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The Minto Metropole is a 33-story residential building in the Westboro neighbourhood of Ottawa, Ontario. [2] At 108 metres (354 ft), it is the third-tallest building in Ottawa, after Claridge Icon and Place de Ville Tower C. [3] It is the second-tallest residential building in the National Capital Region.
This is a list of properties which have been designated by the City of Ottawa under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act as having cultural heritage value or interest. At many properties, a bronze plaque gives a bilingual description of the property's history.
St. Laurent Centre is the third largest mall in terms of total space in the National Capital Region behind Rideau Centre and Bayshore Shopping Centre with 880,736 sq ft of leasable area, although a large portion of the mall's gross leasable area is utilized by non-retail tenants. [9] It is currently the 27th largest mall in Canada.
St. Laurent Blvd at the St. Laurent Mall. St. Laurent Boulevard (Ottawa Road #26) is an arterial road in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.Beginning at the Royal Canadian Mounted Police college complex at Sandridge Road in the Manor Park neighbourhood, St. Laurent Boulevard runs in a straight line, slightly east of south, until it reaches Walkley Road.
Lower Town (also spelled "Lowertown" (French: la Basse-Ville) is a neighbourhood in Rideau-Vanier Ward in central Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, to the east of downtown. It is the oldest part of the city. It is bounded by Rideau Street to the south, the Ottawa River to the west and north and the Rideau River to the east. [1]
Map of the east-end of Downtown Ottawa. Centretown is a neighbourhood in Somerset Ward, in central Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.It is defined by the city as "the area bounded on the north by Gloucester Street and Lisgar Street, on the east by the Rideau Canal, on the south by the Queensway freeway and on the west by Bronson Avenue."
University of Ottawa Library This page was last edited on 20 February 2024, at 05:23 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
The Ottawa architecture firm of Burgess, McLean & MacPhadyen designed a single level brick, concrete and steel building composed of three connected wings [3] on a 12-acre city-owned Lees Avenue site. [4] After being unused for a number of years, it was sold to the University of Ottawa in January 2007. The neighbourhood remained home to the ...