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  #21  
Old Posted Oct 28, 2009, 11:08 PM
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Originally Posted by waterloowarrior View Post
old ottawa east cdp
http://ottawa.ca/residents/public_co.../index_en.html

Thursday, October 29, 2009
5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Presentation at 7 p.m.
Saint Paul University
(233 Main Street)
Laframboise Building, Dining Hall
I have had some brief experiences dealing with the Old Ottawa East Community Association and it doesn't surprise me that this CDP was supposed to be approved in the fall of 2007 and we are now at the fall of 2009.
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  #22  
Old Posted Dec 1, 2009, 7:07 PM
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Riverside South CDP update

Quote:
Overview of Proposed Changes

The updated CDP land use plan is attached (Document 2) along with a summary of text changes to the CDP guideline document (Document 3). Highlights of the more significant changes in the proposed update to the CDP are as follows:
  • Width of “Green” corridor along Mosquito Creek valley increased.
  • Two Stormwater Management ponds location, size and shape changed.
  • Collector road intersections near pipeline easement relocated.
  • Leitrim Road future by-pass in Employment Area moved to the northeast.
  • Collector road layout in Employment Area redesigned.
  • New Employment Area added to comply with Official Plan housing/jobs requirement.
  • Land use at the Spratt Road/Limebank intersection changed.
  • New English Catholic High School site added.
  • New rapid transit Park and Ride locations added.
  • Projected number of dwellings increased from 19200 to 20300.
  • Projected population increased from 52000 to 54500.
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  #23  
Old Posted Dec 2, 2009, 6:45 PM
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Bayview-Carling CDP reactivated!
http://westsideaction.blogspot.com/2...activated.html

Quote:
The first meeting, primarily aimed at getting participants in the original study back into the process, will be the initial Public Advisory Committee meeting on Thursday, December 10th, 7:00 - 9:00 p.m., at Room 4102E/4103E, City Hall. The rooms are located on the fourth floor at City Hall.
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  #24  
Old Posted Jan 11, 2010, 7:27 PM
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RFP issued for the "Mid-Centretown Community Design Plan"
http://www.merx.com/English/SUPPLIER...452eFs0w%3d%3d
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  #25  
Old Posted Feb 2, 2010, 6:30 AM
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  #26  
Old Posted Feb 4, 2010, 12:54 AM
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  #27  
Old Posted Mar 16, 2010, 4:59 PM
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Mid-Centretown Community Design Plan

The Community Planning and Urban Design Division of the Planning and Growth Management Department has launched the Centretown Community Design Plan (CDP) study.

This CDP is being undertaken in response to recent development proposals and a need to review and update the Centretown Secondary Plan in keeping with City of Ottawa Official Plan intensification policies as well as its compatibility and urban design objectives.

Study Area

The study area will primarily focus on the mid area of Centretown, bounded by Elgin Street on the east, the 417 on the south, Kent Street on the west and the Central Area boundary/Gloucester Street on the north. Much of the study area is included in the Centretown Heritage Conservation District.



Study Goal
The goal of this study is to prepare a CDP for Mid-Centretown. The plan will provide a broad and integrated twenty-year vision and guidance for the future of the area.

Public Consultation
The planning process will be carried out in collaboration with the Centretown Community Association, the Bank Street Business Improvement Association (BIA), other community organizations in the area, residents, property owners, businesses, and with representation from Councillor Diane Holmes’ office.

Timing
The CDP is targeted for completion in March 2011.

Contact
Robert Spicer, Planner III
Community Planning and Urban Design Division
Planning and Growth Management Department
City of Ottawa
4th fl., 110 Laurier Avenue West
Ottawa, ON K1P 1J1
Tel. 613-580-2424, ext. 13858
robert.spicer@ottawa.ca
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  #28  
Old Posted Apr 6, 2010, 8:47 PM
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as noted earlier, Carling-Bayview CDP is back in business
http://ottawa.ca/residents/public_co.../index_en.html
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  #29  
Old Posted Apr 9, 2010, 10:48 PM
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New plan to produce new vision for downtown
Friday, 09 April 2010
By David Wolkowski
http://centretownnewsonline.ca/index...1580&Itemid=94
Views : 5
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Published in : Centretown News, News

The City of Ottawa is teaming up with Toronto-based architectural firm Urban Design Strategies to develop a new community design plan for mid-Centretown.

