutting the stadium in half.
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  #1260  
Old Posted May 13, 2026, 12:58 PM
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Toronto developer plans ‘heritage chic’ boutique hotel as part of Lansdowne 2.0

By Marissa Galko, OBJ
May 12, 2026


A boutique hotel is in the works as part of the Lansdowne 2.0 project.

The Toronto-based developer behind the two 40-storey residential towers proposed as part of the project told OBJ Tuesday that it plans to include condo and apartment rental units, as well as a boutique hotel. Last November, city council approved the $418.8-million project to redevelop Lansdowne Park with a new 6,600-seat event centre, new north-side stadium stands, and the two towers. Toronto’s Mirabella Development Corp. bought the air rights for the towers for $65 million.

CEO Julie Di Lorenzo told OBJ that the area lends itself to what her team has in mind.

“(Lansdowne Park and the Glebe) has so much depth of character and history. It’s got an established neighbourhood. It’s got so much history that’s been incredibly well-preserved. It’s not going to be hard to tell a story about a boutique hotel there,” she said, adding that access to Lansdowne’s “best-in-class” amenities, the Rideau Canal and the greenspace in the Glebe attracted Mirabella to the project.

Of the 770 planned units, Di Lorenzo said that approximately 150 will be hotel rooms. And while it’s still early in the project, she said international hotel brand Marriott has shown interest in partnering with Mirabella on a boutique hotel concept. “(Marriott) has something called Autograph (Collection),” she said. “Autograph allows you to create your own (hotel) brand and that’s why we were really excited about creating a brand within the community that drew from the history of the community. It’s nice to know that people recognize the importance of this site and its premium location.” The hotel will have a “heritage chic” vibe, Di Lorenzo said, drawing inspiration from the area’s history.

“Of all the sites in Canada, I would say that it’s one of the best sites I’ve come across in 40 years, because it has so many attributes. I think the boutique hotel will be well-served by clients.” The hotel will have traditional amenities such as a concierge and valet service, security, as well as an exercise facility and health services. Di Lorenzo said Mirabella is debating adding a pool, similar to the one on the 10th floor of the 38-storey Mirabella luxury condo tower in Toronto.

“We may or may not have a pool. It would be really nice to have a pool with the view of the canal and the park, but we’re not sure,” Di Lorenzo said. “We’re also trying to do something a little different in our future projects. Maintenance fees are high in buildings with a lot of amenities. Other than security, valet and concierge services, we would try to reduce maintenance costs for people to have the most value (for them) long-term.” Di Lorenzo said that there will be “ample parking planned very creatively on site,” adding that the Mirabella team is not concerned about parking issues. “We will not tax the neighbourhood in terms of traffic. Usually, multi-unit residential doesn’t create very much traffic because people, especially in an environment like this, will walk to a lot of the places.” The two towers will be designed to fit into the neighbourhood, she said. “We’re going to divide these buildings to ensure that they’re a comfortable massing for the neighbourhood. We know what the neighbourhood is familiar with for that location, and so they won’t be identical. We think it’s a lot more interesting to have them staggered.” She expects the hotel to appeal to a variety of guests, from business travellers to weekend tourists.

“When people come to boutique hotels, they’re not often businesspeople. They’re sometimes coming (to the hotel) as a choice destination. This is a really nice choice destination to spend a weekend. But if you are coming for business, there’s so much to do that is at your doorstep.” Mirabella plans to meet the city’s timeline for the project, she said, breaking ground in 2031 and completing the project by 2034.

“We were really delighted to be participating in something that is such a beautiful physical location, but also represents an amazing collaboration between the private and public sectors. So we’re coming in at the easiest point in the project. Everyone else has done all the work, and our clients will be the beneficiaries of this magnificent campus,” Di Lorenzo said.

https://obj.ca/toronto-dev-plans-boutique-hotel-lansdowne-2-0/
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