Friday, May 30, 2025

Portsmouth Village---A potential Heritage Conservation District.

 Designation Procedure 7.3.C Prior to designating an area as a Heritage Conservation District under Part V of the Ontario Heritage Act, the City must undertake a study. During the study period, alteration, demolition or removal may be regulated. (page 375/585.) 

Properties Designated Under the Ontario Heritage Act 7.3.C.2 Properties that are protected by Part 1V of the Ontario Heritage Act may be included as part of the heritage conservation district to ensure the integrity of the district. (Protected by Part 1V of the OHA, or in the process:

  • Church of the Good Thief
  • 440 King Street West, St. Helen's
  • 462 King Street West, Stone Gables
  • Rockwood Hospital, Rockwood Villa and many other buildings, 8 Gable Lane.
  • P4W, 40 Sir John A. Macdonald Boulevard
  • Penitentiary Water Tower---244 Sir John A. Macdonald Boulevard. Sold to Queen's University in 1965.
  • 525 King Street West
  •  "City begins process for Ontario Heritage Designation for Kingston Pen" by Bill Hutchins, The Kingstonist, April 8, 2025.)
The City intends to investigate the following areas as heritage conservation districts, including but not limited to:
  • lower Princess Street from Division Street to the waterfront
  • King Street West from Portsmouth Village to Barrie Street
  • Portsmouth Village
  • the properties facing onto Alamein Drive
  • the Village of Westbrook
  • Cataraqui Village
  • St. Lawrence Ward, and
  • Kingscourt  (all information is from pages 375,376 and 377 of 585 pages, "City of Kingston Official Plan, Consolidated as of August 31, 2024.")

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

A Restrictive Covenant

A Restrictive Covenant affecting 40 Sir John A. Macdonald Boulevard, Kingston. September 12, 2022. File: 52564-1007. To preserve the value and enjoyment of adjoining land. (Union Park redevelopment project, page 93/95.)

Saving irreplaceable buildings in Canada

  • Fram, Mark---Well Preserved. The Ontario Heritage Foundation's Manual of Principles and Practices for Architectural Conservation. Erin: Boston Mills Press.
  • Heritage Character Statement Building A-3. A former women's prison within the grounds of the Pen:

Building A-3.
  • Parks Canada Standards and Guidelines for the Conservation of Historic Places in Canada.
  • Ministry of Culture (Ontario) Eight Guiding Principles in the Conservation of Historic Properties.
Books written by Dr. Jennifer McKendry, an architectural historian:







Monday, May 26, 2025

City of Kingston. By-Law No. 2007-167.

A By-Law to Designate 40 Sir John A. Macdonald Boulevard, Also Known as 'The Prison for Women (P4W)' To Be of Cultural Heritage Value Pursuant to The Provisions of the Ontario Heritage Act, (R.S.O. 1990, Chapter 0.18.) Passed September 18, 2007.

The "Reasons for the Designation" include the following "important" attributes:

  • hand worked limestone masonry veneer over a poured concrete core, which is smooth hammer dressed on the public faces of the C-18 Building and the rusticated blocks used on the rear elevations of C-18, the link between C-18 and C-16, and most of C-16,
  • the use of the Auburn Penitentiary style cellblock reflects a desire to alter social behavior via architecture,
  • its functions as a recognizable landmark in the City of Kingston and throughout Canada.
Architectural details associated with the C-18 Administration Building including:
  • its more sophisticated classical architectural styling with the principle facade broken into seven bays,
  • its copper coated hip roof topped with a distinctive cupola supported on a square base located just behind the central pediment in the front facade with an octagonal drum topped with a finial,
  • its slightly projecting pedimented central entrance bay featuring on the ground floor a double door with a square headed transom set into a portico composed as an entablature and pediment carried by Tuscan columns,
  • its distinctive fenestration which includes a modified Palladian window and a three-part window formed of narrow slides flanking a central window in the central bay of the principle facade, and the contrasting use of square headed windows on the first and third floor and the semicircle arched windows on the second floor of the symmetrical wings which flank the central section.
Architectural details associated with C-16 Cellblock, which is divided by fifteen bays with a three-bay rear wall, including:
  • its classical style of architecture,
  • its shallow pitched copper-covered hip roof,
  • its symmetrical arrangement and distinctive treatment of windows which includes the use of semicircular arched windows with keystones,
  • its cellblock design found on the third floor and mezzanine (fourth floor) which was more typical of men's prisons, and which is marked by its poured concrete walls, terrazzo floors, steel bars, elevated walkways, barriers, staircases and the locking mechanisms and
  • a stone chimney on the north slope of the roof,
  • its historic economic benefits to Kingston, through the creation of Federal positions, thereby contributing to the community of prison workers which were a unique group within Kingston, and
  • contextual values such as views towards Portsmouth Olympic Harbour and Portsmouth Village and as part of a cultural heritage landscape of prison life within Kingston,.
A portion of the property fronting onto King Street West is included as part of the Kingston Penitentiary National Historic Site of Canada that contains the Warden's House at 555 King Street West. This portion of the property is also "Listed" as a property of cultural heritage value on the City of Kingston Register of Historic Places. (From pages 94 and 95 out of 95 pages "Union Park Kingston Redevelopment Project.")

