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  #41  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2015, 1:00 AM
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Parliament's $3B 'mother of all renovations' on time, on budget

David Akin, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: March 24, 2015, Last Updated: March 24, 2015 5:27 PM EDT




Public Works and Government Services Canada is on time and on budget for its massive $3-billion, 20-year-project to rebuild the Parliament buildings but MPs seem only slightly impressed with the department’s efficiency.

In fact, New Democrat Pat Martin, a former journeyman carpenter, believes the job could have been done cheaper and faster if government bureaucracy had not gotten in the way.

“Too many cooks in the kitchen complicates the problem,” Martin said Tuesday after the House of Commons committee he chairs got a status report on the project. “It’s easy to be on time and on budget when you’ve projected a 20-year time frame at a cost 10 times of what it should really cost.”

PWGSC is the lead manager but the National Capital Commission, the Department of Canadian Heritage and the Office of the Speaker of the House of Commons all have various interests and authorities and that, in Martin’s view, has gummed things up.

Martin has advocated for a single authority for the physical infrastructure on the parliamentary precinct, modelled after the Architect of the Capitol, which has been the builder and steward of the American capital’s landmark buildings and monuments since 1793.

“I think we have the most beautiful Parliament buildings in the world and I’ve seen a lot of them,” Martin said.

And while he and other MPs on his Commons committee generally approve of the esthetics of the renovated buildings, one feature has some rolling their eyes: a glass roof over the new House of Commons being built now in the West Block.

“The glass roof is a fatuous architectural flight of fancy, in my view,” Martin said.

“At least you get better light,” said Mathieu Ravignat, the NDP MP for the West Quebec riding of Pontiac.

“It doesn’t change the face of the buildings per se but the glass roof is a little worrying, said Ravignat. “But certainly, esthetically speaking, I don’t have a problem with it.”

It cost more than a regular roof, Martin said, and, at one point, the type of glass had to be changed – at yet more expense – to accommodate lighting requirements for the television cameras that will broadcast the proceedings in the new House of Commons.

The West Block was shut down in 2011 after chunks of masonry from the 148-old Gothic Revival-style structure were reported to have fallen on tourists. When it re-opens in 2017, the House of Commons will meet there and the Senate will meet in the to-be-renovated Government Conference Centre across from the Chateau Laurier while Centre Block gets its multi-year refit.

“This is the mother of all renovation projects,” said Chris Warkentin, the Conservative MP for Peace River, Alta., who owned a residential construction company before politics. That PWGSC is set to meet its move-in targets for the first three buildings in the project is, to Warkentin, “a remarkable achievement.”

The first to open, later this year, will be the Sir John A. Macdonald building on the southwest corner of Wellington and O’Connor, known to most in Ottawa since it was built in 1930 as the Bank of Montreal building. The Beaux-Arts façade has been largely kept with a modern addition to its west at a cost of just under $100 million. It will house government ceremonial and committee rooms.

Next up is the 90-year-old Wellington Building at the southeast corner of Bank and Wellington streets. Gutted in 2010 to remove dangerous asbestos, it will re-open next March to become home to the offices of 69 parliamentarians and 10 parliamentary committee meeting rooms.

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/politi...-and-on-budget
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  #42  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2015, 1:01 AM
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Parliament’s $3-billion renovation running ahead of schedule, Public Works says

BILL CURRY
OTTAWA — The Globe and Mail

Published Tuesday, Mar. 24 2015, 3:18 PM EDT
Last updated Tuesday, Mar. 24 2015, 4:44 PM EDT


The cost of renovating Canada’s Parliament buildings has reached $3-billion, but officials insist the massive project is going well and is even running slightly ahead of schedule.

Public Works officials faced skepticism from Members of Parliament on the cost and timing of the construction during a committee briefing Tuesday. The MPs then joined the officials for a private tour of the West Block, which is scheduled to be the new temporary home of the House of Commons in 2017.

A glass ceiling will cover the temporary chamber, which will serve as swing space while the Centre Block is evacuated for renovations.

Senior Public Works officials told MPs on the government operations committee that of the $3-billion that has so far been approved for the renovations, about $1.8-billion has been spent. About $1.4-billion of that amount was spent over the past 10 years.

