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  #5081  
Old Posted May 16, 2017, 1:18 AM
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rocketphish rocketphish is offline
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Last edited by rocketphish; May 16, 2017 at 1:47 AM.
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  #5082  
Old Posted May 16, 2017, 3:13 AM
Admiral Nelson Admiral Nelson is offline
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That building shouldn't be called London Arms. It should be called Gorbachev's Birthmark
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  #5083  
Old Posted May 17, 2017, 1:18 AM
citydwlr citydwlr is offline
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Found out that the corner of Metcalfe and Albert--which, up until a few months ago, housed St. Vincent de Paul's "The Paul" store--was recently leased by a business called The Mad Radish:

http://www.madradish.com/

A job posting on indeed.ca indicates the following:

Quote:
Mad Radish is a new fast-casual salad concept, created by DAVIDsTEA founder David Segal. Serving chef-driven salads, soups and healthy snacks, we are bringing a new perspective to the salad category, emphasizing food that tastes as great as it makes you feel. Our first two stores are opening in June in Ottawa, and we will be supporting them with community involvement, fun events and a donation partnership with Community Food Centres Canada.
It looks like it will be a direct competitor to Ottawa-based Green Rebel, and Toronto-based Freshii.
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  #5084  
Old Posted May 17, 2017, 3:16 PM
Uhuniau Uhuniau is online now
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It looks like it will be a direct competitor to Ottawa-based Green Rebel, and Toronto-based Freshii.
I keep thinking Green Rebel is one of them special pharmacies.
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  #5085  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2017, 5:25 PM
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Jonathan Westeinde builds a powerful legacy of green real estate
Windmill Developments co-founder has never wavered from his most important mission: to create urban spaces that make Ottawans proud

By: Caroline Phillips, OBJ
Published: May 30, 2017 7:41am EDT


Jonathan Westeinde can be forgiven for running a few minutes behind for our interview. As co-founder and chief executive of Windmill Developments, he has a lot on his plate these days.

Most notably, Windmill has partnered with Dream Unlimited Corp. to transform the old pulp and paper mill on Chaudière and Albert Islands on the Ottawa River into an environmentally and pedestrian-friendly waterfront community, consisting of condos and townhomes, offices, shops and restaurants, and waterfront parks and pathways. It’s just a short walk (or portage) away from Parliament Hill.

It’s named Zibi, after the Algonquin word for “river.” Windmill has held on tight to its ambition of creating a sustainable urban space it can be proud of, despite objections from certain Algonquin First Nations over the sacredness of the land being developed.

The green real estate development firm is also building The Plant, an urban agricultural-themed condo and townhome project in Toronto, and is nearing completion of its church-to-condo conversion, Arch Lofts, also in The Big Smoke.

Mr. Westeinde draws inspiration from a variety of sources, including a tour he did of northern Europe and, in particular, Sweden. The Scandinavian nation has been been ranked the most sustainable country in the world for its renewable energy sources and low carbon dioxide emissions.

Other projects already ticked off the to-do list include the Cathedral Hill and The Eddy condominiums in Ottawa and the Whitewater Village luxury cottage community farther up the Ottawa River.

The biggest challenge in the business, he says, is having to rely on third parties, whether it’s different levels of government or building contractors.

“It all comes down to making sure you’re working with the right people and have the right relationships with people who are buying into your same vision,” he says, speaking in his office located along a bustling stretch of Wellington Street West.

Born and raised in Nepean, Mr. Westeinde is the youngest of three children and a member of the well-respected Westeinde clan, headed by John and Shirley Westeinde. The pair ran its own construction company until 2003, when they sold it to Aecon Group.

Mr. Westeinde’s older brother Jeff serves as the executive chairman of Windmill. He also ran his own company, cleaning up contaminated sites.

“My parents taught us work ethic,” says Mr. Westeinde, 47, a past OBJ Forty Under 40 recipient. “They would never give us money, but they would always give us the opportunity to work for money, which had me on a construction site when I was 12 and working two paper routes for much of my childhood.

