The tricky balance of highrise development and experimental farm research - Action News
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Ottawa

The tricky balance of highrise development and experimental farm research

City officials and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada say there needs to be a broader discussion about the growing number of highrise proposals around the Central Experimental Farm and how that affects the viability of research at the site.

Towers may encircle research farm as transit corridors get developed

Debate about highrises near the Central Experimental Farm intensifies

12 months ago
Duration 1:43
Ottawa's Central Experimental Farm is situated between several transit corridors primed for development, but officials say a broader conversation is needed around the impact of building highrises so close to the agricultural research facility.

City officials and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC)say there needs to be a broader discussion about the growing number of highrise proposals around Ottawa's Central Experimental Farm and how they affect the viability of research at the site.

The debate has intensified with the proposal for two such towersat 1081 Carling Ave., on the cornerwith Parkdale Avenue.

Ottawa-based developer Taggart Realty Management said the 16 and 27-storey buildingswould hold 350 rental apartments, potentially including affordable units.

On the other side of the farm, aseparate application from ThebergeHomes that proposes three towers two of them 24and the other 32at 780 Baseline Rd. on the corner of Fisher Avenueis winding its way through the planning process.

A map showing Ottawa's Central Experimental Farm and two planned developments.
This map shows the planned developments that border the Central Experimental Farm and transit corridors under the city's 2013 transportation plan, which it's in the process of updating. (CBC News Graphics)

Kitchissippi Coun. Jeff Leiper, chair of the planning committee, said people want to have a larger discussion about how future growth along these transit corridors will affect the farm.

He saidthe city's current official plan doesn't limit height for the sake of the farm, but the city could create a secondary plan if AAFCmade the case.

"I don't think that's a productive discussion with the farm until we have a well-considered, modern, up-to-date document from them thinking from them that describes exactly what the role of the farm is going to be within their network of research facilities," Leiper said.

"I'm interested to see whether there is a compromise between the heights that would be contemplated by our official plan today versus the research needs of the farm."

A city councillor sits at a table and listens during a meeting.
Coun. Jeff Leiper is chair of Ottawa's planning and housing committee. He says the city does have tools to address the farm's concerns. (Giacomo Panico/CBC)

The farm is one of 19 agriculture research centres in Canada, coveringmore than 1,000 acres just southwest of the city core. It'snearly 140 years old and is a national historic site.

River Coun. Riley Brockington, whose ward encompasses the farm, said given the importance of agricultural research at the sitethe city needs to make sure these proposals aren't handled as one-offs.

"This is in the centre of the city. I think there are a lot of people who have a lot of different ideas of what this land could be used for. But, at the end of the day, agriculture research is very important," Brockington said.

"The corridors that we're talking about really should have density. They're close to rapid transit, they're going to be close to LRT stations."

A man sits behind a laptop.
Coun. Riley Brockington says he wants to hear Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) clearly explain the conditions required for continued research at the farm. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

Brockington said he hopes there will be more clarity when AAFC attends Wednesday's planning and housing committee meeting, which will be considering the Carlingproposal again.

Joey Theberge of Theberge Homessaid he has tried to adapt his proposal to minimize shadows byshrinking the footprint of the tallest tower and trying to angle the buildings.

"Our shadow analysis has shown that the impacts we're going to create are more in the winterOur main highest-point tower is more of a square pin tower now, rather than a flat wall to try to minimize any of those impacts," Theberge said.

"The benefits far outreach any of the negative impacts that would have by bringing that kind of density to this area."

He said he thinks proposals should be considered on a case-by-case basis and his is bolstered by the proximity to future bus rapid transit and the need for rental units.

A rendering of three proposed highrise towers in a V shape on a street corner.
An architectural rendering for Theberge Homes' proposed three towers at Baseline and Fisher roads south of the Central Experimental Farm. The application currently contains plans for two towers at 24 storeys and one at 32 storeys. (Theberge Homes)

Pascal Michel, AAFC's director general for science and technology in the Ontario-Quebec region, said he found the adjustments on the Baseline proposal to be minimal so far, but he does think compromise is possible.

"No buildingwould bebest. But we do understand that there are probably ways to build those buildings with minimal impact for the land," he said. "It's a balancing of top-of-the-mind challenges."

A rendering of two proposed towers on a street corner, the one in front larger than the one behind.
A look at the second design for the 1081 Carling Ave. towers submitted to the city, with the tallest tower at 25 storeys. The design before planning committee boosts that to 27 storeys. (Fotenn)

Michel said research at the farm is important toadapting agricultureto climate changeand providing food security.

He said shadows cast by proposed towers around the farm would introduce variability to existing research projects and diminish the continued value of the farm as a model of how Canadian farmers' fields work.

"We are expecting that these are not the last files that we're going to be dealing with. Our perspective on this is holistic," Michel said.

"We need to not only look at the immediate impact of those individual projects, we need to look at the foundational and core function of the Central Experimental Farm and how all of this impacts at once our ability to do research here."

A field of wheat against a blue summer sky.
Wheat grows on Ottawa's Central Experimental Farm in July 2022. AAFC says one example of the farm's successful research is new wheat varieties that grow better in Canada. (Chris Rands/CBC)

Committee chair Leiper notes the 1081 Carling Ave.proposal succeeded the last time it was at committee. It's returning because city staff realized AAFC had not been notified of the meeting.

The meeting is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Wednesday.

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