The chair of the committee, NDP MP Pat Martin, questioned why the McGill University hospital in Montreal could be built in roughly two years for $1.3-billion, yet the Parliament Hill project is taking decades.

“It’s long been my view that the reason everything on Parliament Hill costs 10 times as much and takes 10 times as long is there are too many cooks in the kitchen,” he said, arguing too many departments are involved in managing the project.

Public Works assistant deputy minister Nancy Chahwan said in her presentation that working with heritage buildings takes time and money and involves dealing with structural surprises.

“It would probably cost us less today to build a new parliamentary precinct, but because of the symbolism and the importance of the seat of democracy, we have to be very careful that we are maintaining that historic value and that symbolic value,” she said. “These are unique buildings.”

Ms. Chahwan said she is ultimately in charge of keeping the project on time and on budget and working with all of the other departments that have a role to play.

Ms. Chahwan also said her department is working with the RCMP to incorporate any additional security that may be required in the wake of the October shooting on Parliament Hill. She noted that plans were already under way for a new visitors screening centre that will be under the Parliament Hill grounds.

Following the meeting, Mr. Martin said he believes the project has involved “enormous waste” and that the glass ceiling for a temporary House of Commons is an example of unnecessary luxury.

“It’s absurd. The glass ceiling is a ridiculous, fatuous, unnecessary problem,” he said. “I mean we don’t need a crystal palace here.”

While Public Works insists the renovations are on-time and on-budget, various estimates for specific projects have circulated over time.

Ms. Chahwan had told the committee in November 2013 that the overall renovations had cost $1.1-billion between 2001 and 2013 and were expected to cost an additional $1.5-billion between 2013 and 2018.

Previous estimates are not easily comparable to current estimates however because additional projects have been added to the precinct renovations.

For instance, the government has just started renovations on the Government Conference Centre, which is south east of Parliament Hill across the street from the Chateau Laurier hotel.

The former railway station – which was the location of the 1981 Constitutional negotiations – was in need of renovations and is being refurbished to provide a temporary home for the Senate during the Centre Block renovations.

Renovations are nearly complete on a former bank on Wellington Street across from Parliament Hill. The building has been renamed the John A. Macdonald building and will be home to large Hill gatherings that had previously been held in the West Block.

Renovations on the Wellington Building, which normally houses a large number of Parliament Hill offices for MPs, is scheduled to be complete in 2016.

Public Works has said that renovations will take a pause in 2017 as Parliament Hill serves as a focal point for Canada’s 150th anniversary celebrations.

Conservative MP Brad Butt spoke positively of the renovations.

“I think it’s very exciting what’s going on around here and that we are wanting to preserve these assets and make them more functional,” he said during the committee briefing. “These buildings belong to the Canadian people and they are a treasure.”

Following the private tour, Conservative MP Chris Warkentin, who is parliamentary secretary to Public Works Minister Diane Finley, said the work to date on the West Block is “impressive,” and that he’s looking forward to seeing the finished result.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/...ticle23597161/
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  #43  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2015, 1:14 AM
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'The project of a lifetime': The architects of the West Block's ambitious rethink draw on similar European projects

The Ottawa Citizen
Published on: March 24, 2015, Last Updated: March 24, 2015 5:58 PM EDT



Quote:
The architecture team designing an addition to the West Block on Parliament Hill describes it as “both contemporary and yet respectful of the building which surrounds it.”

Originally published in the Ottawa Citizen on March 22, 2009

By Maria Cook


The architecture team designing an addition to the West Block on Parliament Hill describes it as “both contemporary and yet respectful of the building which surrounds it.”

The design features a free-standing pavilion in the centre of the courtyard of the West Block, as well as three new underground levels. The three-storey pavilion acts as a support for a glass roof, which will cover the entire courtyard.

When the new infill is finished in 2020, it will become the temporary chamber for the House of Commons, allowing the operations of Parliament to continue uninterrupted during renovation of the Centre Block, which is expected to last five to seven years.

When work in the Centre Block is complete with its restored chamber, the space will be converted into committee rooms.