“I remember my dad leaving the construction trailer door open when I started working on a Westeinde Construction job site one summer, and making it clear to the superintendent (ensuring that I heard) that it did not matter that I was his son; if I was not performing, he had every right to fire me.”

Mr. Westeinde gives a tip of the construction hat to his mother, not just for her community involvement but for excelling in a male-dominated field.

“She broke many barriers by being the first at many things as a woman in the construction industry, showing the importance of persistence and not letting intimidation slow you down.”

Mr. Westeinde studied at St. Paul High School in Bells Corners and Albert College boarding school in Belleville. He followed in the footsteps of his family members by attending the University of Western Ontario in London (now known as Western University). However, unlike his father and siblings, he opted for an undergraduate degree in economics rather than engineering.

He worked for several years in business before heading to Dublin to earn his MBA at Trinity College. Interestingly, he had to cross the pond to meet his future wife, who was from his hometown. Susan Finlay was there working for Corel.

Ms. Finlay is currently working with the Canada 3C expedition, which is taking Canadians on a learning and teaching adventure to all three coasts, via an icebreaker ship, to inspire a deeper understanding of our country. While she’s away, Mr. Westeinde has been keeping the home fires burning.

The couple has three very sporty daughters: Savannah, 16, Paige, 15, and Kyla, 12, the eldest of whom is on the junior Canadian team for freestyle whitewater kayaking. She’s headed to Argentina in November to compete in the world championships.

In his limited free time, Mr. Westeinde enjoys outdoor activities with his girls, particularly whitewater kayaking because it forces him to leave his cellphone behind.

“This business is great for someone who has slight ADD (attention deficit disorder),” jokes Mr. Westeinde. “There’s never a dull moment and there’s always lots going on.

“There can be good days and bad days, but there’s never a boring day.”



Five things to know about Jonathan Westeinde
  • Mr. Westeinde burned through all his money while studying in Dublin and had to moonlight as a rickshaw runner.
  • Windmill Developments gets its his name from the patriarch of the family, John Westeinde, who came to Canada from Holland at age 14. He became known as “Mr. Windmill” for his campaign to build a working windmill of friendship at Dow’s Lake.
  • Mr. Westeinde is famous in his family for his fish and chips, made with catch that he brings back from his annual fishing trips to the Haa Nee Naa Lodge on Dundas Island, B.C.
  • Mr. Westeinde sits on the board of the Children’s Aid Foundation of Ottawa, which, among other things, provides bursaries to deserving youth in care of the Children’s Aid Society.
  • Among his career highlights was being chosen in 2009 by a NAFTA committee to lead a North American task force on green building.

http://www.obj.ca/index.php/article/jonathan-westeinde-builds-powerful-legacy-green-real-estate
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  #5086  
Old Posted Jun 16, 2017, 1:29 PM
acottawa acottawa is offline
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Interesting article on the recent tragic fire in London and the theory that the cladding made it much worse. I hope they do not use that type of cladding in Canada.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/london-fire-grenfell-tarling-expert-1.4163560
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  #5087  
Old Posted Jun 16, 2017, 7:14 PM
kevinbottawa kevinbottawa is offline
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Athletic training facility coming to Orleans. Interesting partnership.

Quote:
Former Sens owner, renowned architect to build $20M athletics centre in Orléans

Paula McCooey, Ottawa CitizenPAULA MCCOOEY, OTTAWA CITIZEN
More from Paula McCooey, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: June 15, 2017 | Last Updated: June 15, 2017 4:38 PM EDT

A $20-million sports centre to help train some of Canada’s most promising athletes will be built in Orléans by 2019.

The 65,000-square-foot, multi-staged development — headed by architect Douglas Cardinal, Ottawa developer and former Ottawa Senators owner Bruce Firestone, and Black Sheep Developments — will be built on an empty lot on Mer Bleue Road. It will feature a large building, with Tumblers Gymnastics as the anchor tenant, and host international gymnastics competitions.

