Minecraft players given free rein to build up, tear down Ottawa - Action News
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Ottawa

Minecraft players given free rein to build up, tear down Ottawa

Thanks to the city's open data, Minecraft players can now interact with a Lego-like version of Canada's capital.

'We're one of the first in Canada to do this'

There aren't any castles in Ottawa, but there is Parliament Hill and that building and many others are now available for Minecraft players to explore and interact with, says Coun. Rick Chiarelli. (Courtesy Liam O'Donnell)

In the real life version of Ottawa, Parliament Hill looms over the downtown, the Rideau Canal bisects the city, and the Senators take to the Canadian Tire Centre iceway out in Kanata.

In Minecraft Ottawa, none of that's set in stone.

The recently-unveiledGeoOttaWowlets Minecraft players explore and refashionOttawa's streets, houses,train tracks, as well asmajor buildings like Parliament HillandCity Hall.

"I think we're one of the first in Canada to do this, so that's a good thing," saidCoun. RickChiarelli, chair of the city's information technology sub-committee, on CBC Ottawa'sAll In a DayFriday afternoon.

For those unfamiliar with how the game works, Minecraft lets players dig (mine) andbuild (craft) nearly anything they want usingLego-like blocks and bricks.

The game which has no levels to complete or mandatory objectives to accomplish has proven immensely popular. In 2014, its Swedish designers Mojangwerebought by technology giant Microsoft for $2.5 billion.

GeoOttaWow came about aftera staff member took the city's open data and uploaded it over the holidays, said Charles Duffett, the city's chief information officer.

Duffett told All In A Dayhost Alan Neal that the freedom of being able to shape the nation's capital to your liking gets people especially young people invested in the future of their city.

Game teaches'principles of civil planning'

"Now you have kids who are experimenting with basic principles of municipal planning. So if they think, for instance, that an outdoorstadiumshould be somewhere, they can build one and then they can look at what impact it would have on that area, and what the concerns would be," saidDuffett.

Ottawa is one of the first cities in Canada to be made available on Minecraft, said Coun. Rick Chiarelli, chair of the information technology sub-committee. (CBC)

"They may discover they're learning someprinciplesof civil planning."

Other places in the real worldhave made themselves available on Minecraft,perhaps most notably the entire country of Denmark, which can be torn down and built back up according to players' whims and desires.

According to Chiarelli, in one important way, the Minecraftversion of Ottawa is even better than the real thing.

"It also shows all the streets plowed."