Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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 ...
Ottawa: As part of the city’s heritage inventory project, the city is reviewing properties in Old Ottawa East and Old Ottawa South and placing those considered to have “cultural heritage value” on a registry. Owners will be required to give 60 days notice to the city before demolishing a listed property. [4]
This article is a list of historic places in the City of Ottawa, Ontario entered on the Canadian Register of Historic Places, whether they are federal, provincial, or municipal. See also List of historic places in Ontario .
This is a list of National Historic Sites (French: Lieux historiques nationaux) in its capital city, Ottawa, Ontario. There are 26 National Historic Sites in Ottawa, [1] of which two (Laurier House and the Rideau Canal) are administered by Parks Canada (identified below by the beaver icon ). [2]
In 1959, a City of Ottawa survey showed that nearly half of the dwellings in the village were deemed to be in poor or very poor condition. [66] The long delay in the installation of sewers and water soiled the reputation of Britannia, including the village, and lowered land/house prices and taxes.
Before the 2001 city of Ottawa amalgamation it was a suburb of the city of ... 1911 and subsequently filed at the Carleton County land registry office in Ottawa. [3] ...
The City of Ottawa is the second largest employer [215] [216] with approximately 2,100 people employed by the Ottawa Police service, and 13,300 full-time equivalent non-police employees. [217] [218] In 2016, Ottawa experienced an increase of 10,000 jobs over the 2012 average growth, which was relatively slower than in the late 1990s.
It is the main provincial court for the Ottawa area, and as such handles most of the region's legal affairs. The building is home to the civil, small claims, family, criminal, and district branches of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice. It is also home to the local land registry office. Some 1,000 people use the nine storey building each day.