The facility will also eventually house coaches that will train some of Canada’s top gymnasts, and accommodate other sports including basketball, floor hockey and military-style obstacle courses.

“The economic impact for our community will be substantial,” Brian Dagenais, Black Sheep’s president, said in an announcement Thursday. “The building will be a celebration of achievement and a hub for families and businesses, and for us it’s just the first phase.”

Dagenais said Cardinal will build the environmentally sustainable sports complex to reflect users’ needs. After Thursday’s official announcement, Cardinal sat down with some of the young gymnasts from Tumblers to hear what they envision for the new facility.

“(Cardinal’s) goal today is to begin the process of talking with the kids and asking them, ‘What do you want in a facility?’ and through their vision, and the visions of parents, Tumblers, and board of directors, only by talking to them can he really properly express (their) desires.”

The facility will include a “wrap” of retail space with complementary businesses such as a physiotherapist, dance studio, massage therapist and chiropractor.

The project, near the corner of Innes Road, is expected to take two years to complete. It has yet to acquire the necessary building permits.

Cumberland Coun. Stephen Blais said the new facility will provide a much-needed space to train young athletes, while also creating an economic boon for local businesses.

“Orléans produces more than its fair share of Ottawa’s top-tier athletes, and a new world-class facility will help ensure that we continue to promote national level athletes while contributing to positive economic and social outcomes in our community.”
http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-news...to-build-20m-athletics-centre-in-orleans
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  #5088  
Old Posted Jun 16, 2017, 10:13 PM
kwoldtimer kwoldtimer is offline
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Very interesting, although I wonder how much "Douglas Cardinal" you get in a $20M facility? The article's mention of a "wrap" of related businesses makes me think this is where we'll see it. Look forward to seeing renders.
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  #5089  
Old Posted Jun 20, 2017, 9:21 PM
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Originally Posted by acottawa View Post
Interesting article on the recent tragic fire in London and the theory that the cladding made it much worse. I hope they do not use that type of cladding in Canada.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/london-fire-grenfell-tarling-expert-1.4163560
Hope it's not the same crap as TriBeCa, Fusion and Andaz. Idon't think it is. Ours seems to be flush on the wall while the Grenfell seems to protrude out.


http://www.getwestlondon.co.uk/news/west-london-news/grenfell-tower-before-fire-tore-13189075


http://www.ottawascondos.com/condo_buildings.php

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  #5090  
Old Posted Jun 20, 2017, 9:32 PM
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Robert Campeau, arguably the single most important figure in Ottawa development in the second half of the 20th century, has past away.

He was responsible for Place de Ville (and breaking the ridiculous 110 foot height limit), Terrace de la Chaudière, Place du Portage (apparently, I had no idea) apartment buildings, and thousands upon thousands of suburban homes across the city. He also built Scotia Plaza and Harbour Centre in Toronto along with many other projects in Canada and the U.S.

Quote:
Bold, controversial entrepreneur, builder Robert Campeau dies at 93



NORMAN PROVENCHER, OTTAWA CITIZEN
More from Norman Provencher, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: June 17, 2017 | Last Updated: June 18, 2017 5:49 PM EDT


Robert Campeau, the small-town boy who built up huge swaths of Ottawa and elsewhere before his business reach exceeded his grasp in the 1980s in a headline-grabbing corporate battle that wiped out U.S. retailers Allied Stores and Federated, has died in an Ottawa hospital.

He was 93.

Campeau arrived in Ottawa in the 1950s from Chelmsford, near Sudbury, almost penniless and with rudimentary English skills and a drive for success.

In the North, he was one of 14 siblings and he’d quit school in the eighth grade to help support his family. He took odd jobs, ranging from deliveries to sweeping floors at Inco for 50 cents an hour.

He maintained that focus when he arrived in Ottawa with a new wife and child, taking any job that came up, including driving truck for a Gatineau paper mill and running a corner store to feed his family.


