Article content continued

In an opinion article in the Citizen explaining the NCC’s position, Kristmanson mentioned — almost in passing — the possibility of establishing a waterfront linear park where the Parkway currently runs. The “Sir John A. Macdonald waterfront park,” as Kristmanson called it, would run from the War Museum on Lebreton Flats to Britannia Beach, incorporating the many existing beaches, rapids, and lookouts along the way.

In order to make it a waterfront park in any meaningful way, the parkway itself would have to be removed. Jacquelin Holzman, the former mayor of Ottawa and current member of the NCC Board of Directors, told me that the park “is front and centre in the vision of the NCC and the Board” and said that the NCC has engaged stakeholders and neighbours on the subject.

The fact that the NCC didn’t explicitly outline these plans while explaining their position to the city is a massive failure of communications on their part. Refusing to allow public transit parallel to their existing freeway is a nonsensical decision, but if they are actively considering the removal of, or major changes to, that freeway then it makes more sense. A waterfront parkway is no place for a light-rail line — even if it’s a segment of only 1.2 kilometres, and even if it’s partially buried.

Establishing the Sir John A. Macdonald Park could be the most ambitious conservation project of the National Capital Commission since Gatineau Park was created in 1938. The NCC’s mandate is to take part in projects like this one, conserving key lands for uses that couldn’t otherwise be envisioned in order to improve quality of life in the National Capital Region. They’ve wasted these waterfront lands for over 50 years by turning them into a commuter corridor, but at least they are finally making larger plans for them.