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  #81  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2022, 5:56 PM
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Slush cannons, ice probes among ideas to extend Rideau Canal skating season
Working on an earlier start seen as more effective than extending season's end

CBC News
Posted: Jan 21, 2022 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: 9 hours ago




The National Capital Commission (NCC) wants to find ways to open the Rideau Canal Skateway earlier in the season and will be working with Carleton University to try out some ideas — including something called a "slush cannon."

The NCC has been working for years to figure out how climate change affects attractions like the canal so that it can better manage them.

A 2020 report said one of the problems of warmer, wetter winters is a shortened Rideau Canal skating season. Seven of the last 10 skating seasons have been shorter than the average of 59 days.



In its news release on this year's opening, the NCC said it concluded it would be more effective to try moving up the start date of the skating season, which in recent years has happened in mid-to-late January, than trying to extend its end.

The collaboration between the NCC and Carleton is set to run for four years. This year, the team is gathering baseline data about the canal conditions to inform future pilot projects that could give skaters more time on the ice.

Shawn Kenny, a professor of environmental engineering at the university, says they'll look at ice temperature and use ground-penetrating radar to measure ice thickness.

The temperature sensors were only installed this week, dropped into holes drilled in the ice. The probes will take temperature readings from the mud at the bottom of the canal, the water and the ice, he said.

Kenny said the team will look at several factors unique to the skateway. One is the effect of run-off water and effluent from road bridges over the canal, while another is the fact the canal isn't the same depth along its whole length.

He said he could imagine tweaking how the canal is insulated, flooded or cleared of snow, but subzero temperatures will still be key as he doesn't think refrigeration is viable — financially or environmentally.

One way to extend the life of the skateway would be to promote thicker ice earlier — and that's where "slush cannons" could come in.

Similar to snow cannons used on ski hills, they would spew very cold water or even slush onto the ice, according to Bruce Devine, a senior manager with the NCC.

"Just imagine: if the water is cold enough to start building some ice, and we can build it [so that] even if the temperature rises we don't lose the ice, then we can achieve our 30-centimetre thickness possibly sooner," Devine told CBC's Ottawa Morning.

The idea was discussed at a Thursday NCC meeting, where CEO Tobi Nussbaum also mentioned playing around with the canal's water depths.

The team intends to study if deeper water affects the freezing or melting speeds of the ice.

The NCC also recently partnered with civil engineering students from the University of Ottawa to tackle a problem spot near the canal's northern end that doesn't want to fully freeze over.

Nussbaum said there should be an update in April on the NCC's wider work on climate change, and particularly the agency's vulnerabilities.

With files from CBC's Ottawa Morning and Sara Frizzell

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...ange-1.6321738
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  #82  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2022, 6:08 PM
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That's cool. Love to see the NCC working with local universities.
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  #83  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2022, 11:59 PM
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You can now buy drinks on the Rideau Canal Skateway – and we're not talking hot chocolate
Locally owned and operated Dunrobin Distilleries has its own cocktail kiosk on the world's largest skating rink

By: Caroline Phillips, OBJ
Published: Feb 11, 2022 11:30am EST




Sometimes you really do need a stiff drink, especially after skating the entire 7.8-kilometre distance of the Rideau Canal on a really cold day against a strong headwind.

So, go ahead and have one. Dunrobin Distilleries has made history as the first craft distillery to serve its locally made spirits on the world’s largest skating rink. It's come up with its own signature winter cocktail, called the Northern Spike, made from hot maple sap with a shot of Dunrobin’s award-winning whisky, served in 12-ounce biodegradable cups.

And you thought hot chocolate was a good pairing with BeaverTails.

Word is slowly getting out about the new Dunrobin Cocktail kiosk, which is set up at the north end of the canal at the Concord rest area between Pretoria Bridge and the National Arts Centre.

“The feedback has been very positive,” Dunrobin Distilleries co-owner Mark Watson said. “Sales have been good. They’ve been very good, I would say.”

The Rideau Canal Skateway is managed and maintained by the National Capital Commission, a Crown corporation. It's temporarily closed due to the mild weather.

The Dunrobin-based business says it approached the NCC in 2019 with its idea to offer a uniquely Canadian alcoholic beverage that could warm skaters up, similar to a hot toddy.

The pitch went over well, thanks to the Canadian focus, said Watson.

“It’s not very interesting to have just a rum and Coke on the canal. It's more interesting to have something that's only available in Canada."

The business was selected through a request for proposals process that Watson described as long and extensive.

