CANCELLED—Waterfront Reconciliation? Rue Jacques Cartier
The riverfront along rue Jacques-Cartier, Gatineau.
Due to the extent of flooding in the area of Pointe-Gatineau, this walk has been cancelled.
Note: In light of predictions of rainfall and snowmelt, there may be flooding along the riverbank. We will post an update on the danger of flooding along the walk route closer to Jane's Walk Weekend. Please check the website on or after Friday, May 3 to confirm whether this walk will take place.
Calling for a new Capital City for Canada based on Indigenous values. Reconciling over 7,000 years of history on rue Jacques Cartier, Gatineau into the design of a new unified city for all.
Come enjoy a beautiful walk along the sparkling Ottawa River and enjoy a post-walk visit at one of our waterfront restaurants, in lovely Pointe-Gatineau. This is our oldest neighbourhood going back 7,000 years, calling you to visit. The neighbourhood is known for the 2014 protest to defend Indigenous archaeological artifacts and for a botched urban redevelopment project. Our experience offers examples of why our National Capital Region needs to be overhauled to better protect Indigenous values in the urban design. Based on the lessons learned by residents living in our region's most spectacular neighbourhood, citizens have good reasons to start calling for the amalgamation of both cities into one new National Capital based on Indigenous values. This would unleash a creative, cultural, and economic renaissance that would transform our larger community. Our walk will discuss some of these issues, against the backdrop of the sparkling Ottawa and Gatineau Rivers, where people have lived for eons, since the glaciers meltwater receded.
The walk will be as long as you like, starting out at Abinan Park and strolling along the linear park beside the river. Those who want to duck out early, to hang out by the water or enjoy a local waterside restaurant are welcome to do so. Although, last year most stayed with us to the end when we ended up at a restaurant together!
More:
Floods, demonstrations, and 7,000 years of human settlement along rue Jacques Cartier. Stroll through local history and the potential for Reconciliation between Indigenous peoples and the City government. Come explore and witness the challenges Urban Indigenous people still face with Gatineau's urban planners along a beautiful street. This local gem welcomes sightseers, runners, and waterside restaurant goers; yet is also a case study in how not to conduct waterfront redevelopment. Lessons learned may be applied to other regions. (Bring your camera for spectacular vistas!)
Afterwards, why not go for lunch at any waterside restaurant along the street? Depending on this year's flooding situation, you may either bring your walking stick or if it was like last year, bring sandbags please.
Rue Jacques-Cartier is the oldest community in our National Capital Region and continues to be a neighbourhood in transition. We will stroll along the sparkling shores of the Gatineau and Ottawa Rivers in Pointe-Gatineau, Gatineau. This is directly across from Rockcliffe neighbourhood in Ottawa within view of ambassadors' residences, 24 Sussex, and the Rideau Falls.
The walk should appeal to those interested in urban planning, Urban Indigenous culture, local history, sightseeing, and photography. We will contemplate this community from three perspectives: the past, as an early settlement for Indigenous peoples, fur traders, log drivers, and fishers many of whose descendants remain; the present, as a neighbourhood resisting government attempts to erase our heritage and lifestyle; and the future, as an area zoned for extensive high rise redevelopment that may change now due to the Ottawa River Flood of 2017. Lessons learned from the past raise questions concerning flood plain development and inadequate government flood and emergency preparedness measures.
Despite the creation of a spectacular new shoreline linear park along rue Jacques Cartier, this $43M project is a prime example how not to redevelop urban waterfronts. It is a case study that applies to many communities across North America. Lessons learned should be taught in urban planning schools, so such failings are not repeated. Urban planners and politicians are welcome to join us too, to provide their perspective.
Beginning at Abinan Park, the site of an occupation by Indigenous people in the summer of 2014 that was supported by many local residents, we'll walk along the waterfront. The park is our ground zero for why cities should better involve residents in the planning of waterfront development. Other riverfront installations demonstrate how the City has successfully divorced residents from accessing the river.
Photographers will be particularly rewarded with river views of classic tug boats, the raging Rideau Falls, Parliament, local matchstick style house architecture, Ambassadors' row of stately houses atop Rockcliffe, the Ottawa New Edinburgh Club, and sparkling heritage recreational waters around Kettle Island where locals fended off the Kettle Island Bridge proposal.) Afterwards, people may choose to stop at one of the waterfront restaurants, as a group or separately.