2016 7-1 Feb Heritage Planning

Death knell for Cumberland Street workers’ cottage

Groupe Claude Lauzon wins again – City Council grants demolition permit for over objections from LCA, Heritage Ottawa, and neighbours.

By Liz MacKenzie

On January 26, City Council brought down the axe on 281-283 Cumber­land, the last of five heritage build­ings that Groupe Lauzon asked and succeeded to demolish. The Council did not have the fortitude to insist that Groupe Lauzon preserve it as part of their proposed infill project at Murray and Cumberland – Our Lady’s School site. The building is a little workers’ cottage double, still salvageable and still providing af­fordable rental housing. With inge­nuity, it could have been integrated into the new condo design, but there was no resolve.

In 2005, Groupe Claude Lauzon asked City Council for permission to demolish five buildings designated under part IV of the Heritage Con­servation Act. City Council refused. Over the years, through deliberate neglect, unchecked by City officials, these buildings were allowed to de­teriorate and crumble. They became a blot on our community. Two have been rebuilt, two have been lost.

Proposed development at 281 Cumberland pushes between two houses

The Built Heritage Committee was sympathetic when neighbours, members of the Lowertown Com­munity Association, and Heritage Ottawa spoke in defense of the building. However, these commu­nity groups are not the people that staff or City Council heeds. Groupe Lauzon has their ear and the out­come at Council was sadly predict­able.

The website Skyscrapers weighed in with unsettling ignorance about the meaning of heritage, the pur­pose of Heritage Conservation Dis­tricts, and the legislation in place to protect buildings within them. The Skyscraper gang is about bricks and mortar – but heritage is not just about bricks and mortar. The de­meaning comments about 281-283 Cumberland are a sobering remind­er of this knowledge gap.

“preserving an old cottage because three francophone widows lived in it doesn’t qualify as heritage..

“CMON, even if this is where some seamstress and landlady made their living, look at these buildings. They’re absolutely HIDEOUS! Ugly paneling [sic], 2 doors and 7 windows. This ratio­nale is indefensible.”

This little house on Cumberland dates from the 1860s, shortly after Bytown became the City of Ottawa in 1855. Vast fortunes were being made in the lumbering, milling, construction and transportation in­dustries. By 1871, the mills were producing more than 200 million board-feet of lumber each year.

Workers – many of them franco­phone – who toiled in these highly lucrative but dangerous trades were poorly paid and lived in humble con­ditions. John H. Taylor’s Ottawa, an Illustrated History, Table VII shows that in 1885, the predominately fran­cophone By Ward made up 18.1 % of the of the City’s population, and in 1885 accounted for 37.9% of deaths.

The English establishment feared the voting power of the French workers and re-drew ward boundar­ies to dilute this power. The workers were denied government positions, life insurance, and access to banking and education opportunities.

There was poverty, and there were widows; many, many widows who had families to support and little or no income. Through ingenuity, hard work and determination, many suc­ceeded to build decent housing and run sustainable businesses. At 283 Cumberland, we know that Ad­elaide Marenger, Marie Desilets, and Hermiline Brunette turned to self-employment to sustain their families. As widows, they engaged in enterprises that could be conduct­ed from their homes with revenue generating businesses as landladies, storekeepers, and dressmakers.

We should celebrate them. Are their accomplishments lesser than those of business and political cliques? Their homes demand as much respect as the grand homes of the Billings and Pinheys for whom so many of the poor labored. These are homes celebrated not for their architectural grandeur, but for the spirit and stories they embody.

What will we lose when 281-283 Cumberland is demolished? We lose a monument to the story of poor, hardworking Lowertown families, who built this city brick by brick, stone by stone for the industrialists that they served. Who will remem­ber their stories when all the traces are destroyed?

Proposed new construction brings structural threat to heritage houses

The north wing of Groupe Lau­zon’s development plans for Our Lady’s School on St. Patrick Street pushes between two heritage build­ings. Engineering geologist Ted Lawrence raised concerns to the Planning Committee about dangers posed to 228 St. Patrick Street. and 277 Cumberland Street. This will be an important issue to watch when the site plan is presented, as the new construction has a high potential to threaten the structural integrity of the two buildings. Lawrence pro­posed a separate infill on the vacant St. Patrick Street lot to respect the heritage infill guidelines and to pro­tect these small buildings.

The concern is heightened by the knowledge that recent residential construction with two levels of un­derground parking at 317-321 St. Andrew Street caused severe ad­verse impacts to adjacent buildings under similar circumstances.