News Article: Lebreton...UPDATE - Agreement made with NCC.

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Relapsing

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Jul 3, 2018
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Remember idiots here that were saying that the team could move. Ahhh good times
... I just remember people talking about trainyards being an amazing location.

I kid, I kid.

Yeah, this could be very problematic. How stable is the land there?

You’d have to think that during the first go around with Melnyk/Ruddy that there are tests that were done. Enough tests to propose what they wanted to build , one would think.

Having 60 school buses two or three nights a week, à la RedBlacks is probably something that will be done on a smaller scale. Maybe park and rides from the govt lots near Rochester/Booth, or any lots nearby. That could remove some pressure.

If I were part of the design process, I would definitely design a LRT entrance to possibly the bottom of the arena, like Penn Station/MSG . A track that goes back and forth from Bayview.

I would also design a Sens World that is weather proof , maybe a clear , retractable roof area , a 400 x 400 area or something like that where in snow storms you can still have a functional entertainment area that is covered from the elements .

I think they are going to have some interesting sketching designs . And I really liked what Cyril said , if I understood correctly, in that they don’t want to open the arena around a mud pit, rather a more cohesive opening of “everything “ ready around the same time.
The site is limestone bedrock with a range of overburden depth.

Some of the towers on the east side of the site have 5 underground stories.
 
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Relapsing

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There is also a First Nations negotiation ongoing , which will be interesting.
I hope that they're able to be an important partner in this and other development projects on the flats.

What a unique opportunity for the Anishinaabe to have a significant cultural impact on a major development project in the capital. I would be over the moon if the Senators embraced this wholeheartedly.
 

Stylizer1

Teflon Don
Jun 12, 2009
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This is a project that is like no other. And, the developers are the teams partners. They can do whatever they want to make this work. I would have no problem to have allocated 1000 parking spaces in each of the three buildings or however many needed. This is a long term solution that has limited acreage for the said facility. Believe me., I am very familiar with affordable housing and how the CHMC approves projects for affordable housing.
No, this is a project like every other. It's not like they are changing zoning by-laws because Ottawa construction is on the new frontier of design. There is a difference between renters and home owners. Renters tend to have less cars while owners tend to have more. If people can drop lets say $750,000 for a condo they most likely are going to own at least 1 automobile. Now, each one of those parking spaces is going to be worth a considerable amount of money to the developer which will be included into the price of the condo. That could be anywhere from 20-30,000$ per spot. Also not every apartment will have a designated parking spot. Now if we are talking about Retail/business parking that's a different story. TD place has 24,000 seats but only has 1000 parking spots. The world exchange plaza downtown is a multilevel parking garage. It only has 1100 spots. The War museum only has 230. Lets say you have 4, 30 story residential buildings each with 800 residents and 500 spaces, I can guarantee at least every second unit has a car. Also being so close to the Ottawa river and its propensity to flood every spring there is only so deep they can go while having to incorporate sewage lines. Downtown Ottawa is higher and primarily made of bedrock.
 

Cosmix

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Jul 24, 2011
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Not EB EDDY/Domtar… there were various industrial situated on Lebreton Flats, and they are long gone and mostly forgotten…. The taxpayer will end up footing the bill for soil mitigation.

Read that and other references in it. Very interesting and informative. Thanks for that!

Hope not Montreal has a bigger first bowl, more rows of seats. which makes the upper bowls further from the ice, when I was there.
I’ve sat in upper and lower on Montreal, prefer Ottawa’s
They have mentioned they want seats even closer though on the new arena.
Hopefully the "lower bowl" will not be below the water level in the spring! :)
 

Stylizer1

Teflon Don
Jun 12, 2009
19,737
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Ottabot City
For anyone who is curious, TD Garden offers a model similar to what we might expect. Heavily dependant on public transit, few parking lots nearby.

The largest parking lot is directly under the arena and it has 1755 spots. TD Garden is built on only 3.2 acres.

So assuming the budget was there a parking complex under a 10 acre plot could accommodate perhaps 5,000 vehicles, or 1 in 4 patrons.

At $40 per vehicle that would generate $200k per game or $8M per year off hockey alone. Multiply by X for other events + day parking and it would seem it could pay itself off quite quickly.
Where did you get that number from 1755? Wiki says 800. If you add the surrounding parking lots then 1755 sounds right.