But all the time his focus was on something bigger. In the booming post-war ’50s, Campeau quickly realized that housing for fast-growing families, like his own, was a no-fail proposition.

Most stories about his entry into the real estate and development sector agree that Campeau’s early days involved renovations, finding fixer-uppers, making them over and selling at a profit.

Eventually, he scraped together the capital for Elmvale Acres, building his first units on either side of Smyth Road. Gradually, the community spread north and south from there. His projects spread to the Pleasant Park neighbourhood and further.

Schools and churches followed the new homes, solidifying the communities.

The homes themselves were no-frills, $18,000 to $20,000 units built from templates to house a couple and 1.5 children.

While the families were, for the most part, happy and proud with their new homes, there were those who found the projects less than appealing.

In one of their regular battles, former mayor Charlotte Whitton famously opined: “When I look at his houses, I think perhaps nuclear bombardment might not be such a terrible thing after all.”

But the formula was solid and Campeau leveraged successes into larger and larger projects.

From suburban neighbourhoods, Campeau Corp.’s attention turned to highrises and, then, dramatically, in the 1960s he unveiled his blockbuster plan for the massive Place de Ville complex on Queen Street, with its 250-foot-tall main building, far in excess of the height permitted downtown under the existing bylaw. The project got the city’s approval.

Shortly afterward, when the NCC unveiled its plans for Place du Portage and, later, Les Terrasses de la Chaudière in Hull, Campeau Corp. was the major contractor for both.

The successes continued to pile up until, at the height of Campeau Corp.’s building successes, the company burst onto the world stage in 1986 with, first, the purchase of Allied Stores, for $3.5 billion U.S., and then, two years later, the even larger takeover of Federated, for $6.6 billion U.S. The acquisitions brought with them name stores such as Bloomingdale’s and Jordan Marsh.

At the time, business magazine Fortune called it “the biggest, looniest deal ever,” and it was not to last.

Trouble followed as cash flow from the stores fell short of the interest payments necessary to service the massive debt. Campeau Corp. shut dozens of stores and laid off thousands of workers across the U.S.

Finally, Federated and Allied filed for bankruptcy-court protection in 1990, emerging from court protection two years later as one company, Federated, with no links to Campeau Corp.

Creditors, owed a total of $8.2 billion U.S., recouped, on average, 72 cents on the dollar and were left holding the bag for $2.3 billion U.S. of debt.

After the Federated failure, Campeau mostly fell from public sight, reappearing briefly with deals in Germany and Austria, as well as other ventures.

In an email, Bruce Firestone, founder of the Ottawa Senators hockey team and a businessman in many ventures, recalled Campeau as “an amazing person in many respects.”

“Bob Campeau was a charismatic, angry, ambitious Franco-Ontarian from Sudbury,” Firestone says in his book, Don’t Back Down, written to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the founding of the Senators. In it, Firestone tells of his one face-to-face business encounter with Campeau, a battle over ownership of some bankruptcy-bound buildings needed to re-establish Firestone’s company, Terrace.

After much complicated haggling, first with Campeau and then with his staff, the 28-year-old Firestone was able to negotiate a purchase of the buildings, literally at the courtroom door.

“Terrace was on the way to a successful re-launch, thanks to Robert Campeau, the munificent,” Firestone writes. He notes in the email that the resurrection of Terrace led, “in an indirect way,” to “relaunching the Ottawa Senators.”

Campeau lived in Switzerland for a time, then returned to live in Toronto. In recent years, he had also been mostly active with his charitable organizations.

It’s not known when he returned to Ottawa. No cause of death was given.

He is survived by his wife, Christel, and his children Rachelle, Jacques, Robert Jr., Giselle and Jan-Paul.

