Category Archives: Uncategorized

Weekend Round Up: Mid-March Fun

Too be fair it is a quieter time than we are used to around the hood but still lots to do if you’re looking for fun.

Today in honour of Pi Day our neighbours over at Boko Bakery on Elgin are offering FREE Pie-pops until 8PM.  Great offer and we’ll be sure to pick up a few extra bits to support their generosity.

Tons of great local’s for Friday night drinks. Personal favourites include the outstanding cocktails and stylish surrounds of The Albion Rooms. Fancy a craft beer & live music it’s got to be the Lunenburg Pub where the prices are great and the crowd is lively. With the wintery weather you might need a strong one and there is no better place to enjoy top quality bourbon than Hooch on Rideau Street.

Kick off Saturday with Cartoons & Pyjamas at the Mayfair theatre. Saturday Morning all you can eat Cereal Cartoon Party starts at 10AM – what a great way to start the day.

Saturday morning at 11am the St Patrick’s Day parade kicks off at Laurier & Elgin. A bit cooler than I’d like for the wearing of the green but it’ll definitely be full of warm spirit.

auntieloosSure, Urban Craft is located at the Glebe Community Centre, put this Saturday’s fair is worth attending given the presence of great Sandy Hill locals like Auntie Loo’s Treats – hosting Auntie Loo’s Kitchen and providing the opportunity to support ton’s of talent local artisans. Like the tag line says “Hip – Modern – Handmade”!

Weekend Roundup: Musical March

“March” over to the NAC”s 4th stage tonight to take in the Latin stylings of Claudia Salguero and her new production Claudia Salguero – IDILIO showcasing an array of the singer’s favourite Latin love songs performed in Spanish. Salguero will donate part of the proceedings to Columbia’s Child Aid Foundation and will be supported by her musical ensemble including local Saxophonist Jasmin Lalande.

Equally on Thursday is Aganetha Dyck’s Honeybee Alterations at the Ottawa School of Art. Dyck will give a 2PM lecture on the inspiration and techniques in her works while the vernissage is from 5-8pm.

Friday night is Salguero’s last performance or you can take it down a notch and check out great Craft beer’s and live music. The Lunenburg pub hosts it’s Beerfest Friday with Toques & Suits bringing the tunes. Meanwhile over at Cafe Alt catch HSY, The Beverleys and Blue Angel.

Friday, Saturday,  Sunday and through to March 16th it is DiverCine Film Festival at the Bytowne Cinema featuring 12 films from 10 French-speaking countries. Get your daily fill of fantastic francophone movies from Canada, Senegal, France, Tunisia, Haiti, Switzerland, Belgium and beyond.

Saturday is International Women’s Day so celebrate yourself, your partner, your sister, your colleague, your daughter, your mother, you name it.

Saturday night take in the experimental sounds of Fryquency at Mugshots. As always it’s a pay-what-you-can event in the old jail bar on Nicholas featuring Doomsquad, You’ll never get to Heaven, JFM and F Hood.  9PM

Sunday it’s over to the Ottawa Art Gallery for Creative SundaysHands-on art making activities for kids. 1-3PM FREE

Eye Spy: Claudia Salguero supported by local talent at NAC

Claudia Salguero the Ottawa-based Columbian singer returns tomorrow and Friday to the NAC 4th stage. Following sold-out performances over the past 3 years Salguero is back with her latest show IDILIO – featuring hand selected Latin American love songs.

Salguero’s Spanish performance promises to animate and illuminate the poetic Latin harmonies. As always, Salguero has generously donated a portion of the proceeds to Columbia’s Fundacion Ayuda a la Infancia – Foundation for Children’s Aid.

Sandy Hill’ers will be particularly pleased to “spy” amongst Salguero’s talented international  ensemble local saxophonist Jasmin Lalande.

NAC Fourth Stage,
March 6-7, 7:30pm

Weekend Roundup: Chemistry, Photography & 3 Beers

As March is set to roar in like a Lion I cling to the hope of a lamb-like exit…

Stock up on fresh eats at the Ottawa U Farmer’s Market in the University centre today from 9-4pm .

Thursday is the opening night of Trois (Three) at Arts Court. That’s three performances nightly for three nights. “Three nights, three shows. And three beers for $10. Doors and cash bar open at 7:30, with the first performance at 8:00pm” Remember if you miss the opening there is always Friday and Saturday night. 

Former Sandy Hill’er and all around great guy Eugene Haslam is the latest CreativeMorning’s Presenter. Catch up with this popular commentator and powerful promoter at Friday’s session at Enriched Bread Artist Studios on Gladstone 8:30-10:00am

FrozenKick off your evening with family fun on Friday. Viscount Alexander on Mann St is hosting Movie Night! They’ve got Disney’s Frozen is on the program and the movie is free while the drinks & pizza are well priced. Doors 5:30 and movie starts at 6PM.

