LANSDOWNE

Community Liaison2024-09-22T13:14:30-04:00

Lansdowne Committee

For over a decade, this committee has advocated for a fair, open and transparent process for revitalizing Lansdowne Park.

For information, please drop a line to lansdowne@glebeca.ca

June Creelman
June CreelmanCommittee Chair

by John Leaning

The recent news that the south stadium at Lansdowne Park, built in 1962, is possibly collapsing, gives cause to examine the history and future of the so-called park. It has been many things since 1868, when the canal ordinance land east of Bank Street was offered to the Ottawa Agriculture Society for the purpose of a fairground.

Since then, it has been used for exhibitions, spectator sports and participatory sports, and an amusement midway, but never actually as a park. The canal shoreline and eastern and southern boundary of Lansdowne Park was originally different; the “park” consisted of a peninsula on which sat the home of a Mr. Craig, just opposite Pig Island. The inlet behind extended from the present lily pond north of Fifth Avenue to just in front of the Aberdeen Pavilion built in 1898. The fairground cum exhibition first consisted of a motley collection of wooden buildings which burned down in 1907, fortunately leaving the Aberdeen Pavilion, the largest freespan building of its kind in North America. It was Colonel By who determined the east and south boundaries of the fairground and the Glebe in 1826.

The canal was moved there because of the actions of a Captain LeBreton who had acquired the LeBreton Flats lands across which the canal was originally intended to pass. When the park was first created, it was outside the city. By the 1930s, the Glebe residential area had encompassed it. But even though the Driveway had been built along its eastern side in 1926, traffic access to the park by the 1950s was limited and started to cause problems of congestion and pollution in the surrounding areas. Lansdowne Park was not originally intended as a spectator sports ground as it is now. The Rough Riders football team did not appear until 1896. They lasted 100 years, until their demise due to mismanagement in 1996. The use of the park as a commercially operated midway by Amusements of America did not appear until 1964. It is the primary reason why we now have a vast asphalt parking lot where playing fields used to be – even though the midway only lasts for ten days each year.

In 1970, there was a serious proposal to extend Lansdowne Park northwards to Fifth Avenue and Bank Street, which would have required the removal of 150 homes. Fortunately, that idea was quashed by city council under considerable pressure from the Glebe Community Association. However, the GCA was unable to prevent the expansion of the south stadium in 1975, the portion of the stands now in a state of collapse. Since 1972, there have been about eight different design proposals for the park, including the removal of the midway to outside of Ottawa. Some very positive moves were made in the 1990s. The Aberdeen Pavilion was restored, a children’s playground was created in the northeast corner and much of the canal ordnance lands adjacent to the Driveway were made into attractive parkland. Some ideas being contemplated are the removal of the stadium, removal of the midway and replacement of the vast asphalt parking lot with ornamental gardens and playing fields. Courtesy of the Glebe Report, October 12, 2007

Committee Minutes/ Reports

Letter to Minister Calandra re: Bill 185

April 15, 2024 Hon. Paul Calandra Minister of Municipal AƯairs and Housing Queen’s Park, Toronto Email: Paul.Calandra@pc.ola.org Dear Minister Calandra, The Glebe Community Association (GCA) is a volunteer, non-profit, membership-based and city [...]

Lansdowne update

Recent Developments with Lansdowne 2.0 In late November 2023, City Council approved moving forward with Lansdowne 2.0.   There are still many steps to be completed before the project is a ‘go’. City Council requires [...]

GCA formal submission on Lansdowne

 October 29, 2023  Dear Mayor and Councillors  Re: Joint FCSC-PHC Meeting of Nov 2, 2023—Lansdowne 2.0    I am writing on behalf of the Glebe Community Association (GCA) to urge you to vote ‘no’ [...]

A third call for financial transparency

Subject: Press Release: Lansdowne 2.0 financials and need for greater transparency around costs and risks Please find enclosed a Press Release related to Lansdowne 2.0 which goes to Joint Committee on Nov. 2nd of next week. [...]

Lansdowne Park 2.0 Press release

Lansdowne Park 2.0: Community Stakeholders call for informed and meaningful Public Consultations before new Council makes any further decisions Mayor Sutcliffe and his new Council are facing hard decisions over the future of Lansdowne [...]

Lansdowne Update

At the end of January, the GCA was invited to participate in a public meeting on the future of Lansdowne Park hosted by a community organization called Parkways for People. Carolyn Mackenzie (GCA Planning Chair) [...]

Landsdowne 2.0

The City of Ottawa has been working with the Ottawa Sports and Entertainment Group (OSEG) over the past year to develop a plan to make Lansdowne financially self-sustaining, and their revitalization plans were shared on [...]

Revitalization work at Lansdowne Park

View/Download PDF of Letter June 30, 2021 Mayor Watson & City Council 110 Laurier Avenue West Ottawa, ON K1P 1J1 Dear Mayor Watson and City Councillors, RE: Lansdowne Park Partnership: Path to sustainability and next [...]

Major changes ahead for Lansdowne?

Major changes ahead for Lansdowne? The City of Ottawa has just released a report proposing major changes for Lansdowne. The proposals include demolishing the Civic Centre arena and the north side stands of the stadium [...]

Healthy communities initiative

June 23, 2021 Mr. Andrew Peck Executive Director Glebe BIA Dear Mr. Peck, RE: Support for the Social Infrastructure at Lansdowne in the Glebe project under the Canada Healthy Communities Initiative On behalf of the [...]

GCA Lansdowne Committee Update 

Glebe Community Association Lansdowne Committee Update  April 2021   This update will focus on the following items concerning Lansdowne Park:      City’s review of Lansdowne Park Aberdeen Square Renewal project Canada Healthy Communities Initiative funding [...]

Community Pop-Up Art Gallery at Lansdowne

Calling Artists! Community Pop-Up Art Gallery at Lansdowne Late winter/spring 2021 Are you an artist with ties to the Glebe, Glebe Annex, Dow’s Lake, Old Ottawa East or Old Ottawa South? We are now accepting [...]

Pop-Up Art Gallery at Lansdowne Park

Community Pop-Up Art Gallery at Lansdowne Park Have you been staring at your walls for the last few months thinking that you need something new to brighten them up? Since so many of us are [...]

Lansdowne Annual Report and COVID Update

Submission to the City of Ottawa’s Finance and Economic Development Committee Meeting of November 12, 2020 Item 2. Lansdowne Annual Report and COVID Impact Update Dear Mayor and Councillors, The Glebe Community Association (GCA) is [...]

Aberdeen square meeting

The Glebe Community Association along with Community Associations in Old Ottawa East and Old Ottawa South, the Ottawa Sports and Entertainment Group (OSEG) and Councillor Menard will be hosting a virtual community consultation to review [...]

Future of Lansdowne Park

Thank you to the more than 500 people who came to the public forum on the future of Lansdowne Park on October 28. Here are more ways you can show you care about Lansdowne: Sign up to [...]

GCA Presentation to FEDCO – Feb 2012

In February, the City's Finance and Economic Development Committee met to discuss the Lansdowne Partnership Plan Implementation Status Update report, the RFO Process – Lease and sale of air rights at Lansdowne Park and the [...]

GCA Presentation to FEDCO

In February, the City's Finance and Economic Development Committee met to discuss the Lansdowne Partnership Plan Implementation Status Update report, the RFO Process – Lease and sale of air rights at Lansdowne Park and the [...]

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