Coach houses unwelcome in tony Rockcliffe Park, community association says
CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning | CBC News | Posted: June 15, 2016 3:31 PM | Last Updated: June 16, 2016
City to unveil draft proposal on coach houses to Rockcliffe residents Wednesday night
The community association for the tony Ottawa neighbourhood of Rockcliffe Park says it wants an exemption from any future legislation that would allow small residential buildings — commonly known as coach houses — to be built in backyards.
Ontario wants municipalities to allow them, and to that end the City of Ottawa has been consulting with neighbourhoods across town about it. A draft proposal is being unveiled Wednesday night for residents in Rockcliffe.
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But the Rockcliffe Park Residents Association is opposed to the idea, saying the neighbourhood is a heritage conservation district and needs to be protected from more development.
"As a heritage area it is worth protecting, and the application of additional residential units within an area such as this ... is just really contrary to the whole idea of the heritage," said Peter Lewis, the association's president, in an interview in CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning Wednesday.
"Why bring an intensification initiative into an area that's very definition talks about limits on density, limits on intensification? It just seems to be completely counterintuitive to me."
'Property owners could be hemmed in'
Bryan Dickson, the association's vice-president, says coach houses would hurt the look and feel of the community.
"I think you have to remember that coach houses will take up up to 40 per cent of a backyard. You've mentioned a neighbour, but I'd like you to consider neighbours [plural], because there is a real possibility that property owners could be hemmed in by coach houses," he said.
"So instead of seeing greenery, trees, landscaping, you would see the wall of a so-called coach house."
He also said that while the province's objective is to combat suburban sprawl by increasing density, "cultural heritage shall be preserved," he said.
"That's really what we're talking about here. Rockcliffe is a cultural heritage landscape."
The meeting Wednesday night is taking place at the Rockcliffe Park Community Hall on Springfield Road at 7 p.m.