Friday night its the return of monthly event Nature Nocturne. This month the event explores photography with “Ready for your Close-up?“. It’s not strictly in the hood but 20mins on foot still counts as local in our book and a night at the Castle – Museum of Nature – is always magical. 8PM 22$.

Saturday at Carleton University its the 7th annual Chemistry Magic Show featuring one-hour “performances” at 11Am & 2PM with an all-day activity centre open (Steacie Building 2nd Floor) between 9:30-4:30. Suggested donation 3$. Theatre B, Basement Southam Hall.

Also on Saturday there are two opportunities to catch Essays the annual performance of new choreographies by Ottawa School of Dance, Arts Court 2 Daly,   2:30 & 7:30.

Eye Spy: Renaissance of Historic Carriage House

Tomorrow is the day to parade your community spirit!

Carriage House GraphicTomorrow Bettye Hyde, Sandy Hill’s première early years learning centre, moves from All Saints to it’s new home – the community owned Carriage House.

Come out to bid the old digs a fond farewell, cheer and join the wee ones on their epic parade. It is a momentous moment in our neighbourhood and it deserves to be marked.

We never doubted this crew would do it in style and sure enough Janet, Lisa, Keisha, Cindy and Leanne will all be on hand to lead the kid’s parade from All Saints Church – 10 Blackburn (at Laurier) to the new digs at 43 Blackburn tomorrow morning at 9:15.

More than a nursery Bettye Hyde is a Sandy Hill icon and home to creative thinkers – from it’s entrepreneurial namesake who built this legacy over 40 years ago to those who are continuing to innovate today . It was the need for a new Bettye Hyde home that spurred on not just the signing of a lease but the community purchase of the beautiful Carriage House. These entrepreneurs have joined forces to create not only a home for Bettye Hyde whilst ensuring the protection of a historic building but also have laid the foundations for a new business hub in the neighbourhood with CAFCO, the Childhood, Adolescent and Family Centre of Ottawa. 

Professional from CAFCO will join Bettye Hyde and others for the parade and we all hope to see you there too.

10 Blackburn – All Saints Church 9:15am 20 Feb

Eye Spy: Serious Words on Revitalising our Hood

Tomorrow is the cut-off for letters to the City Planning department on a proposal from Dharma Development that wishes to more than double the height allowed on Upper Rideau Street.

bytownerideau1.pngI want a strolling, shopping corridor so I wrote this to City Planning. I want businesses like the Bytowne, Auntie Loos, Rideau Bakery and All Books. I want them supported by foot-fall and I want more of their ilk. Strongly worded? Yes but if we don’t advocate for our neighbourhood who will?
—–

Re: File Number D02-02-13-0129 – Zoning By-law Amendment Proposal, 541-545 Rideau Street

I am writing to you today to oppose the proposal to rezone 541-545 Rideau Street. The proposal brought by Dharma Developments violates current zoning restrictions and goes directly against the City’s stated aim to create a Traditional Mainstreet (TM) on Upper Rideau.  The City spent taxpayer money developing the Upper Rideau Design Plan in 2005 with the communities’ involvement to identify the best approach to creating the best possible Street. To allow rezoning is wasteful of taxpayers’ money and disrespectful of the Ward’s wishes.

The City planning has stated that their “hands are tied” in respect to high-rise developments as they were zoned for height and the City must respect the owners rights. This was a response from City planning when asked why we can’t spot-rezone for lower height –it is always and only greater capacity the City bows to. Let the City have their hands tied and be respectful citizen and property owners rights in areas zoned for low-rise development.  The City must have an equal obligation towards respecting the investments of property buyers that purchased in areas zoned as low-rise. Let’s finally start respecting investments equally be they by corporation or individual.

To be completely clear a TM means buildings should be no higher than 19meters – ideal for light thus encouraging strolling and patios which are two much needed developments on Upper Rideau.  The Dharma Development proposal wants to more than double the zoned height restriction and tear-down 541 Rideau a building noted as “of Heritage Interest”.  The last thing residents of the Upper Rideau want – and that the City as a whole should encourage – is the transformation of beautiful old neighbourhoods in to an extension of the wind-tunnel dark shadowed portion of Rideau Street between King Edward and Cumberland.

That these old neighbourhoods have been neglected is no excuse for irresponsible development.  One need only look to the transformation of Bank St in Old Ottawa South to see the flourishing benefits of listening to Community input.

