News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 02, 2020
 8.5K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 39K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 4.8K     0 

JasonParis

Moderator
Member Bio
Joined
Apr 23, 2007
Messages
7,017
Reaction score
2,926
City:
Toronto
simply Dan, archivist and myself travelled to the capital about six weeks ago for a biking weekend. Pics are from both myself and archivist. Here's the first part of our journey...

The mighty 401.
DSCN3048.jpg


Entering the city from the Ottawa River Parkway...
DSCN3050.jpg


DSCN3051.jpg


A few photos from Bank St...
DSCN3053.jpg


DSCN3054.jpg


Followed by a walk through some of Ottawa's inner city nabes...
DSCN3056.jpg


DSCN3058.jpg


DSCN3059.jpg


DSCN3060.jpg


DSCN3062.jpg


DSCN3064.jpg


DSCN3065.jpg


DSCN3088.jpg


DSCN3063.jpg


Ottawa City Hall...
DSCN3067.jpg


DSCN3071.jpg


DSCN3072.jpg


DSCN3081.jpg


Art inside City Hall...
DSCN3068.jpg


DSCN3069.jpg


An old Drill Hall next to City Hall...
DSCN3074.jpg


DSCN3075.jpg


DSCN3076.jpg


Department of National Defence headquarters.
DSCN3073.jpg


On the grounds of City Hall...
DSCN3077.jpg


DSCN3078.jpg


DSCN3080.jpg


I think achivist said that this was an old school of some sort.
DSCN3079.jpg


Ontario Court House...
DSCN3083.jpg


DSCN3084.jpg


Various shots of downtown buildings...
DSCN3085.jpg


DSCN3082.jpg


DSCN3087.jpg


The Ottawa River from Rideau Falls Park.
DSCN3089.jpg


Rideau Falls Park (cont.)...
DSCN3090.jpg


Old City Hall (now federal offices) from Rideau Falls Park.
DSCN3093.jpg


Rideau Falls Park (cont.)...
DSCN3094.jpg


DSCN3095.jpg


DSCN3096.jpg


DSCN3097.jpg


Moshe Safdie's modification/addition to (old) City Hall...
DSCN3098.jpg


DSCN3099.jpg


(Old) City Hall (cont.)...
DSCN3100.jpg


DSCN3101.jpg


DSCN3102.jpg


DSCN3103.jpg


Overlooking the Ottawa River and Gatineau from Rockcliffe...
DSCN3104.jpg


DSCN3105.jpg


Part II is here.
 
The "old school" was once a school for teachers. It now houses the mayor's office, among other things.

Great photos, btw; thanks.
 
The "old school" was once a school for teachers. It now houses the mayor's office, among other things.

Great photos, btw; thanks.


Yes, it's the heritage wing of Ottawa City Hall. The old gymnasium is now a committee room.

Love that PSAC building.
 
I've seen this town probably too much over the years. It is quiet, clean and a bit dull for my taste. But thank you three musketeers for the pics, and hope you enjoyed the cycling tour.
 
Ottawa's loaded up with snow now. It'll be nice to see it in the summer sun again by way of your pictures.
 
Good Ottawa/Gatineau pics!

DK416: Good Ottawa/Gatineau pics! I remember going there on my September 1985 trip and I found Canada's Capital to be quite interesting! I wonder if the Nick Gaol Youth Hostel is still there-the one in the old Jail BTW.
I remember best that all the hot party spots were over in Hull,Quebec due to the lower drinking age and later bar hours. Is it still that way today? LI MIKE
 
Long Island Mike, Hull (now Gatineau) has toned down quite a bit in terms of night time activities. The bars now close at the same time both sides of the river. Downtown Gatineau has been spruced up quite a bit, though it's still a town that only its mother could love.
 
Interesting Hydrogen, especially that part about Gatineau being "... still a town only its mother could love." That reminds me of the mother imagery that broadly surrounds Ottawa as well. Wasn't the Queen-Mother herself - in this case Queen Victoria - somehow involved in the designation of Ottawa as the capital of the colony? Meaning that it would sit there on the border where the current day provincial lines lie.

As for current day Gatineau, wasn't its increase in size, making it I think the fourth largest city in Québec, just behing Laval, due to the 'amalgamation' carried out by Parti Québécois?.

So where am I going with this?

Perhaps the latter-day metaphorical equivalent of the mother analogy for Gatineau, by virtue of the amalgamation, could be argued to be embodied in the form of Parti Québécois. Now think about that motherly-love idea, again, ... obviously I did. :)
 
Another reason for choosing Ottawa was its distance from the US border - the Americans invading was still a real possibility back then. Plus the Ottawa River/Rideau canal was a good bypass to the St. Lawrence, away from the border. Toronto, Kingston, Montreal, and whatever other cities wanted to be the capital were more vulnerable.

DK416: Good Ottawa/Gatineau pics! I remember going there on my September 1985 trip and I found Canada's Capital to be quite interesting! I wonder if the Nick Gaol Youth Hostel is still there-the one in the old Jail BTW.
I remember best that all the hot party spots were over in Hull,Quebec due to the lower drinking age and later bar hours. Is it still that way today? LI MIKE
I'm pretty sure the old jail hostel is still there. As for party spots, the Byward Market is where the nightlife is now. And Elgin St to a lesser extent.
 
Interesting Hydrogen, especially that part about Gatineau being "... still a town only its mother could love." That reminds me of the mother imagery that broadly surrounds Ottawa as well. Wasn't the Queen-Mother herself - in this case Queen Victoria - somehow involved in the designation of Ottawa as the capital of the colony? Meaning that it would sit there on the border where the current day provincial lines lie.

As for current day Gatineau, wasn't its increase in size, making it I think the fourth largest city in Québec, just behing Laval, due to the 'amalgamation' carried out by Parti Québécois?.

So where am I going with this?

Perhaps the latter-day metaphorical equivalent of the mother analogy for Gatineau, by virtue of the amalgamation, could be argued to be embodied in the form of Parti Québécois. Now think about that motherly-love idea, again, ... obviously I did. :)

Ottawa (then Bytown) was definitely the compromise, Zephyr. Yes, Victoria did make the final choice, but there was also considerable local lobbying to make Ottawa the capital (I guess it always was a political town). As MisterF mentioned, there were also clear strategic values for choosing Ottawa - including the Rideau Canal to Kingston and the Ottawa river to Montreal.

As for Gatineau (or the part of it that was once called Hull), it was redeveloped in the 70's, wherein whatever character there was in the downtown fell to make way for the lovely federal brutalist complexes that are there now. I never saw what was there before, but needless to say there are still paper mills along the river. Apparently they are to disappear eventually. Today, Gatineau is a broad mixture of dowdy and sprawl, with a nice small beach along the Ottawa River and the very nice Gatineau Park. I guess I'm not doing the place any justice.

Hull always had a poor little brother relationship with Ottawa. Nevertheless, a considerable number of federal government offices are now located there. And it should go without saying that politics plays a big role in this (at every level).

Gatineau is an amalgamation of the former municipalities of Gatineau, Hull Aylmer, Buckingham and Masson-Angers.
 

Back
Top