Saturday, May 24, 2025

City of Kingston April 8, 2025. The Pen is "A landmark of national significance."

Notice of Intention April 8--- Notice of Intention to pass a By-law to Designate

The following property to be of Cultural Heritage Value and Interest Pursuant to the Provisions of the Ontario Heritage Act (R.S.0. 1990, Chapter 0.18.)

Take Notice that the Council of The Corporation of the City of Kingston intends to pass a By-law under Section 29 of the Ontario Heritage Act, R.S.0. 1990, Chapter 0.18, to designate the following lands to be of cultural heritage value and interest: 

560 King Street West (Block 183-184 and 192, Plan 54, Except Part 1 on Reference Plan 13R-14792; Together with Easement over Part Block 182, Plan 54, Being Part 12 on Reference Plan 13R-18756 as in FC 46925, City of Kingston, County of Frontenac, known as Kingston Penitentiary.)

The property includes 8.5 hectares of land on the south side of King Street West at the terminus of Sir John A. Macdonald Boulevard and is adjacent to Portsmouth Olympic Harbour (formerly Hatter's Bay) within the Portsmouth Village neighbourhood of the City of Kingston. 

Kingston Penitentiary (KP) was the first purpose-built penitentiary in Canada and, at the time of its construction emboldened the most enlightened concepts for the reformation of incarcerated individuals. It is a major institutional complex of largely 19th and 20th century buildings designed in the neoclassical style and constructed of local limestone. Taken together, the structures, spatial arrangement and rich layers of meaning associated with KP comprise a cultural heritage landscape that has local, provincial and national significance. 

Kingston Penitentiary (KP) has design value for its high degree of technical achievement, artistic merit and craftsmanship related to its prototypical configuration, layout and spacial organization, in addition to its rich collection of well-crafted 19th century neoclassical structures.

The 19th century site plan prioritized symmetry to support an ordered universe, with a primary north-south axis from the entrance portico/North Lodge carried through the centre of the Main Cell Block and the South Workshop's Greek-cross design. This symmetry was also expressed in the location/orientation of the Dining Hall/Chapel and Hospital buildings, west and east of the Main Cell Block, and the similar locating of the East and West Workshops relative to the main South Workshop.

The property's fine craftsmanship is exhibited in its use of materials and construction methods. The property is a rare and early example of a closed-loop sustainability model of construction. The property displays a very high level of workmanship and elements of technical achievement, particularly exemplified in the 'flying' staircase executed in the cut stone at the South Workshop rotunda, the remarkable groin-vaulted ceiling in sections of the South Workshop, the basement of the Dining Hall and on the main level of the North Lodge. Also of note are the cast iron 'winged' columns designed by Edward Horsey for the Dining Hall that represents an early technical achievement in the use of exposed structural iron.