“You had to jump through a thousand rings of fire to get accepted,” he said of all the requirements, including proof of bilingualism, environmental considerations and health and safety protocols.

Dunrobin Distilleries has a fenced-off licensed area in which customers can enjoy their drinks. There are places to sit that are kept properly lit after the sun goes down. Beverages are served from an Airstream Caravan mobile bar by employees with Smart Serve certification.

The location is meant to be a place for skaters to enjoy a nice drink – and not a boozy watering hole.

“In a perfect world, people would be skating with their cups,” said Watson, who’s just happy the NCC gave the distillery permission to sell its spirits on the canal this winter. “It’s the first time in history they’ve allowed alcohol to be served. It shows them as being very progressive.

“Everybody that stops by is very excited by the concept.”

Along with the $9 Northern Spike cocktail, skaters can order $5 shots of the distillery’s assortment of spirits, which include its whisky, gin, vodka and limoncello. It also serves a non-alcohol green tea with maple sap drink that’s full of antioxidants.

Sales have been “on track” with expectations, said Watson, who hopes to expand the distillery's presence on the canal next year, provided Winterlude activities are back on. The multi-day winter celebration is one of Ottawa's most important tourist draws, attracting an average of 600,000 visitors each year.

Dunrobin Distilleries was co-founded by Watson and his business partner and longtime friend Adrian Spitzer about four years ago on Watson's small organic farm in the rural west-end community of Dunrobin. It grows and harvests many of its own organic ingredients that Watson and Spitzer combine with their passion for the art of distilling.

“I’ve been distilling since I was in high school, and so has my partner,” said Watson.

The business has a team of 20 full- and part-time employees. Its leadership includes former Royal Oak Pub Group CEO Jonathan Hatchell as vice-president.

"We're growing, and we're trying to become one of Canada's premier producers of spirits," Watson said.

January's cold weather meant the skateway was open for 27 consecutive days in 2022, almost as many as last year’s season total of 29 days.

This past week hasn't been great for business, though. The kiosk was shut down earlier due to the downtown "Freedom Convoy" protests, followed by a warm spell that has temporarily closed the skateway. Temperatures are expected to start dropping again on Saturday.

Weather permitting, the Dunrobin Cocktail kiosk operates 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday as well as Monday through Wednesday, and from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.

Watson has gone skating a bunch of times this season, using blades that he attaches to his cross-country ski boots.

“It’s been wonderful,” he said of the exercise and fresh air. “Now, after I do that 11-kilometre workout, I reward myself with [insert Robbie Burns accent here] a wee dram of Dunrobin whisky.”

caroline@obj.ca

https://www.obj.ca/index.php/article...ot-talking-hot
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  #84  
Old Posted Aug 15, 2022, 4:55 PM
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Le Boat changes tack and taps into whole new base of Canadian consumers

Heddy Sorour , OBJ
Aug 15, 2022 11:59am EDT




The owners of Le Boat didn’t just pivot during COVID-19; they managed a full pirouette.

The luxury canal houseboat purveyor, one of the largest in Europe, responded to the pandemic in a way that not only preserved but also expanded its market while much of the travel and tourism industry floundered.

A global company based in France, Le Boat launched its Canadian operations in 2018 out of Smiths Falls, offering a variety of cruises on the Rideau Canal where travellers rent a houseboat and captain it themselves.

Because its operations in Europe were affected by the global pandemic before COVID reached North American shores, Le Boat had already experienced the disruptions and knew that the product was ideally suited to pandemic restrictions.

“We did a lot to try to drive awareness that Le Boat is in your own backyard and that this is a very safe type of holiday where you could literally explore Ontario’s great outdoors from a luxury perspective,” explains Lisa Mclean, marketing manager with Le Boat.

“That was one of the keys for our type of product. We’re not a group tour, we’re not at a campground with other people, you’re floating on your own cottage and in your own social bubble.”

So, just as the pandemic reached Canadian shores, Le Boat was already soliciting coverage from mainstream media outlets that could reach a high-end market of Canadian consumers wishing to explore different aspects of the Rideau Canal.

“Le Boat is a great example of a business that pivoted their marketing efforts to capture a new demographic of customers during COVID,” says Julia Crowder, manager of economic development in Smiths Falls. “I also believe that by offering shorter vacations — three days instead of their usual seven days — it put the vacation into a price point and timeframe which was more appealing to the domestic market.”

Le Boat targeted its marketing geographically in Canada, McLean explains. “When I plotted where our customers came from, I could see that the clusters were all around (Hwy.) 401, so we really targeted our marketing to people living along the 401 corridor, all the way from Windsor to Quebec and within anywhere from a one- to five-hour drive time.”