“It’s the project of a lifetime; to take a building on Parliament Hill and not only to upgrade it but to add to it,” said architect Norman Glouberman. “And to do it in a way that we think will enhance the building and return it to its initial glory, and perhaps more than its initial glory.”

The addition is part of a major rehabilitation of the West Block that started in 2005. The project is expected to cost more than $1.3 billion. That includes renovation of the West Block, fit-up of interim accommodations for West Block occupants and functions which will be relocated next year to nearby buildings, and design and construction of the new infill.

For inspiration, the design team looked at the Oxford Museum of Natural History, a 19th-century Gothic building in Oxford, England that was built around the same time as the West Block. It has a spectacular atrium that provides an example of how a glass roof was built over a courtyard at the time.

Although there are technical differences, the overall spirit is to reflect the Gothic character of the building on the interior. From the exterior it will be almost invisible; it will be seen only from higher vantage points such as the Peace Tower.

“We see it as a very contemporary piece of architecture, but one that has some imaging back to the original Gothic,” said Glouberman. “We plan to have the structure exposed so it will be reminiscent of the Gothic kind of structure … a tree-like structure.”

The project is being carried out by two Montreal firms in a joint venture, Arcop and Fournier Gersovitz Moss Architects.

They plan to preserve the role of the courtyard as a source of light to the offices— hence the glass roof and the placement of the building as an object in the centre.

“We’re trying to keep it away from all the walls of the existing building,” said Glouberman, who is with Arcop. “We want it to be a pristine object in the middle of the courtyard.


Looking East, the architects’ vision of the pavilion rising in the courtyard, topped with a glass roof.

“We want to use a lot of local materials. We’re looking at wood and steel. We want to highlight Canadian materials and wood is very much a Canadian material.”

Both the British Museum in London and the Louvre have added space and solved circulation issues by making courtyards of this type. If done well, they give visitors an opportunity to appreciate details of the original architecture as an interior experience. The stone walls of the West Block facing the courtyard will remain exposed.

“Dealing with a heritage building takes a certain mindset,” said Glouberman. “Creating a contemporary infill, you have the contrast of the two, which you don’t see often in Canada but you see a lot in Europe. I think this is a real chance to do something innovative.”

The roof design carefully avoids putting weight on the existing stone building by transferring the loads back to the pavilion and some free-standing steel columns in the courtyard. The roof celebrates the structural system rather than minimizing its impact.

“I think it’s going to be a real piece of engineering, a real beautiful kind of structure,” said Glouberman. “Within the courtyard you’ll see this tree-like structure spanning over the space.


The design for the West Block has been carefully planned to take into consideration the important heritage characteristics of this building while ensuring it will meet parliamentary needs well into the 21st century.

“You will only see the new building inside,” adds Glouberman. “That’s one of the heritage ideas. They don’t want to change the image of the Hill. They want the three buildings (the West, Centre and East blocks) to stay very much the same from the outside. I think we all agree on that.”

The most dramatic change from a public perspective will be the new security arrangements. Instead of entering Parliament directly through the Peace Tower, visitors to the temporary Commons chamber are to be routed underground through a scanning facility before being allowed into the building. One MP compared it to a defence bunker.

“It’s essentially an underground facility, which you would enter approximately to the left of the steps in front of Centre Block, between Centre Block and West Block,” said Rob Wright, Public Works project director.

The new security facility is part of the West Block project, but it will eventually become part of a visitor welcome centre and serve as the entrance to the entire complex. It is located outside the building footprint.

“The successful design of such a facility — that must be at once an efficient, secure processing machine and also an elegant and welcoming signal point — poses an enormous design challenge,” says an architectural report obtained by the Citizen. “It is made more challenging by the fact that the site and landscape are part of a national historic site and they cannot be easily reshaped.”

The architects hope that once screening has taken place, entering the roofed courtyard will help make up for the unpleasantness of an underground entrance.

“All visitors, once scanned, will enter immediately into the courtyard, bathed in natural light and soaring in height,” says the report. “The courtyard becomes the meeting place, the orientation space. From this level, the visitor should be able to experience the full vertical sweep of the courtyard walls,” it says.

“The design team believes that the courtyard, covered by its new glazed roof, should be the centre of the building, and the circulation patterns of the different users (MPs, civic visitors, business visitors) should be anchored within this space.