The buildings within Kingston Penitentiary that contribute to the property's overall cultural value and interest include:

  • The North Lodge (1841-46) with bell cupola (1895);
  • The guard towers, particularly the northeast (c. 1840) and northwest (1842) towers, and sections of the prison walls;
  • The Main Cellblock building (1834-57), excluding the modern gymnasium (1951), kitchen (1956) and disassociation wing (1948);
  • The South Workshop (1846-8); 
  • The Chapel and Dining Hall (1849-52);
  • The Hospital (1847);
  • The West Workshop (1858-9 and 1876-82);
  • The East Workshop (1855-8) with extant isolation cells (1889);
  • The Keeper's Hall (1911); and
  • The Women's Prison (1913).
KP possesses historical and associative value because it has direct associations with a number of Themes, Persons and Events and demonstrates the work of various architects that are significant to Kingston, the Province of Ontario and to Canada.

KP was designed to incorporate the most progressive ideas regarding punishment of its day. The very idea of a "penitentiary"-a state-run facility based on principles of reform, rather than simply incarceration was still relatively new when KP was built. Established in 1835, KP was among the first wave of penitentiaries constructed in North America. The creation of KP was an important step towards a modern, systemic and rational treatment of legal transgressors. The history and events that occurred at KP provides an understanding of the historic role of corporal punishment and the treatment of youth, women and those experiencing mental illness in the penal system in Canada in the 19th and early 20th century.

Significant people associated with KP include Hugh Thompson, John Macaulay, Henry Smith, Henry Smith Jr., Philip Pember, Dr. James Sampson, Thomas Kirkpatrick, the Reverend William Herchmer, George Brown and John Creighton, as well as Architects William Coverdale, Edward Horsey and James Adams.

Kingston Penitentiary has a direct association with the Brown Commission report that charged a warden with 119 counts of mismanagement of the facility and the neglect and abuse of incarcerated individuals, leading to substantive changes to the Canadian penal system.

The federal penitentiary system has been a dominant part of Kingston's socio-economic life throughout most of its history. Kingston has served as the premier focus of the federal penitentiary system in Ontario from its inception. KP has strong contextual value because of its importance in defining, maintaining and supporting the character and growth of Portsmouth Village and the City of Kingston. It is physically and visually linked to its surroundings and is a landmark of national significance.


The Ontario government saved a prison chapel.

 IN THE MATTER OF THE ONTARIO HERITAGE ACT, R.S.0., CHAPTER 0.18 AND 20 STRACHAN AVENUE, CITY OF TORONTO, PROVINCE OF ONTARIO.

NOTICE OF PASSING A BY-LAW TO:

Canada Lands Company CLC Ltd., 200 King Street West, Suite 1509, Toronto, Ontario M5H 3T4

Inglis Limited, 1901 Minnesota Court, Mississauga, Ontario L5N 3A7

Ontario Heritage Foundation, 10 Adelaide Street East, Toronto, Ontario M5C 1J3

Take notice that the Council of the Corporation of the City of Toronto has passed By-law No. 1996-0378 to designate 20 Strachan (Central Prison Chapel) as being of architectural and historical value or interest. Dated at Toronto this 27th day of August 1996.

(signed) City Clerk

Barbara Hall, Mayor of Toronto

Liberty Village Park. The former Prison Chapel is the red building on the left.

The Ontario Heritage Act Part 1V is also protecting:

  • The Don Jail, 550 Gerrard Street Toronto
  • Guelph Correctional Centre
  •  Booth Barn on the CEF in Ottawa
  • Ottawa Gaol, 75 Nicholas Street
  • Maplelawn House and Gardens, 529 Richmond Road Ottawa
  • the Isabel MacNeill Halfway House for Women---525 King Street West Kingston
  • the Natural Resources Complex bounded by Booth, Rochester, Orangeville and Norman Streets in Ottawa.
    Buildings that are being preserved on the NRC campus.



Friday, May 23, 2025

Sale of the Prison for Women. A Kingstonist article by Bill Hutchins--- October 22, 2024.

The 1992 Directory of Federal Real Property.