I want to see new developments on Upper Rideau that enhance the liveability of the street.  Developments must encourage quality businesses catering to and are supported by the neighbourhood.  Currently Upper Rideau St is not a “destination” it is a cut-through for car drivers.  Building light-blocking high-rises will reinforce this. If the City is sincere in its stated plan then it needs to respect the Upper Rideau St Design and, as this plan states, adhere to the zoning of 19ft height that allows no more than between 6-9 stories; as opposed to the 16stories the current proposal request.  The Upper Rideau Street plan was adopted 8 years ago – let’s enforce it today.

Developing Upper Rideau Street properly can – given the diversity & density of the surrounding neighbourhoods including Sandy Hill, Lowertown, Vanier & the Byward Market –create a natural shopping and strolling corridor between Vanier and Byward. Doing this will strengthen the quality of businesses, the desirability of all four neighbourhoods and create a vibrant shopping street to rival any seen in Old Ottawa South or Wellington West.

It is time for the City to get serious about the commitment to transform Upper Rideau – talk and planning sessions and whitepapers are nothing other than a waste of taxpayer money if they are not implemented.

——

Please feel free to copy this letter and email it with your own message to Douglas.james@ottawa.ca
Letters on this proposal are due by end of day 17 February 2014

Mr. Douglas James
Planning and Growth Management Department
City of Ottawa
110 Laurier Avenue West
Ottawa, ON, K10 1J1

Eye Spy: A Strong Vocal Community

Last night Cllr Mathieu Fleury invited residents from Lowertown & Sandy Hill to come together and discuss outstanding concerns surrounding the opening of Chapel St and Beausoleil to cars.  Please see past articles for details.

The evening was animated, at times challenging and very vocal. Almost every attendee contributed forceful yet positive ideas on how to bring proactive changes that benefit the whole community rather than a segment.

RightBike3The take-away from this meeting is that the communities have asked for the City & Councillor to make the intersection bike-only on to Chapel within the next two weeks to discourage drivers from becoming familiar with a new route that would be closed off (City’s timeline) in the spring. With the advent of RightBike kiosks coming to Sandy Hill what better time than now to take action to promote and provide cycling infrastructure.

Alongside this action many additional ideas were put forth including:

  • the beautification of the bike intersection with planters
  • using the intersection to create an urban cycle track – for all level of cyclists old & v young – for safe bike passage to Market
  • the installation of further traffic calming measure to increase school crossing safety – signs, speed bumps, reduced speed limits

Improvements don’t happen in a vacuum and local residents showcased powerful voices, visionary ideas with a readiness to listen and collaborate to make the adjoining areas the most brilliant urban Ottawa neighbourhoods!

Social Media & Community Bring Positive Change to Divisive Traffic Issue

This article was originally published in the Image newspaper. 

The surprise opening of the intersection at Beausoleil Dr & Chapel St to car traffic this December ignited a powerful social media debate as locals went online to express shock at the unannounced change when no notice was given to residents nor was there any mention on the Councillor’s website or December progress report.

The news came to local blog www.sandyhillseen.com (SHS) via an email from for a local resident and its editor immediately contacted Councillor Fleury via Twitter to verify facts and start a dialogue with Ottawa’s social media community. A spontaneous flurry of Facebook messages, tweets and emails alerted residents focusing concern, and pressuring the Councillor to find a solution. 

Councillor Fleury told sandyhillseen that the change was necessary to acquire a stop sign at Beausoleil where it meets Chapel.  The stop sign had been requested by parents to ensure safety on the popular pedestrian route – which had seen near misses and collisions with students – to De La Salle, York St. & Ste-Anne schools.

The Councillor’s office repeatedly stated that, under the Highway Traffic Act (HTA), car traffic at that intersection was necessary for a stop sign, as mid-block signs are not allowed.  On Dec 18th Fleury tweeted “currently there’s no way aside from full light signal, expensive & can’t implement now”.

The notion of increasing car traffic, through the creation of a new intersection, to increase pedestrian safety provoked incredulity online. The Councillor’s tweets did little to quell the growing online unease that an important issue that languished for years now had such an “urgent solution” imposed.

Tweets and emails shared dismay at the lack of communication, and the jarring notion of increasing car traffic to protect pedestrians. Without challenging the safe crossing, questions quickly arose as to whether due diligence had been done in exploring solutions.

As passions and online debate grew, the Councillor’s office proposed a next-day December 20 meeting at the intersection, with a City planner in attendance. A small clutch of Sandy Hillers gathered at 8AM in a snowstorm to propose alternative solutions that would legally and inexpensively secure the stop sign without increasing traffic.