“Everything significant and public within the building should be designed to happen within the courtyard,” including viewing of the Speaker’s parade.

A walkway inserted within the pavilion and courtyard roof structure will overlook the partially glazed roofs of the government and opposition lobbies and offer views of the building’s heritage façades.

The chamber will be located on the second floor. It will maintain the present Centre Block centre aisle width of 3.9 metres, the symbolic two-and-a-half swords’ lengths between government and opposition.

The West Block is also being upgraded to meet current earthquake requirements. The stones that make up the exterior will be removed individually and tied back to the rubble core and inside stone face of the walls. The floor will also be tied to the outside wall.

“We want to make sure the face doesn’t fall apart and the rubble core falls apart and the whole thing collapses,” says Glouberman. “It’s not something that happens easily, but it is work that has to be done.”

Parliament Hill by the numbers

Buildings completed:
1865: West Block, with additions in 1878, 1906
1865: East Block
1876: Library of Parliament
1922: Centre Block
1927: Peace Tower

450: Senate employees
2,500: House of Commons employees
350: Library of Parliament employees
5,000: Artifacts in the House of Commons Heritage Collection, ranging from sculpture and furniture to official portraits and historical paintings
550: Approximate number of windows on the Centre Block’s south façade
50,000: Number of stones on the façade
200: Days per year the carillon is played by Dominion Carillonneur Andrea McCrady
2.3: Weight, in kilograms, of the Peace Tower’s flag
795: Parking spots (north of Wellington between Elgin and Kent streets)
14: Number of statues on the grounds at Parliament Hill — plus two monuments
88,480: The area of the Parliament Hill grounds, in square metres

Compiled by Liisa Tuominen from:
The Parliamentary Precinct
The Parliament of Canada
Staff from: Public Works and Government Services Canada, Library of Parliament, House of Commons, Senate

© 2009 Postmedia Network Inc. All rights reserved.
http://ottawacitizen.com/news/politi...opean-projects
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  #44  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2015, 1:43 PM
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I dont understand how the courtyard will be converted into offices without huge amounts of complaints by users for not getting the skylight, or perhaps for getting a skylight where it is too hot or too cold. Seems to me it would have been much more practical and cost effective to put in a conventional roof, where conversions afterwards would allow a larger number of offices on different floors.

I also find it interesting that Pat Martin, a theoretical expert on construction, claims this is being over too long of a period of time and for too much money. Im curious if he was in charge of the renovations what the timeline/budget savings would be.
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  #45  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2015, 2:20 PM
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A conventional roof would ruin this building IMO. The courtyard is part of the building's heritage and was designed that way to let light in to the rooms facing into it. Having a glass roof preserves that intent.

As for cramming more offices in after Parliament moves out, I don't think that should be the goal. If they want more office space, they should just build more buildings, such as a Southwest block to replace the old American embassy and balance out the Langevin Block, finally visually completing the collection of parliament buildings from a triad to a quint.
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  #46  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2015, 4:10 PM
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Originally Posted by MoreTrains View Post
I also find it interesting that Pat Martin, a theoretical expert on construction, claims this is being over too long of a period of time and for too much money. Im curious if he was in charge of the renovations what the timeline/budget savings would be.
"A theoretical expert" indeed. I'm not sure that being a journeyman carpenter qualifies you to comment on multi-billion dollar renovation projects. His comparison with the McGill University Health Centre is a bit ridiculous. I'm not sure what a new build hospital has to do with the renovation and restoration of three historic legislative buildings while allowing continued functioning of the national government in the mean time.

Martin also says that it cost 10 times what it should have cost, so I guess his budget would have been $300 million.
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  #47  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2015, 4:46 PM
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I'm actually really glad they didn't go for that typical conservative approach ("just use what ever you can find at Home Depot to save money") and went with something innovative. This is more of the calibre we should aim for in this city. It reminds me of what was done at the British Museum in London.