“There are several problems we’re looking to address,” says Somerset Ward Coun. Diane Holmes, who announced the design plan.

“The biggest problem at the moment is that there are different zoning laws depending on which street you’re on. We’ve found buildings located next to each other that have different zonings in terms of height and density limits, and this makes things difficult for city staff and residents.”

The new plan will standardize limits on buildings’ densities, heights and the size and shape of their ground floors in the area of Ottawa bounded by Elgin Street to the east, Kent Street to the west, Gloucester Street to the north and Highway 417 to the south.

The mid-Centretown design derives from the Downtown Ottawa Urban Design Strategy, a plan developed by the city’s planning and development department to renew downtown Ottawa over the next 20 years.

George Dark, a partner at Urban Design Strategies who has worked for the city before on controversial designs for Lansdowne Live and the redevelopment of the area between LeBreton Flats and downtown Ottawa, is creating the design plan.

“We are trying to refresh and understand the existing designs that make mid-Centretown such a great place to be,” says Dark.

Dark was in town last week meeting with a group of people in the transportation, heritage and architectural fields put together by the city.

“You always have to restructure and rebuild what goes where,” he says.

“There’s never a kind of one-size-fits-all plan. The area requires a much more tactile approach.”

Shawn Menard, president of the Centretown Citizens Community Association, is worried that the new design plan will result in high-rises cropping up across mid-Centretown.

“We can’t have extremely tall buildings going up all over the place to the detriment of the existing community,” says Menard.

He is concerned about the effect new high-rises would have on the neighbourhood, including cutting off light to existing properties, and increasing noise levels and congestion.

Other features of the community design plan include making mid-Centretown more pedestrian friendly by widening sidewalks and planting more trees.

“Right now, the neighbourhood is really a wasteland of parking lots,” says Holmes, who says the city is lucky to have spaces to redevelop.

She says the high number of parking lots encourages people to commute and drive through Centretown, instead of walking and cycling around the city.

Once preliminary meetings between the architectural company and the city have been held, Holmes says consultations with the public and design workshops will begin.
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  #30  
Old Posted Apr 9, 2010, 11:41 PM
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Message to Shawn Menard: You live in a city and Centretown is a "neighbourhood" directly adjacent to the CBD already scattered with high rises. This battle was "lost" years ago.
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  #31  
Old Posted May 19, 2010, 12:33 AM
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Councillor Leadman has proposed a moratorium on development in the Bayview-Carling CDP area (map) until the CDP is finished
http://ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/cit...Moratorium.htm

Resolution:

THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED THAT Planning and Environment Committee recommended to Council that:

1. Staff not schedule any rezoning within the Carling-Bayview Community Design Plan Area for a public hearing until the Community Design Plan has been submitted to Committee and Council for adoption;

2. Staff be directed to monitor applications to the Committee of Adjustment to ensure that applications to the Committee of Adjustment are not being made to circumvent this moratorium on rezoning and that the results of such monitoring be regularly reported to the Ward Councillors;

3. The City Clerk and Solicitor be directed to seek a planner to be on retainer to defend the position established in this motion.
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  #32  
Old Posted May 19, 2010, 1:55 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gjhall View Post
Message to Shawn Menard: You live in a city and Centretown is a "neighbourhood" directly adjacent to the CBD already scattered with high rises. This battle was "lost" years ago.
Centretown is a neighbourhood as much as the Glebe or Hintonburg are neighbourhoods. Part of the charm of Ottawa is that it has functioning residential neighbourhoods right at its core. The key battle that made this possible, which was actually won years ago, centred on keeping major commercial developments from spreading south of Gloucester. Office workers bring traffic and crappy stores that close at five p.m. Downtown Hull is a prime example of what happens when they take over. Centretown could have gone that way, too.