Given the turbulence caused by the pandemic, the company doubled-down on efforts to build confidence in the Le Boat brand in both customers and staff, including a full refund policy during the pandemic and now a flight cancellation guarantee.

“So, if your flight is delayed by two days, we’ll hold your boat for you and we’ll only bill you for the days you’re on the boat or give you a refund,” says Mclean. “One of the things I’m proud of is that Le Boat didn’t lay off staff. They did everything possible to make sure all our staff still had jobs. They were even quick to refinance to keep the money flowing through the travel industry. I was probably one of 10 of my friends that still had a job during COVID.”

As a marketing strategy, it was a complete about face for Le Boat, which, when it first set up shop in Smiths Falls in 2018, had focused its marketing almost exclusively on its existing 18,000 customers from Europe, the U.S., Australia and South Africa.

The company, which marked 50 years in business in 2019, can be traced back to English entrepreneur Michael Streat, who in 1969 founded Blue Line with eight boats. Le Boat today is a combination of three companies: Crown Blue Line (originally Blue Line), Connoisseur, and Emerald Star in Ireland. It offers houseboat rentals that cruise the waterways in France, England, the Netherlands, Belgium, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Germany, as well as in Canada.

In the company’s first two years of operations pre-COVID in Smiths Falls, 60 per cent of bookings were from Europe, 30 per cent from the U.S., and 10 per cent from Canada, according to McLean. Most were from past Le Boat customers interested in seeing more of Canada by boat, especially since the Rideau Canal is a UNESCO World Heritage site.

The change in tack brought about by the pandemic did not go unnoticed by local municipal officials.

“Their pivot brought new tourists from the region, who discovered not only Smiths Falls, but also all the towns along the Rideau Canal,” comments Crowder. “The town is working with Le Boat to help expand their fleet and provide more opportunities for both domestic and international visitors.”

As a result, Le Boat is expanding not only on the Rideau, but potentially beyond.

“We now have 30 boats and because demand from the domestic market has been so strong, we are getting four additional boats next year, so we’re exceeding our original business plan of only 32 boats on the Rideau,” says Mclean. “We’ll have 34 boats on the canal in 2023 and we’re currently looking for a second base somewhere along the canal – hopefully in Ottawa.

The company is also exploring expanding operations onto the Trent Severn waterway over the next few years. But its growth has not been all smooth sailing.

“With the demands of COVID, boat sales in Canada are actually up 20 to 25 per cent so it looks like people from Ontario turned to boating during COVID and a lot of people bought their own boats, so dockage space is actually a challenge,” says Mclean.

https://www.obj.ca/index.php/article...dian-consumers
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  #85  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2023, 3:08 PM
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There is a cold snap in the long term forecast for next week, but it is hard to see a scenario where it persists long enough to counteract this week's mild temperatures and late February/early march sun.


Rideau Canal Skateway
@NCC_Skateway
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50m
Persistent above average seasonal temperatures and current ice conditions will prevent us from opening the #RideauCanal Skateway this week.

We’ll reassess conditions at the end of the week.
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  #86  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2023, 3:16 PM
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Will this be the first time that the Canal isn’t opened for the season?
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  #87  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2023, 3:23 PM
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It's unfortunate but that's the thing with weather, can't control it.

The city needs to seriously revamp Winterlude to be much less weather (and Canal dependant). Winterlude used to give Ottawa an edge on winter tourism but it's really gotten downhill in the past few years (even outside COVID).

They should look at what's being done in Montreal with Igloofest. Some great events happening and it draws huge crowds for several weeks in Jan/Feb - think of it as our winter version of Bluesfest.


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  #88  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2023, 6:14 PM
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Will this be the first time that the Canal isn’t opened for the season?
Yes, I believe so. If it happens.
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  #89  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2023, 9:37 PM
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This is interesting reading with the benefit of living a little further in the future than when it was written.


Climate Change: A Long-Term Strategic Issue for the NCC.
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  #90  
Old Posted Feb 25, 2023, 3:41 AM
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Rideau Canal Skateway won't open this winter
Warmer, wetter weather could jeopardize future of popular Ottawa attraction

CBC News
Posted: Feb 24, 2023 12:34 PM EST | Last Updated: 6 hours ago




The Rideau Canal Skateway will not open this winter, making this season the first one ever without the popular pastime and tourist draw.

The National Capital Commission (NCC) said Friday afternoon the closure is disappointing, but the weather didn't co-operate.

