Highrise complex pitched for Carling Travelodge site - Action News
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Ottawa

Highrise complex pitched for Carling Travelodge site

City councillors on Ottawa's planning committee will vote next week on a plan to replace the Travelodge Hotel on Carling Avenue with a highrise development that would include three buildings taller than 20 storeys more than twice the height currently allowed in the area.

Planning rationale for development includes proximity of LRT stations that haven't been approved

An artist's rendering of a 20-storey building that could be built as part of Phase 1 of the Travelodge redevelopment plan. (Provided by City of Ottawa)

Latest

  • Council approved this rezoning on Aug. 29, 2018.
  • Planning committee approved this rezoning on Aug. 28, 2018.
  • Councillors Riley Brockington and Jeff Leiper dissented on the rezoning.

Citycouncillors onOttawa's planning committee will vote next week on a plan to replace the Travelodge Hotel on CarlingAvenue with a highrise development that wouldinclude three buildings taller than20 storeys more than twice the heightcurrently allowed in the area.

Holloway Lodging Corp. wants to redevelopa stretch of land it owns on the south side of Carling, between Merivale Road and Kirkwood Avenue, which includes the Travelodge and a parking garage. The property used to include theTalisman Hotel, amodernist structure built by Bill Teronthat the city's urban design panel pleaded with councillors to save,but it was torn down earlier this year.

The plan calls for 900 units in three highrises of 20, 22 and 20storeysalong Carling, plustwo more eight-storey buildings on the south side of the site, next to single-family homes. As many as 2,000 new residents could move intothe area.

The Travelodge Hotel on Carling Avenue could soon make way for a highrise complex housing as many as 2,000 residents. (Google Streetview)

'Let's not kid ourselves'

Coun. Riley Brockington concedes the plan has been improved since its inception. It now includes a 1,424-square-metre public park along the western edge of the property, to be added duringthe second phase of development. The owners have also promised to incorporate an existing Japanese-inspired pavilion formerly a steakhouseinto the park.

Still, Brockingtonisn't impressed with the application.

"Let's not kid ourselves,this is a large development," he writes, under the "Comments from the ward councillor" section of the report.

"Local residents are not opposed to development, nor are they opposed to development at this location. They oppose the sheer height of the buildings and quantity of expected new residents."

Last year, council approved another highrise redevelopment for the site of the current WestgateShopping Centre, across the street from the Travelodgeproperty, leading some critics to argue the local transportation networkcannot support the planned intensification.

Coun. Riley Brockington, whose ward includes the Travelodge property, wrote that the proposal raises 'red flags.' (CBC Ottawa)

What future LRT stations?

Under city planning policy, CarlingAvenue is known as an "arterial mainstreet," which usually call for maximum height limits of nine storeys.

However, councillors can consider higher buildings in special circumstances, which the city's planning staff is recommending in this case.

One rationale for the extra height? The property "meets locational criteria for intensification and highrise development" because it iswithin 600 metres of two future LRT stations, at Carlingand Kirkwood, as well as one at Carling and Merivale.

But those future LRTstations are purely theoretical at this point. ACarling light rail line has not been approved in any way. According to the city's current plans, a CarlingLRT could be in the works sometime after 2031.

This proposal has taken longer than usual to wind its way through the city's planning process. The ownerhas already appealed the zoning because the city has not made a decision within the prescribed120 days.

If the planning committee approves the current proposal at is meetingnext Tuesday, staff would ask Holloway to withdraw its appeal.