Heritage hedges? Special status could mean life or death for Kanata shrubbery - Action News
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Ottawa

Heritage hedges? Special status could mean life or death for Kanata shrubbery

Prolonged bylaw sagas arent unheard of in Ottawa, but a recent dispute over an unruly hedge adds a new dimension the possibility that a neighbourhood heritage designation could help end the standoff.

Bylaw complaint about unruly hedge threatens Beaverbrook character, residents say

Residents hope for heritage designation for iconic cedar hedge

6 days ago
Duration 4:08
Residents of the Beaverbrook neighbourhood in Kanata North are hoping that a heritage designation from the city could help save a decades-old cedar hedge that they say gives the area its character.

A bylaw complaint about an unruly hedge is threatening the character of an Ottawa suburb, residents say, and a neighbourhoodheritage designation may be their best hope to preserveit.

In early September, abylaw officer visited Catherine Douglas's home in the Beaverbrook neighbourhood of Kanata North.

The officer informed her the decades-old cedar hedge at the back of her property was encroaching on a narrow, poorly maintainedwalking path that runs alongside Beaverbrook Road.

Because she'd just paid to have the hedge trimmed in May, Douglas showed the officer areceipt for the workto prove she was caring for the hedge responsibly.

A photograph of Cathy Curry.
Coun. Cathy Curry says the tall cedar hedges found all over Beaverbrook help give the neighbourhood its character. (Stu Mills/CBC)

That was the last she heard about the complaint untilmid-October whenshe received an infraction notice in the mail instructing her to cut the hedge back one metre from the path. She said several of her neighbours received the samenotice.

According to Douglas, however,such a drastic chopis impossible.

"That would actually kill the hedge," she said.

As a recent decade-long fence disputeshows, prolongedbylaw sagas aren't unheard of in Ottawa. But Douglas's situation adds a new dimension the possibility that a neighbourhood heritage designation could help end the standoff.

Hedges give neighbourhood character, councillor says

The tall cedar hedges are omnipresent throughoutBeaverbrook so much so thatrecent tree inventory published by the local community association opted not to count them because"they are ubiquitous."

Kanata North Coun. Cathy Curry believes the hedges help lend Beaverbrook its unique character.

You feel like you're in the middle of a forest- Coun. Kathy Curry

"Walking on a city street here in Kanata, beside this type of hedge, you feel like you're in the middle of a forest," she said. "When you're actually here and you see it, you can see why this is a special neighbourhood."

Curry said the hedge complaint actually sprung from a regrettable quirk of city bureaucracy. A local resident pushing a baby carriage on the path behind Douglas's home mistook the hedges for city property and contacted thecouncillor's office to ask if they could be trimmed.

The request was passed on to the city's forestry departmentbefore it unexpectedly filtered through to bylaw, Curry said.

"I think everybody is feeling pretty badly that it got to bylaw," she said. "We just wanted a little trimming, and now we're worried that the hedges might get killed."

A Beaverbrook hedge branch.
Beaverbrook resident Catherine Douglas says if she were to follow bylaw's instructions and cut the cedar back one metre from the path, it would kill the hedge. (Stu Mills/CBC)

City consideringheritage designation

For years, Curry said, area residents have been asking for a neighbourhood heritagedesignation.

The city is currently undertaking feasibility assessments for establishing "heritage conservation districts" (HCDs) in five areas of the cityincluding Beaverbrook.

According to a news release, those assessments will consider each area's "potential for HCD designation, start a dialogue with community members about designation, and determine resources and budgets required for full studies."

Under the Ontario Heritage Act, municipalities are allowed to recognize and protect neighbourhoods that havewhat the City of Ottawacallsa "cohesive sense of time and place."

A home in Beaverbrook.
Beaverbrook was the creation of late Ottawa developer Bill Teron, who was known as the 'father of Kanata' and designed the neighbourhood as a satellite city. (Stu Mills/CBC)

Alterations to properties located within HCDs, such as the construction of additions or the partial demolition of a property, would require the approval of the city.

Curry said she hopes suchadesignationwould alsoprotectthe Beaverbrookhedges and other natural features in thecommunity. For now, she said the ongoing heritage assessment and separate plans to reconstruct the nearbypathway meanthe hedges will be simplytrimmedand otherwiseleft as is.

For Neil Thomson, president of the Kanata Beaverbrook Community Association, avision of "nature predominance" makes Beaverbrook a worthy candidate for heritage protection.

The neighbourhood was the creation of late Ottawa developer Bill Teron, who wasknown as the "father of Kanata" and designed Beaverbrook as a satellite city.

"It was unconsciously a 15-minute neighbourhood right out of the box," said Thomson, who has lived there since 1992.

A photograph of Neil Thomson.
Neil Thomson, president of the Kanata Beaverbrook Community Association, says Beaverbrook's vision of 'nature predominance' makes it a worthy candidate for heritage protection. (Stu Mills/CBC)

Although construction on thesuburb startedin the 1960s, Thomson said age alone shouldn't determine whether it deservesheritage status.

"Heritage is not just to preserve something that's from the 1820s. It's also to preserve ideas of architecture and how a city gets builtand what might be a model for in the future," he said. "I think that certainly works here in Beaverbrook."

Douglas said she'sheard rumblings that the city was pursuing a heritage designation for the neigbourhood and added such an approach would make her happy.

"When you've got such a lovely area in which you grew up, you hope to be able to provide that for your children," she said.

With files from Stu Mills