This list included: a crossing-guard; proper traffic signals; re-implementing the closure at the opposite end of the block – as done during the summer construction, and instaling a mid-block barrier and making Chapel/Beausoleil a bike-only intersection.

While acknowledging the legality of a bike-only intersection, the offical from City Planning disparaged it, arguing that motorized vehicles ignore stop signs erected for pedestrians and cyclists. “Cars won’t stop for intersections without cars.”

It is inconceivable that a City official would consider bowing to illegal drivers running a stop sign, when the appropriate action is enforcement. The transformational power of pedestrians and cyclists in reinvigorating neighbourhoods is being embraced worldwide and it is unconscionable to discourage forward-thinking visionary approaches for urban improvement.

The lack of firm commitment following the on-site gathering meant the community felt it necessary to stay involved to ensure a green, inclusive approach. Twitter, blogs and emails kept the discussions alive and Sandy Hill joined forces with Lowertown to encourage an inclusive decision. More blog postings articles and an invitation from the Lowertown Community Association’s (LCA) for the wider area to attend their association meeting on January 13th all featured on www.sandyhillseen.com.

On January 14th, a month after the initial Tweet, an email released from Councillor Fleury’s office stated: “staff will convert the opening of Chapel Street at Beausoleil Drive into a “cyclist access only” intersection, as proposed by community members. “ Letter from Cllr Fleury’s office

It is unfortunate the community needed to challenge a fait-accompli and provide legal and cost-effective alternatives to the City professionals that should lay-out viable options. However the outcome heralds the power of social media, of active, joined-up communities and City reps willing to listen to shape the best, most vibrant neighbourhood.

Eye Spy: U of O “Master Plan” for Development

The University of Ottawa has launched a new website to host the University’s “master plan” for land-holdings and development in the neighbourhood  http://www.uottawamasterplan.ca/

The project employs Toronto-based firm Urban Strategies with George Dark as the Partner-in-Charge. There is little information on the attractive website at the moment but it is definitely one to watch closely as the implications for Sandy Hill and the wider area are important as is the challenge to maintain the liveability and diversity of these core Ottawa neighbourhoods.

Weekend Round-Up: Downtown Chills & Winterlude Skills

No shortage of options this weekend folks – so ready, set, go LOCAL!

subway stations of the crossWhile Ins Choi’s Kim’s Convenience garners rave reviews at the NAC Sandy Hill gets the opportunity Sunday night to further explores Choi’s repertoire as he brings his one-off performance “Subway Stations of the Cross” to St Alban’s church. It promises a powerful spoken word piece with songs inspired by an encounter between Choi and a homeless man. 8PM 20$

On Thursday University of Ottawa Bike Coop (200 Lees Ave, Room A105) is holding a workshop on basic bike maintenance – tires and tubes. Get ready to fix your summer bike or learn how to maintain a year-rounder.  Bike Co-op membership is open to all.

There are still tickets available for Thursday night’s extra-date with Leif Vollebekk, performing at St Alban’s Church (454 King Edward Ave.) – through Ticketweb or at Vertigo Records and Compact Music – 8PM ADV 10$Leif Vollbekk

Lunenburg Pub has local theatre troupe 9th Hour and their production of Grain of Salt on Thursday and Friday evening. Little theatre and a little tipple. 7:30PM 20$ Door

Friday evening head to the Ottawa Art Gallery for the vernissage of Degel (Thaw) new works from Visual Arts artist Manon Labrosse. Arts Court, 2 Daly Ave, 5-8PM

winterlude-logoFriday night Winterlude kicks off in Confederation Square from 7pm with the “Great Winter Ball” that includes opening ceremonies, ice carvings, djs and fireworks. 7PM

Ice Carving events continue throughout the weekend with competitors from around the world taking part. Check out their mad Winterlude skills throughout the weekend at Confederation Park. FREE

Saturday evening is the closing night of Neil Simon’s Rumours at the  Ottawa Little Theatre, 400 King Edward Ave, 2PM, 12-25$

Saturday also sees Freeze Frame whereby 10 independent film makers were challenged to create within a 24hour deadline a Super 8mm short film using the Freeze Frame theme Saw Gallery(67 Nicholas St) 7:30PM FREE.

pop-fiction2-658x360Looking for some French Theatre? Come to Arts Court where until Sunday Feb 2nd you can take in Pop Fiction. A mixture of Science-Fiction and Reality this play brings the audience in to the action as it explores the strengths and failings of communications yesterday, today and tomorrow. 15-20$

Sunday Night it is our pick of the week Ins Choi’s Subway Stations of the Cross. One night only at St Alban’s Church 8PM.

Finally there is some kind of sporting event also on Sunday that some may want to take in apparently…. Happy Weekending!