Past information regarding the prison
. City Council Agenda---May 8, 2019-Brownfield Initial Study Grant Program, Page 4. 40 Sir John A. Macdonald Boulevard
. "The property is bounded by Sir John A. Macdonald Boulevard to the east and Union Street and King Street to the north and south respectively. The owner has stated that the proposed redevelopment of the property will include residential and commercial components that involve the construction of three new buildings and the extensive renovation of the existing Prison for Women building. The proposed redevelopment will be a mixed use comprised of residential, retail and office space for a total area of approximately 795,000 square feet of buildings and approximately 146 surface parking lots."

Plans were underway to knock down the walls between the cells in order to create condos. And all the interior bars and window bars will be removed. 


Canadian Register of Historic Places---Corrections Canada holdings in the Limestone City
  • Former Prison for Women Administration Building/Cell Block (C-18, C-16).
  • Collins Bay Institution Administration Building A-1 and Cell Block Building B-1
  • Kingston Pen, North, East, West and South workshops
  • Guard Towers, North Lodge and Main Cellblock---the Pen.
  • Elmhirst House, 443 Union Street West
  •  Correctional Centre---508 Portsmouth Ave.
  • Former Warden's Residence, now a museum---555 King Street West, across from Kingston Pen
  • Kingston Pen National Historic Site of Canada
  • St. Helen's---Grant House, Red Cross Lodge and Stone Gables---440 King Street West
  • Guard Towers--- Collins Bay
     Collins Bay Guard Towers. Photo was taken by Timkal.




Demolition of the walls at the Prison for Women. The video "P4W walls coming down" is on YouTube.


Sunday, May 18, 2025

Properties that should not be on an affordable housing list.

 

The Isabel MacNeill Halfway House for Women, 525 King Street West, Kingston.

House of Commons Ottawa April 18, 2007
 Mrs. Irene Mathyssen (London-Fanshawe, NDP): "Mr. Speaker, the government recently announced the closure of Canada's only minimum security prison for women. The Isabel MacNeill House provided a transitional environment for incarcerated women offenders. It provides training to enhance their employment skills. The inmates at the prison had to take the government to court and challenge the closure under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. This is an equality issue and another example of of government's disregard for the welfare of women." The limestone building is located in Portsmouth Village, across the street from the Prison for Women and the Pen. It is a Federal Heritage property and protected by Part 1V of the Ontario Heritage Act. Part 1V covers the exterior and interior of the halfway house.

Stone Gables 

Located on 462 King Street West. "Once the federal government ceases to own St. Helen's and Stone Gables, the federal heritage protection will be removed, making it susceptible to demolition or remodeling." (MHC-14-017-City of Kingston.) 

I have no doubt that attempts will be made to demolish these buildings. Developers will appeal to the Ontario Municipal Board (Ontario Land Tribunal) for demolition permits and air rights. The City is desperate for new housing--- forget about your tourism industry, political and architectural history and park land. 

PUBLIC NOTICE Notice of Intension to pass a Bylaw to Designate 462 King Street West, also known as Stone Gables to be of Cultural Value and Interest. Pursuant to the Provisions of the Ontario Heritage Act. (R.S.O. 1990). November 25, 2014.

The Ontario Regional Headquarters on 440 King Street West includes the Red Cross Lodge and St. Helen's. Listed for sale on September 23, 2024:

Stone Gables and St. Helen's are worth $17 million according to the document "A Roadmap to Strengthening Public Safety" by Rob Sampson, page 208.


Saturday, May 17, 2025

Half of the Kingston Pen will be flattened to create housing.

Despite the fact that:

1.) The Kingston Pen is the most popular tourist attraction in the city.

2.) The buildings were created with limestone and will last for thousands of years.

3.) The landmark is known as Canada's Taj Mahal and Eiffel Tower.

4.) Guard towers, exterior walls and 10 buildings are scheduled for demolition. Including the South Workshop where an episode of Murdoch Mysteries was filmed:

5.) "Selective demolition of the Main Walls can provide entrances for automobiles and buses." (City of Kingston Project---Kingston Pen and the Portsmouth Olympic Harbour, page 74.)

6.) The Pen and the Prison for Women are National Historic Sites of Canada.

7.) 


8.)  
Government of Canada heritage designations.
9.)
A guard tower overlooking Lake Ontario.

