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Originally Posted by someone123
One thing about Ottawa is that the urban planning was clearly a bit timid going back even to the 1800's. There's no downtown street that follows the Parliament Hill alignment. It's quite odd, and as soon as you cross Wellington you're pretty much in "normal" territory. Had Wellington Street and that central axis been turned into something special extending as a parliamentary precinct over to the canal it would feel like a more expansive and cohesive area (basically, you'd be able to stand in a lot more places and see only better than average Parliament Hill type buildings and finishings).
Most of downtown Ottawa reminds me of Edmonton or Calgary with a height limit and lack of landmark commercial buildings (you don't get the Bow by selecting the low bid when doing a federal office tender), while the neighbourhoods are a mix of Ontario and Quebec style architecture. Unfortunately the Ottawa height limits were not very well planned; it's in the same boat as Halifax except with even more office space crammed in.
The Chateau Laurier addition to me seemed representative of the way things often go in Canada. It's a unique building in a special area with a distinctive style that represents just one small part of the city that would have to be protected. Yet it's still subject to profit maximization and that meant wanting to attach a glass box to it. We don't seem to have a lot of urban districts that we really invest in or maintain their integrity. Anything goes for the most part. The old part of Quebec City is one exception.
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There was no capital planning until Wilfrid Laurier came in to power 30 years after the Parliament Buildings were complete. Other than giving up the land for the Château Laurier (named for him, despite his opposition) and Union Station, I can't think of any major project achieved during his time in office.
The ambitious Holt-Bennett report was completed under Borden, but nothing was built due to WW1.
William Lyon Mackenzie King commissioned the War Memorial, Ottawa's greatest monument however, he hired Jacques Gréber in 1946 who came up with the very car-centric bones we have today.
Pearson built the NAC and the "temporary" Science and Tech out in the suburbs.
P.E. Trudeau had some amazing museums built, such as the Civilization and the National Art Gallery.
In all that, we never had a visionary Mayor. Charlotte Whitton built the handsome old City Hall just outside downtown, reachable by car only. She staunchly opposed any development. It's a wonder that Place de Ville, Ottawa's first high-rise complex, was built, under her reign despite her strong opposition.
Today, we have the likes of Watson, a "steady-as-she-goes" type mayor, who is building crucial new infrastructure (many of which were spearheaded by his flashy predecessor O'Brien), in a way that's always a little bit mediocre. Confederation Line is nice (problems aside), but it falls a little short, with narrow platforms downtown and Bayview Station, the transfer point between Confed and Trillium, not built with future possibilities in mind. Lansdowne is nice, but the park space is bland, the stadium is small, the Civic Centre still needs work and the Aberdeen Pavillion's roof is patchy and leaking.
There have been a lot of great plans over the years that we're never built, and even more bullets dodged. Ottawa is the city that tries, but often falls short. It's a nice Canadian City, but doesn't measure up to true world class cities in Europe or Oceania.