"This winter's higher-than-average temperatures, snow and rain … contributed to a thin and porous ice surface," it tweeted.

"The latest ice tests show that the ice surface remains unsafe. Any further efforts are unlikely to yield a different result."

This winter in Ottawa has been one of the warmest in decades, with more than 250 centimetres of snow falling as of Friday — weather conditions poorly suited to the formation of thick, smooth ice.

The NCC first dispatched a team of workers armed with brooms and shovels to clear a short section of the frozen waterway for skating in 1971. This year is the first time the skateway hasn't opened since then.

The capital's annual Winterlude festival, which ended Monday, also did not have one of its major attractions for the first time ever.

Until now, the shortest skating season on the canal was in 2016, when the skateway was open for just 18 days. The latest opening date was Feb. 2, 2002.

Last winter, the entire 7.8-kilometre length of the skateway opened in mid-January and lasted 41 days until early March.

The NCC bills it as the world's largest skating rink, calling it "an iconic and beloved attraction" as it closed the door on its chances for the season.

"We already look forward to welcoming visitors to the world's largest skating rink next winter."

As winters in Ottawa grow warmer and wetter, the NCC has been experimenting with new ice-making methods, and has also updated and bolstered its climate change strategy.

"This year taught us a great deal about the effects of milder winters on the Skateway … [We] remain committed to applying what we learn going forward," it said in Friday's news release.

According to a long-term risk assessment commissioned by the NCC, the warmer weather has shortened the average skating season on the UNESCO World Heritage site by about four days per decade, typically at the start of the season.

According to the report, February starts could become the norm, while skating seasons of 40 days or more will become the exception by 2050. (The report's authors didn't dwell on the possibility that the skateway might remain closed altogether.)

"In the long term, the NCC should determine the threshold for which investing in maintaining the ice surface will exceed the benefits provided, and consider diversification of winter programming surrounding the canal," the report said.

It mentions the possibility of hosting concessions and other winter activities such as cross-country skiing next to the canal on the NCC's pathways and Queen Elizabeth Driveway.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...osed-1.6738557
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  #91  
Old Posted Feb 25, 2023, 12:59 PM
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I wonder if it is possible to grade the bed, drain it completely and then flood it like you would a backyard rink?
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  #92  
Old Posted Feb 25, 2023, 2:44 PM
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Do the downtown section as a chilled rink, and with heat pump/transfer technology use the extracted heat to heat buildings
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  #93  
Old Posted Feb 27, 2023, 4:26 PM
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Really sad it didn't open this year, and after the NCC and Carleton University put in so much extra effort to get it done.

Meanwhile, the City is not helping by using stupid amounts of salt everywhere.
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  #94  
Old Posted Mar 1, 2023, 7:15 PM
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Do the downtown section as a chilled rink, and with heat pump/transfer technology use the extracted heat to heat buildings
It's a good idea, and one that was just setup at the new Shipyards outdoor skate plaza in North Vancouver:

https://www.nsnews.com/in-the-commun...-plaza-6194263
https://www.cnv.org/parks-recreation...ds/skate-plaza
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  #95  
Old Posted Apr 13, 2023, 1:39 PM
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What if we refrigerated the Rideau Canal?
Wayne Borrowman's cool idea just might save the skateway from climate change and heat your home, too

Alistair Steele · CBC News
Posted: Apr 13, 2023 4:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: 6 hours ago


Wayne Borrowman has never skated on the Rideau Canal, but he just might have a cool idea to save Ottawa's famous attraction from climate change.

Borrowman is an engineer and director of research and development for CIMCO Refrigeration, a company headquartered in Burlington, Ont., that claims to have built more than half of the world's artificially cooled ice rinks.

With more than three decades of experience in the industry and hundreds of major projects including Olympic venues under his belt, Borrowman knows a thing or two about the thermal systems required to maintain a top-quality ice surface.

So when he learned this past winter that warm, wet weather had for the first time in its 52-year history prevented the Rideau Canal Skateway from opening, Borrowman saw an opportunity.

"I guess the first thought I had was, well, we're in the refrigeration business and we make ice," he told CBC. "Yeah it's a big surface, but we've done big refrigeration systems."

In a blog post, Borrowman estimated the skateway's ice surface to equal about 60 NHL rinks. To him, it's just a matter of scaling up.

"That may sound crazy to some, but I've spent my whole career involved with the design and installation of large cooling systems and I can assure you from an engineering perspective it is possible," he wrote.

Underlying a typical refrigerated rink is a network of some 15,000 metres of piping through which a brine solution or propylene glycol is pumped, extracting heat from the ground and keeping the ice surface above in a solid state.