10.) City of Kingston Official Plan---Page 368/569. Potential Heritage Conservation Districts in the City of Kingston---May 1, 2018. The City intends to investigate areas for designation as heritage conservation districts including but not limited to:
  • King Street West from Portsmouth Village to Barrie Street.
  • Portsmouth Village.
The immediate benefit of a Heritage Conservation District is a planning process that respects a community's history and identity. The City has a concentration of heritage buildings, sites, structures, and designed landscapes that are linked by aesthetic, historical and socio-cultural contexts or use. (Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport website, page 10.)

11.)
12.) "It is not inconceivable that they could level the entire site." ( A statement by Sydenham councillor Bill Glover. "Group tries to get Kingston Penitentiary heritage status" by Peter Hendra, Toronto Sun, September 2012.)

13.) "The federal government has the power to demolish them. However, we have concluded that would be absolutely atrocious, grievous and scandalous." (Floyd Patterson, President of the Frontenac Heritage Foundation, a statement to Peter Hendra, Toronto Sun, September 2012.)

Natural and Open Spaces are protected areas:

  • Hampton Woods
  • Pinecrest Woods
  • Portion of Mud Lake/Britannia Woods
  • Prince of Wales Woods
  • Chaudiere Rapids
  • CEF Woods
  • Arboretum
  • Portion of Lemieux Islands
"The Natural Open Space Study report prepared by the City of Ottawa identifies a number of significant natural resources on or adjacent to the CEF. The Arboretum rates in the highest category for social value, reflecting the importance Ottawa residents attach to this area for its visual and natural relief, and for its contribution to the quality of life in an urban context." (CEF Historic Site Management Plan, part 8/20. 2019--09--17.)

 

Broken promises.

1.) The Cole and Rochester families sold Maplelawn on 529 Richmond Road to the Federal District Commission (the NCC). But the Deed stipulated that all the land, including the 9 acre Rochester Field would remain a greenspace.

2.) "The Humane Society property on 101 Champagne will be an extension of Ev Tremblay Park"

3.) "The Rideau Canal will always be maintained by Canada."

4.) National Interest Land Mass properties are untouchable.

5.) 1976---The Portsmouth Olympic Harbour adjacent to the Kingston Pen should always be public and owned by the citizens of Canada:

 "Since the facility would later remain available to the public, the government of Ontario provided funds for the purchase of the land, and the federal government shared the cost of the installation...The Olympic Yachting Centre, buildings and land cost $6.4 million tax dollars." (Montreal Olympics Official Report, Volume 1" page 85/275) and (Montreal Olympics Official Report, Volume 2, page 215/238.)

 However, the City of Kingston wants to build condos: "Petition: Save the Portsmouth Olympic Harbour Greenspace and Character. The parkland should not be sold for condo/residential development. WE DO NOT WANT TO GIVE UP THIS GREAT WATERFRONT PARK TO DEVELOPMENT."

6.) National Historic Sites of Canada cannot be flattened or converted to housing---

  • The Kingston Pen
  • Prison for Women on Sir John. A. Macdonald Boulevard, Kingston
  • Collins Bay Pen near Kingston, known as Disneyland North
  • Laval Pen in Quebec was supposed to be a museum
7.) The scenic parkways in the National Capital Region may be de-paved.

Red Flags--- Zoning laws, land use regulations and environmental assessments will be removed from federal properties on the Canada Public Land Bank list---"Because they create significant delays."

Land Use Regulations that should always be respected, in my opinion:

  • National Historic Site of Canada
  • Heritage Conservation District
  • Canadian Heritage Landscape
  • Canadian Environmental Assessment Act
  • 900 square miles in the National Capital Region are dedicated to the memory of Canadian soldiers. That includes the Ottawa Greenbelt.
  • National Interest Land Mass
  • UNESCO World Heritage Site
  • Parks Canada Act
  • Museums Act
  • Classified and Recognized Federal Heritage Building
  • By-laws---"File contains material regarding by-laws to protect Sparks Street; commercial development on Zellers Building Site; controls on urban development, height and slant restrictions on buildings (Brouse, Slater, Bate and Birks Buildings); Simpson's; The Bank of Canada; and St. Andrew's Church development." ( The Hon. Romeo LeBlanc, NCC, March 1983 to May 1984, page 11/19.)
  • Zoning in Gatineau Park---"The NCC has prepared a new zoning plan for Gatineau Park which, among other things, will preserve strictly the park's wilderness area." (1975-1976 Annual Report of the NCC, page 21/52.)
  • Dominion, Ordnance and Admiralty Land---Stanley Park in Vancouver was Dominion, Ordnance and Admiralty Land in 1992, reserved for the defence of Canada. 
  • Conservation Authority Act of Ontario (1990)---Conservation authorities are mandated to ensure the protection, restoration and effective management of Ontario's water resources, wetlands, woodlands and natural habitats.
Stanley Park encompassed 384 ha in 1992, or 950 acres.