1727015298557.png
 

Cosmix

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Just researched a bit and the polluter pays mantra is often enforced by the federal government but considering the NCC has been sitting on the land since the 60's (and contamination of the site has been a known issue since then) I would assume that ship has sailed.

The challenge would be compounded by the historical patchwork of polluters that existed over the entire site. On top of that, most if not all don't exist anymore, not many that I recognize anyway.

I don't see EB Eddy on the historical maps. Not sure if they operated on Lebreton proper but they don't show up anywhere on the "Former Industrial Sites" map and "Former Industrial Uses" table.

Interestingly, the company that used to occupy the spot where the stadium will be is the Okeefe Brewing Co. The stadium would also sit on former CP Rail land. Both are low impact polluters.

Most heavy polluters (gas stations, foundries and other metallurgical stuff) were concentrated north around the centre of Lebreton or toward the current war museum. The exception to that is a paint company which was near the NE corner of Preston and Albert, reasonably close to the arena site and a landfill to the west.

City of Ottawa used the specific area for snow dumping which introduces contaminants...

The good news for everyone is that the open aqueduct passed right by the arena site so any contaminants probably hitched a ride right into the Ottawa river and spread far and wide for more people to enjoy.

LINK: https://ncc-website-2.s3.amazonaws.com/documents/LeBreton-Flats-Plan-1997-EN.pdf
I once had a very nice dinner at The Mill Restaurant many years ago.
 

mysens

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Apr 9, 2013
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No, this is a project like every other. It's not like they are changing zoning by-laws because Ottawa construction is on the new frontier of design. There is a difference between renters and home owners. Renters tend to have less cars while owners tend to have more. If people can drop lets say $750,000 for a condo they most likely are going to own at least 1 automobile. Now, each one of those parking spaces is going to be worth a considerable amount of money to the developer which will be included into the price of the condo. That could be anywhere from 20-30,000$ per spot. Also not every apartment will have a designated parking spot. Now if we are talking about Retail/business parking that's a different story. TD place has 24,000 seats but only has 1000 parking spots. The world exchange plaza downtown is a multilevel parking garage. It only has 1100 spots. The War museum only has 230. Lets say you have 4, 30 story residential buildings each with 800 residents and 500 spaces, I can guarantee at least every second unit has a car. Also being so close to the Ottawa river and its propensity to flood every spring there is only so deep they can go while having to incorporate sewage lines. Downtown Ottawa is higher and primarily made of bedrock.
Ummmmm. Affordable housing usually means renters. When applying for a CHMC insured mortgage with highly attractive interest rates for the builder, the affordable housing grant is honored due to below market rents. I am under the impression that the bulk of the project is going to be rental units. Therefore, lots of valet parking for the spectators who want to drive and can afford the fee for valet.

Very expensive.

Does anyone know what the land would be worth if it were not contaminated?
For that type of location, probably about 1.5 to 2 million per acre.
 
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PlayersLtd

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Mar 6, 2019
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This is exactly what I was implying above....the clean up and the value of the land could be close to a wash. Your thinking is on par with what the Sens are going to do. We all need to remember this land has been vacant for more than half a century due to its contamination. So this is also a win for the NCC to get rid of it.


This is a great breakdown of how this can be a money-maker for the owners.....Valet etc, and I would bet that its going to be more than $40.
Yeah, I went conservative. It's $80 at TD Garden. Then again you probably don't fill every spot every event.
 
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HoweHullOrr

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Oct 3, 2013
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For anyone who is curious, TD Garden offers a model similar to what we might expect. Heavily dependant on public transit, few parking lots nearby.

The largest parking lot is directly under the arena and it has 1755 spots. TD Garden is built on only 3.2 acres.

So assuming the budget was there a parking complex under a 10 acre plot could accommodate perhaps 5,000 vehicles, or 1 in 4 patrons.

At $40 per vehicle that would generate $200k per game or $8M per year off hockey alone. Multiply by X for other events + day parking and it would seem it could pay itself off quite quickly.
Doesn’t the City of Ottawa own land adjacent/close to Lebreton arena site? Maybe they want generate revenue from parking? Got to think there’s many ways of handling this, and that there’s other examples in other cities on how this was handled.
 

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