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  #48  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2015, 4:55 PM
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Martin also says that it cost 10 times what it should have cost, so I guess his budget would have been $300 million.
I spent a couple of years as an IT consultant on this project. It was an absolute eye opener to a textbook example of the horrendous waste and mismanagement that we all hear about in terms of government projects. I always said... this could be done with 1/3 the people... so I'd do it for $1B
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  #49  
Old Posted Mar 31, 2015, 1:19 AM
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Here's a shot from day before yesterday of the buildings in question.

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  #50  
Old Posted Mar 31, 2015, 2:03 PM
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Amazing photograph! You can even see some of the old lovers path that is closed off due to 'safety concerns'. Also the giant hole next to the west block is pretty interesting.
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Old Posted Mar 31, 2015, 4:59 PM
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Amazing photograph! You can even see some of the old lovers path that is closed off due to 'safety concerns'. Also the giant hole next to the west block is pretty interesting.
Also, the former kitteh village site is completely gone.
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Old Posted Mar 31, 2015, 5:26 PM
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Also, the former kitteh village site is completely gone.
Im ok with that, I dislike cats.
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  #53  
Old Posted Mar 31, 2015, 5:34 PM
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Also, the former kitteh village site is completely gone.
We can't allow Russia to be the only country able to subdue a pussy riot.
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Old Posted Mar 31, 2015, 9:32 PM
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Im ok with that, I dislike cats.
Unfollow.
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Old Posted Apr 1, 2015, 5:01 PM
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Unfollow.
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  #56  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2015, 1:08 AM
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Public Works gears up for massive Centre Block renovation project

Don Butler, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: April 6, 2015, Last Updated: April 6, 2015 5:04 PM EDT


Public Works and Government Services Canada has begun gearing up for the rehabilitation of Parliament’s Centre Block — a project whose size, it says, will eclipse everything done to date in the parliamentary precinct.

In letters last month, Public Works outlined a two-stage process for selecting the Centre Block project’s construction manager and the team that will provide architectural and engineering services. It also solicited industry feedback on key elements that may form part of the solicitation process.

As an initial step, Public Works will soon issue a Request for Qualifications, allowing companies and teams interested in bidding on the two contracts to submit their credentials. It will then select a shortlist of three finalists for each contract and pick the winners after determining which bids offer the best value for Canada, the department’s letters say.

Work on the Centre Block rehabilitation won’t begin until 2018 and could take as long as a decade to complete. While work is underway, members of Parliament will meet in a new glass-roofed House of Commons being built as part of the rehabilitation of the West Block. Senators will meet in the Government Conference Centre, where renovations should be completed by 2017.

Last month, Public Works officials said the 20-year project to rebuild the Parliament Buildings was on time and on budget. Of the $3-billion that has been approved for the renovations to date, $1.8 billion has already been spent.

In its letters, Public Works describes the rehabilitation of the Centre Block as a project of national significance “that will be of a size greater than all work progressed to date” on the Long Term Vision and Plan for the parliamentary precinct.

The Long Term Vision and Plan spells out a series of rolling five-year plans that cover the renovation of the three core Parliament Buildings and other buildings within the parliamentary precinct.

Public Works says the Centre Block project will be “similar in complexity, scope and scale” to such projects as the Capitol Visitors Centre in Washington, a $600 million U.S. project that opened in 2008, the $2.1-billion U.S. renovations at the United Nations headquarters in New York, completed last year, and the planned rehabilitation of Westminster Palace in London, expected to begin after 2020.

“The rehabilitation of Centre Block will be a legacy project on behalf of all Canadians, and will ensure that this symbol of the country is preserved for the centuries to come,” the department’s letters say.

Public Works says it will use a “construction management at risk” approach for the project that may include provision for a guaranteed maximum price. The selected architectural and engineering team will work closely with the construction manager and provide “significant management influence” on the project, the department says.

dbutler@ottawacitizen.com
twitter.com/ButlerDon

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...vation-project
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  #57  
Old Posted Apr 13, 2015, 5:20 PM
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Artifacts unearthed on Parliament Hill

OBJ
Apr 12, 2015


OTTAWA - If Parliament Hill has sometimes seemed throughout its history like a boozy, male-dominated powder keg, it's worth noting that's partly what it was built on.

Recent archeological digs outside some of the main buildings in the precinct have turned up tens of thousands of artifacts from the early 19th century.