Friday, May 9, 2025

"The Experimental Farm forms a central park within a residential area of the City of Ottawa."

From: The Greber Report of 1950, page 167/395 and a photo is included. 

"Under no conditions whatever should the ground now occupied by the Experimental Farm be used for other than park purposes, should its present use as a farm be abandoned." (Ottawa Improvement Commission, 1915, page 126/238.)

Parks, Parkways and Playgrounds These parks will be accessible to the people, on the principle that parks should be brought to the people, instead of people being forced to travel long distances to the parks. (OIC, 1915, page 180/238.)

Capital Parks in 1992

  • Confederation, Laurier Ave. W.--- 2.5473 ha
  • Bronson Ave. and Sparks Street--- 0.4000 ha
  • Commissioners, Rideau Canal--- 6.8000 ha
  • LeBreton Flats---70.0900 ha
  • Vincent Massey, Riverside Dr. and Heron Road---29.5600 ha
  • Moffat Farm, Prince of Wales Drive and Melfa Crescent---2.0900 ha
  • River Road Park, River Road in Ottawa-Vanier---14.0500 ha
  • Dow's Lake, Rideau Canal---4.000 ha
  • Greenbelt Ottawa South, Hwy 417 and Walkley Rd. (land reserve)---47.6300 ha
  • Rideau Canoe Club---1.67 ha
  • Nepean Point, St. Patrick Street and Sussex Drive---1.4600 ha 
  • Riverside Dr. Park, Ottawa South, Queensway to Bronson Ave.---22.14 ha
  • Victoria Island, Middle St.---7.9120 ha
  • Hog's Back Park, Hog's Back Rd. & Riverside Drive---24.2300 ha
  • Stanley Ave. Park, Ottawa Vanier, Minto Bridge, Maple and Green Islands---5.0400 ha
  • Wellington, Albert, Commissioner and Slater Street---0.6300 ha
  • Rochester Field next to Maplelawn, Richmond Road
  • Rockcliffe
  • Dundonald
  • Major's Hill  more

A reposting from the 1992 Directory of Federal Real Property.

 

Thursday, May 1, 2025

MSN News---Today, May 1 2025. "The Best Places in Canada to See Cherry Blossoms" by Emma Yardley.

6. Ottawa. When: May. Where: Central Experimental Farm National Historic Site's Arboretum boasts more than 2,000 varieties of trees and shrubs-including flowering cherry. Some of them date all the way back to the first plantings in 1889. Trails along Dow's Lake and the Ottawa River Valley also provide pops of pink thanks to pockets of flowering trees." 

Threats to the Arboretum:

The Arboretum will be partially excavated: "It has come to our attention that the City of Ottawa is proposing to claim several meters of the Farm's southern border along Baseline for a rapid transit route. Moreover, it is understood that a part of the Arboretum next to the O-Train will be dug up." (A letter from Judy Dodds, President of the Friends of the CEF, to Federal Environment Minister McKenna, January 6, 2018.)

A need for more parking by the Civic Hospital: "There is a high probability that car arrivals at the campus in 2028 will far exceed the parking capacity. My best guess is that mitigation will eventually include TOH asking the NCC for more acreage on the Experimental Farm--probably in the Arboretum and along Maple Drive and even Commissioners Park for another parking garage and more surface parking lots." (The Glebe Report, 'Risk Management and the new Civic Hospital campus': by Barbara Popel, March 18,2022.)