Based on Borrowman's estimate, refrigerating the Rideau Canal would require nearly one million metres of piping, with chilling units about the size of a shipping container placed at regular intervals along its 7.8-kilometre length.

The big question is where all those pipes will go — encased in concrete, set into the mud, or somehow suspended at an optimal depth — and whether they can coexist with the canal's other seasonal uses.

"The issue is that it may not be practical from an installation or operating cost perspective," Borrowman acknowledged in the blog post.

Undaunted, he began to consider the potential output of such a massive thermal system.

Traditionally, the heat extracted from the ground during the refrigeration process was simply expelled into the atmosphere. More recently, CIMCO and other refrigeration companies have been putting that heat to better use to warm arenas and other buildings.

"It's not just about cooling, it's about what you can do with the heat that you would otherwise have lost," Borrowman explained.

One example is the Shipyards Skate Plaza in North Vancouver, where CIMCO installed a system that not only chills the ice, but also provides space heating and hot water to nearby buildings — enough to warm the equivalent of 40 homes.

Borrowman estimates the thermal output of a refrigeration system capable of chilling the Rideau Canal would be similar to that of a massive district energy system in Sweden, thought to be the world's largest. (A district energy system is already operating at the Zibi development on the Ottawa River.)

So the Rideau Canal could one day provide Ottawans with far more than winter recreation — it could heat their homes, too.

"I would want to be real clear here that this was sort of a thought exercise," Borrowman told CBC. "But think about some difficult things that humanity has done that are more complicated than this."

Shawn Kenny, a professor at Carleton University's department of civil and environmental engineering who has been working with the National Capital Commission (NCC) to improve ice conditions on the Rideau Canal Skateway, agrees that from a purely scientific perspective, Borrowman's idea is "doable."

"The concepts are there in terms of what's feasible and what's not, in an engineering sense … but I think there are other softer issues," Kenny said.

Chief among those is convincing the NCC and Parks Canada, which manages the UNESCO World Heritage Site, that refrigerating the canal is a viable solution. Then there's the enormous cost and upheaval that would be involved in constructing a district energy system capable of delivering heat to thousands of homes, businesses and institutions throughout central Ottawa.

In an emailed statement to CBC, the NCC did not respond directly to Borrowman's idea. Instead, it lauded its partnership with Carleton University "to identify strategies to adapt Skateway operations to the impacts of climate change."

Among the innovations Kenny and his team have been working on is a "slush cannon" to help ice form at the front end of the skating season. They're also using 3D printers to assemble an army of "snowbots," remote-controlled snowblowers that can be used to clear the ice when it's too thin for heavier equipment.

This summer, the group also plans to experiment with thermosiphons, which are used in the Arctic to slow the degradation of the permafrost by removing heat, and which could potentially have the same chilling effect on the Rideau Canal.

They'll also consider how such technology might fit into a larger district energy system, Kenny said.

"It'll be at the conceptual level of how much heat do you need, what kind of system would you need, how much power would it require and how much output would it have."

Borrowman suggests his idea to refrigerate the canal could be achieved in phases, beginning with a more manageable pilot project to demonstrate its practicality and environmental sustainability.

"I just think [this] is the kind of thinking that we have to talk about," he said. "Even if it went nowhere, I think it's worth the exercise of investigating it further."

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...ated-1.6807965
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  #96  
Old Posted Apr 13, 2023, 5:05 PM
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I would not be at all opposed to doing some kind of trial run of this concept at Dows Lake.
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  #97  
Old Posted Apr 13, 2023, 5:50 PM
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I would not be at all opposed to doing some kind of trial run of this concept at Dows Lake.
Yeah, seems like a no-brainer to take a smaller stretch of the skateway and try it out. I was thinking downtown, but could be Dow's Lake.
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  #98  
Old Posted Apr 13, 2023, 7:01 PM
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Yeah, seems like a no-brainer to take a smaller stretch of the skateway and try it out. I was thinking downtown, but could be Dow's Lake.
Tie it in with the heating system at the new Civic Hospital
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Old Posted Apr 13, 2023, 9:20 PM
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Tie it in with the heating system at the new Civic Hospital
Yup, or even as the start of a district heating plan for that area, with loads of construction on the way.
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  #100  
Old Posted Apr 14, 2023, 12:52 PM
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Tie it in with the heating system at the new Civic Hospital
Civic Hospital, uOttawa, City Hall, Convention Centre.

This could be an investment in a Green future, not just a way to preserve a heritage and tourism asset.
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