The family will receive well-wishers at Notre Dame Cathedral on Sussex Drive from 9-10 a.m. on Thursday, June 22, followed by a funeral mass at 10 a.m. Interment will be at 2 p.m. at St. Isidore Cemetery on March Road in Kanata.
http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-news...reneur-builder-robert-campeau-dies-at-93

In somewhat related news, Brookfield is painting Campeau's Jean Edmonds North Tower gray (from the old patchy brown).


https://www.brookfieldproperties.com/portfolio/ottawa/jean-edmonds-towers/
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  #5091  
Old Posted Jun 21, 2017, 10:59 PM
Uhuniau Uhuniau is online now
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  #5092  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2017, 1:46 AM
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I wonder which developer offered them the most for their property?
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  #5093  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2017, 3:16 AM
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This is such a tricky one.. on the one hand i'm ecstatic to see a big shelter move out of the market and I hope it's a catalyst for the exodus of the others, but on the other hand I feel this sets back Vanier's pending gentrification by about 30 years.
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  #5094  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2017, 5:03 AM
Uhuniau Uhuniau is online now
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This is such a tricky one.. on the one hand i'm ecstatic to see a big shelter move out of the market and I hope it's a catalyst for the exodus of the others, but on the other hand I feel this sets back Vanier's pending gentrification by about 30 years.
Why should there be an exodus? The shelters located there for a reason.

It might be worth dispersing them a little so there's not quite such a concentration, but downtowns are where people who need shelters and associated support services actually are.

Already seems to be some vanier Nimbyism cropping up about it. Between that and the Market condo Nimbyism who have been agitating against Sally Ann, the Shepherds of Good Hope, etc., I wonder whose Nimbyism will win?
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  #5095  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2017, 12:51 PM
YOWetal YOWetal is offline
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Originally Posted by Uhuniau View Post
Why should there be an exodus? The shelters located there for a reason.

It might be worth dispersing them a little so there's not quite such a concentration, but downtowns are where people who need shelters and associated support services actually are.

Already seems to be some vanier Nimbyism cropping up about it. Between that and the Market condo Nimbyism who have been agitating against Sally Ann, the Shepherds of Good Hope, etc., I wonder whose Nimbyism will win?
I am a former Market Nimby on this issue but no longer own anything in the byward market.

Dispersal would be good but also the Market is an attraction for the whole city and Montreal road in that section is not.

Interesting to see if Vanier can push back against the plan. Their claim of helping the development of the area is laughable.
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  #5096  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2017, 1:02 PM
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Vanier's feeble NIMBYism will end up on the losing end of this. That I am sure.
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  #5097  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2017, 1:18 PM
kwoldtimer kwoldtimer is offline
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Vanier's feeble NIMBYism will end up on the losing end of this. That I am sure.
The local councillor's feeble response to the news rather bears out your view, istm. Is it safe to assume that the proposal will need no zoning amendments?

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/salvation-army-emergency-shelter-byward-vanier-1.4172483
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  #5098  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2017, 1:30 PM
Uhuniau Uhuniau is online now
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I am a former Market Nimby on this issue but no longer own anything in the byward market.

Dispersal would be good but also the Market is an attraction for the whole city and Montreal road in that section is not.
If Vanier, which is the last hard-scrabble, close-in neighbourhood to the core to start gentrifying (and it has started, contrary to popular belief) becomes the unofficial dumping ground for anything that the rest of the city doesn't want, then that is nothing less than pure institutional classism on the part of the city of Ottawa and its various civil society actors.
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  #5099  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2017, 1:33 PM
acottawa acottawa is offline
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If Vanier, which is the last hard-scrabble, close-in neighbourhood to the core to start gentrifying (and it has started, contrary to popular belief) becomes the unofficial dumping ground for anything that the rest of the city doesn't want, then that is nothing less than pure institutional classism on the part of the city of Ottawa and its various civil society actors.
Isn't that how the market got all of these institutions in the first place?
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  #5100  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2017, 2:05 PM
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I wonder if Sally Ann will take up the motel and the sizeable parking lot behind, it seems to be all one property. I think they can do something dignified in there, maybe with an inner courtyard. I hope they get enough money for innovative architecture that works for the community
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