Abstract
The new city park is located at Tunney’s Pasture four kilometres west of Parliament Hill and lies on the south bank of the Ottawa River. The 49-hectare site is bounded by the Kichi Zibi Mikan pathway and the Ottawa River to the north, Parkdale Avenue to the east, Scott Street and light rail transit to the south, and the community of Champlain Park to the west.
The park is organized by bands of amenities that promote community interactions and celebrate the site’s cultural heritage. They include a children’s playground, sports area, community gardens, arts studios, spaces for music performance, and the Library and Archives.
The community spaces are placed as cuts or channels in the ground to connect to the earth and the land.
Explorations in making, craft, music, and memories create dialogues with the site, and the park becomes an ever-evolving place for discovery that connects the lines and mesh of ideas in the collaborative process of human action.
Natural light is brought into the underground spaces by skylights that are of the form of the site’s rocks.
On the northern edge of the site, a water tower spouts water for the community gardens. Little structures cast in the shape of the site’s rocks stand in rows in irregular sequence as garden sheds.
Adjacent to the printing studio is a rectangular space for skateboarding. In the winter it converts to a skating rink. On the park’s west border, the wide sidewalk runs along its length to join Scott Street to the Ottawa River Parkway, offering a direct connection to the ski trails in the winter months.
But for now, it is still summer, and you prepare to cool off in the long lap pool. You are happy, the colours of the floral beds, people – some lounging, others walking to a studio or the library or for music; the connected pathways; the bands of activities; the lookout towers, the connection to the ground and the sky; you are just happy that the private developers did not take this one.