They tell a story of life before Sir John A. MacDonald, before MPs and senators, and before Ottawa was even called Ottawa.

Starting in 1827, the area that is now Parliament Hill was called Barrack Hill, a staging ground for the British Royal Engineers to undertake the construction of the nearby Rideau Canal. It was overseen by Lt. Col. John By — for which Bytown (now Ottawa) was named. It remained a military area until 1858, when Queen Victoria designated the site the future capital.

When crews began to dig to the west and to the east of Parliament's Centre Block last year for construction projects, they began to find evidence of that earlier incarnation. Archaeologists were called in to excavate the sites with small trowels.

On the east side, near a Senate parking lot, they found evidence of the foundations of the former powder magazine. It's believed that most of that limestone foundation structure is intact under an existing statue of Queen Elizabeth.

On the other side, north of the West Block, they found something even more significant — essentially the garbage dump, or "midden," of the former officers' quarters. Such discoveries can tell researchers heaps about a way of life in a particular era.

Nadine Kopp, a project archaeologist with the Paterson Group, oversaw the digs for the Department of Public Works. She lights up as she sifts through numbered plastic bags full of pottery shards, bits of weaponry, bottles and other treasures.

"You wouldn't typically expect to find a military site in downtown Ottawa, so it was really interesting, and really interesting that we found this intact, with all the construction that has taken place on the Hill since 1859," Kopp said.

"It's amazing that it was still there and preserved."

The artifacts include:

— A completely intact, long and thin opium bottle — a common remedy in the day for different aches and pains, as well as cholera.

— Two Catholic religious medals, unusual because most of the British officers would have been Protestant

— Several smoking pipes, including an unusual one engraved with a beaver and a coureur de bois.

— Personal grooming tools such as a lice comb and a toothbrush.

— Thousands of pieces of pottery and china imported from England.

— An intact Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce bottle and a mustard jar, the kind of condiments an officer might use to spice up his food.

"When you think of early Bytown, it's often portrayed as a swamp, as a back country area, but it's interesting to see the officers still enjoyed a gentlemanly life that was expected of them," said Kopp, who has worked on other archeological digs on Canadian military sites.

There was lots of evidence of drinking — wine bottles, beer bottles, champagne bottles, tumblers and glasses.

"Officers did drink quite a bit," she said.

"It was all part of their dinner that they would have enjoyed, and the advantage they would have had as officers because the rank-and-file of the military weren't allowed to drink on site."

Sifting through the dirt also gave the archaeologists a sense of the diet of these officers. There were many butchered cow, sheep and pig bones, but also fish and game they caught to make their cuisine more interesting — geese, wild turkey, catfish and the now-extinct passenger pigeon.

Oysters and cod sometimes got shipped in from the East Coast, as evidenced by the shells and bones found in the dig.

Ottawa historian Don Nixon, in his book "The Other Side of the Hill," described the environment on Barrack Hill and how cows and horses used to graze there. The buildings faced towards the Ottawa river, rather than out onto what would become the modern downtown core.

"Looking through [the trees] from their front verandas the soldiers had the most wonderful view of the sweeping river, the thundering falls, the green forest and the hazy mountains in the distance beyond," Nixon wrote.

The officers' quarters became government offices after Confederation in 1867, but burned down in 1874.

"By finding actual artifacts in context, from the barracks, we can better learn about the actual people that lived there, and that's what archaeology's all about, learning about the people from the past," said Kopp.

Public Works says it will transfer the artifacts to interested Canadian museums.

Note to readers: This is a corrected story. A previous version wrongly referred to a carrier pigeon. It was a passenger pigeon

By Jennifer Ditchburn, The Canadian Press

http://www.ottawacommunitynews.com/n...rliament-hill/
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  #58  
Old Posted Jul 4, 2015, 7:57 PM
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Is there any update on this project? I'm surprised at how little publicity it's generating.
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  #59  
Old Posted Jul 8, 2015, 8:21 AM
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No details on what's going on inside, but here's what it all looks like from above on the 2nd of July:

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  #60  
Old Posted Jul 8, 2015, 4:30 PM
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Incredible picture !

Next time you are up there, it would be nice to see one of the VIU against the water!
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