A huge section of the Arboretum was rezoned, without public input or consent for the new Civic Hospital. (The Glebe Report, September 13, 2024, page 5.)

"Friends of the Farm raises concerns about future hospital impact on gardens, arboretum." (Ottawa West News, Melissa Murray, March 13, 2017.)

Encroachment on historic, irreplaceable landscapes. A letter to the head of the National Capital Commission: "Friends of the Central Experimental Farm were very supportive of the NCC process and review of a new site for the Ottawa Hospital. Unfortunately, the decision to choose a site at the Central Experimental Farm has prevailed. We believe that the potential impact of this decision on the grounds of the CEF needs to be stated."

"The specific site chosen for the hospital will challenge the public areas that are an integral part of the history and raison-d'etre of the Farm, and that objective is reinforced in the National Historic Site Management Plan."  

I am reposting this document, the CEF became a National Historic Site of Canada in 1998.

(Continuation of the letter to NCC Chair Dr. Kristmanson) "The Dominion Arboretum provides many benefits to residents and visitors to the Capital, removing air pollutants, reducing stress, cleaning groundwater, providing a cool retreat, reducing climate change, supporting wildlife and much more. In addition the Arboretum provides a living historic record of trees planted on the site since 1889."

"The Ornamental Gardens are of historic importance and national significance to all Canadians, as explained in the new FCEF publication Blooms: An Illustrated History of the Ornamental Gardens at Ottawa's Experimental Farm. These gardens comprise unique plant collections found nowhere else in Canada. FCEF volunteers provide thousands of hours annually, under the direction of AAFC staff, demonstrating invaluable community involvement." 

"The first challenge to both of these areas by the intended development can be seen in the layout plan for the new hospital, including the location of the parking area. Buildings and paved surfaces will be located across Prince of Wales Drive from the Arboretum, changing both the sight and sound of the area. The construction will also displace many trees and hedges that were planted on the northwest side as an extension of the Arboretum. (Emphasis mine---savecfbrockcliffe.) It's also worth noting that while a number of Farm buildings i.e. the Dominion Observatory complex and other heritage buildings will be in the buffer zone between the research fields and the new construction, there won't be a similar buffer zone on the east side of the development."

"The second significant challenge will come from the re-design of roads and traffic management on the repurposed site. Any widening of Prince of Wales Drive to accommodate increased traffic will diminish both the Arboretum and the Ornamental Gardens. (Emphasis mine---savecfbrockcliffe.) Any change to the NCC Driveway, Birch Drive or Maple Drive will have a similar impact. Both will interfere with the intended landscape design as specified in the CEF National Historic Site Management Plan."

"A third and most significant threat will come from the precedent set that this project will make for future development. New encroachment could come from another border of the Farm, or it could come from the hospital administration's interest in continuous improvement to its facilities."

"The Friends of the Farm are dedicated to preserving and enhancing the public areas of the Farm. We believe that the NCC should be very specific in its guidance on this project, drawing on the NHS Management Plan, the CEF Advisory Council, and all resources available to protect these invaluable grounds. The NCC will be in a unique position to influence the design and construction so as to minimize the damage and additional encroachment on this National Historic Site. We urge you to exercise your full oversight responsibility to ensure the Farm is preserved for all  Yours sincerely, Judy Dodds, President, Friends of the CEF.

The Civic Hospital plans to expand - The federal parcel donated to the Civic is bounded by Carling, Maple, Birch, the CEF Pathway, Queen Juliana Park and Prince of Wales Drive. POW Drive is across the street from the Arboretum. An official document proclaims that adjacent land "Meets criteria to support future expansion." and "Traffic access will increase on Prince of Wales Drive and the NCC Scenic Parkway."
(From "The New Civic Campus: A 21st Century Hospital in the Heart of Canada's Capital"---April 2016, page 10/75.)
A July 20, 1946 article in the Ottawa Journal.


The following woods on the Farm are protected by the City:
  • Arboretum Woods --- Federal
  • Central Experimental Farm Woods---Federal
  • Prince of Wales Woods---Federal, City (Google: "urban natural features strategy" City of Ottawa, April 11, 2006.)