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The Ottawa Marriott Hotel is located in the city's downtown core and is walking distance from Parliament Hill, Château Laurier, Rideau Canal, Rideau Centre, Shaw Centre, and the National Gallery of Canada. The hotel comprises 489 guestrooms, 26,000 sq ft (2,400 m 2) of meeting space, a fitness centre, indoor pool and a children's activity area
Ottawa Hydro Electric Company Building: 109 Bank Street: Somerset: 1934? W. C. Beattie: Ottawa Ladies' College: 268 First Avenue: Capital: 1912–1914: Allan Keefer: Ottawa Marble and Granite Works: 14 Waller Street: Rideau-Vanier: 1866: Ottawa New Edinburgh Club: 501 Sir George-Étienne Cartier Parkway: Rideau-Rockcliffe: 1914: C.P. Meredith ...
City of Ottawa Art Galleries - includes ASP, Barbara Ann Scott, Centrepointe Theatre, City Hall, Gallery 112, Karsh-Masson, Studio and Trinity galleries [2] Currency Museum - in the Bank of Canada Diefenbunker - at CFS Carp
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The Fairmont Château Laurier is a 660,000-square-foot (61,000 m 2) hotel with 429 guest rooms in the downtown core of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, located near the intersection of Rideau Street and Sussex Drive and designed in a French Gothic Revival Châteauesque style to complement the adjacent Parliament buildings.
The ByWard Market has been an area of constant change, adapting to the increasingly cosmopolitan nature of downtown Ottawa, as well as trends in Canadian society as a whole. Recently, a multitude of restaurants and specialty food stores have sprouted around the market area, making this neighbourhood one of the liveliest in Ottawa outside of ...
Summit, Ottawa Marriott Hotel, Ottawa (restaurant closed, currently a revolving event room) Toulà (formerly Lighthouse), Westin Harbour Castle Hotel, Toronto (ceased revolving in 2001) La Ronde, Holiday Inn Downtown 89 Chesnut (now Chestnut Residence and restaurant on southwest corner closed now used as non-revolving student lounge The Lookout ...
Ottawa's status as the capital of the new country created a pressing demand for hotel space. A new wing housing the dining room was built during the 1870s along Elgin Street. The original hotel was torn down and replaced in 1880, in the "Second Empire" style. [3] [4] For many decades the Russell House served as Ottawa's foremost hotel.