As for tall towers, I don't have a problem with them in the northern end of that box, as long as they are residential. Parking lots won over the area north of Somerset and east of Bank ages ago. I wish I could look at a parking lot through the eyes of this community association. Asphalt must look amazing to them. That being said, I'd be more careful about planning developments in the heritage neighbourhoods south of Somerset or west of Kent. Central is fantastic and even that thing at Gladstone and Kent is ok, but there is definitely heritage and a neighbourhood fabric here that is worth protecting.
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  #33  
Old Posted Jun 3, 2010, 5:08 PM
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Councillor pulls development moratorium report from table
http://www.emcottawawest.ca/20100603...ort+from+table
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  #34  
Old Posted Jun 3, 2010, 8:15 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by waterloowarrior View Post
Councillor pulls development moratorium report from table
http://www.emcottawawest.ca/20100603...ort+from+table
Read: Christine Leadman's way of stopping the proposed condo development that will be built near the O-Train Carling Station.
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  #35  
Old Posted Mar 6, 2011, 12:40 AM
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Old Ottawa East design plan to be revealed at March 10 meeting
http://www.yourottawaregion.com/news...rch-10-meeting

After working on it for more than six years, residents of Old Ottawa East will finally have a chance to see the plan that is envisioned for their community for the next 20 years.

A plan to guide the growth of the underdeveloped central Ottawa community – including what could be built on convent and Oblate lands near St. Paul University when those institutions move out – will be presented at the university on Thursday, March 10.

Including those institutional lands in the plan, which will set out development guidelines and zoning for the area, opened a “new chapter” in the process, said Old Ottawa East Community Association president Nick Masciantonio.

The March 10 presentation won’t be the first time residents have had a look at the community design plan, but this one is different.

The first draft was completed in May of 2009 and ready to be discussed by city councillors, but then the Sisters of the Sacred Heart and Oblate Fathers decided they wanted to be part of the process. Working out the details of how that 30-hectare site might be developed in the future has taken more than a year, but Masciantonio said it’s an important piece of the puzzle.

“A full and frank discussion (about the future of the Sisters’ and Oblate lands) is an important step in the consultation,” Masciantonio said, “Especially given what we’ve seen on other convent lands in the city.”

He was referring to the community design plan in Westboro, which laid out guidelines that some residents feel were ignored when the city rezoned the Soeurs de la Visitation convent site on Richmond Road.

Ensuring the guidelines for Old Ottawa East are airtight has been an important consideration for Masciantonio and the group that has been working on the plan.

“We’re looking to the future and not stepping into the antiquated methods of the past,” Masciantonio said.

“This is probably the most extensive CDP (community design plan) that the city has ever undertaken,” he added.

The meeting will take place in Room 1124 of the Guigues Building at St. Paul University. Members of the public will be able to view the plans starting at 6:30 p.m., with a presentation scheduled for 7 p.m. The evening will wrap up at 9 p.m.

After the meeting, the plans could go to the city’s planning committee for approval in a few weeks, Masciantonio said. Any decisions on rezoning would follow, and the policies would guide any future development in the area.

laura.mueller@metroland.com




http://ottawa.ca/residents/public_co...s/oh_4_en.html
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  #36  
Old Posted Mar 6, 2011, 12:45 AM
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Wellington Street CDP coming to planning committee for approval at the end of March
http://ottawa.ca/residents/public_co.../index_en.html
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  #37  
Old Posted Mar 6, 2011, 12:40 PM
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glad to hear somebody still cares about these plans (even if city staff, and good chunks of both the property development community and the neighbourhood residents clearly don't, sigh)
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  #38  
Old Posted Mar 13, 2011, 9:13 PM
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here's the Oblate lands powerpoint (16.4 MB)
http://download.isiglobal.ca/cdstudi...esentation.pdf
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  #39  
Old Posted Nov 18, 2011, 10:16 PM
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Carling-Bayview Light Rail Transit Corridor Online Open House
http://ottawa.ca/residents/public_co.../index_en.html
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  #40  
Old Posted Nov 18, 2011, 11:35 PM
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I still maintain that running LRT to Westboro and then in a short cut-and-cover tunnel to Lincoln Fields is best.
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Franky: Ajldub, name calling is what they do when good arguments can't be found - don't sink to their level. Claiming the thread is "boring" is also a way to try to discredit a thread that doesn't match their particular bias.
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