LeBreton Flats

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LeBreton Flats
Location of LeBreton Flats in Ottawa
Location of LeBreton Flats in Ottawa
Coordinates: 45°25′00″N 75°43′00″W / 45.416667, -75.716667
Country Canada
Province Ontario
City Ottawa
Government
 - MPs Paul Dewar
 - MPPs Yasir Naqvi
 - Councillors Diane Holmes
Area
 - Total 0.84 km² (0.3 sq mi)
Elevation 60 m (197 ft)
Population (2006)
 - Total 57
 - Density 68.1/km² (176.4/sq mi)
  Canada 2006 Census
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)

LeBreton Flats (also spelled Lebreton Flats) is a neighbourhood in Ottawa, Canada. It lies to the west of Centretown neighbourhood, and to the north of Centretown West with "Nanny Goat Hill" as the dividing line. The Ottawa River forms the northern limit.

Contents

[edit] Early history

LeBreton Flats after the 1900 fire.
LeBreton Flats after the 1900 fire.

LeBreton Flats was named after Captain John LeBreton, one of Nepean Township's first settlers and a hero of the War of 1812.[1] With the development of the Ottawa area, LeBreton Flats by the mid-1800s had developed into a mixed community to serve the lumber mills on the nearby Chaudiere and Victoria Islands. A rail line came in with a station and yards, and industries developed in turn. There was also housing for both the workers and owners, as well as hotels and taverns.

The area was ravaged by the Great Fire of 1900, which had started across the river in Hull (now Gatineau, QC), but jumped over by way of the great stacks of piled lumber on the islands. The fire destroyed the neighbourhood, leaving many homeless. The area was rebuilt, but the lumber barons relocated their dwellings up into the City proper above the escarpment, leaving the workers as the remaining Flat's residents.

[edit] Urban renewal and redevelopment

Two children in LeBreton Flats in 1963, as the lands were being expropriated and the residents forced to vacate the neighbourhood.
Two children in LeBreton Flats in 1963, as the lands were being expropriated and the residents forced to vacate the neighbourhood.

In the 1960s, expropriation occurred in order to make room for redevelopment, including offices for the Government of Canada. As a result of disputes over the use of the land and soil contamination from the previous industrial uses, the land remained vacant for over forty years. It was used in the winter for piling snow that had been removed from Ottawa streets, with the pile often remaining well into the late spring. As a result of the runoff from this snowpile, the land became more contaminated.

Because of this, it was found that almost all of the area's topsoil would have to be removed in order for redevelopment to proceed . However, the ownership had to be consolidated, since the Federal Government, the former Regional Municipality of Ottawa-Carleton, and the City itself were landowners. This situation was remedied with a Federal agency called the National Capital Commission (NCC) acquiring all title to the land.

In May 2005, the new home for the Canadian War Museum was opened on LeBreton Flats as the first component of redevelopment. There are plans to use the remainder of the site for housing, commercial space, offices and parkland.

The southern part of LeBreton Flats between Albert Street and Nanny Goat Hill escaped the expropriation of the 1960s. In this area, brick houses and townhouses built immediately following the 1900 fire still exist alongside rowhousing built in the 1970s. The portion of Lorne Avenue which lies below Nanny Goat Hill is an example of the housing which filled Lebreton prior to the 1960s and is a Heritage District designated by the City of Ottawa.

The western portion of the Transitway runs through LeBreton Flats, served by Lebreton Station.

Currently, as of the Canada 2006 Census, 57 people live in LeBreton Flats.

[edit] See also

View of LeBreton Flats in December 2005, prior to redevelopment.
View of LeBreton Flats in December 2005, prior to redevelopment.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Gillis, Megan. Road map of city's past. Ottawa Sun. June 27, 2005. Retrieved July 12, 2007.

[edit] References

  • Jenkins, Phil. An Acre of Time. Toronto: Macfarlane Walter & Ross, 1996.

[edit] External links

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