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Ottawa

Residents band together to save Hull presbytery from wrecking ball

Residents, heritage advocates and a handful of former councillors are banding together in an effort to save a 116-year-old religious building in Old Hull from demolition.

Trs-Saint-Rdempteur is the 2nd oldest presbytery still standing in Gatineau's Hull sector

Built in 1902, Trs-Saint-Rdempteur is the second-oldest presbytery still standing in Gatineau's Hull sector, and once was home to the first Bishop of Gatineau. (Radio-Canada)

Residents, heritage advocates and a handful of former councillors are banding together in an effort to save a 116-year-old religious building in Old Hull from demolition.

The former Trs-Saint-Rdempteurpresbyteryis the second-oldest presbytery, or parish priest's house,inGatineau's Hull sector.

Itonce was home to the first Bishop of Gatineau.

However, it's been endangered ever since its owners got permission late last year to demolish the structure so that they could expand Residence de l'le, the seniors'complexthat now calls it home.

"It's important for the neighbourhood. It fits in with the context. We still have the old historic homes from the parish next to it," saidMicheline Lemieux, president ofthe Aylmer Heritage Association.

Letter in local paper

Lemieuxwas one of a dozenadvocates who signed a letterpublished Jan. 26 in local French-language newspaperLeDroitcalling for council to protect the building from the wrecking ball.

She said Saturday that the former presbytery has historic value for all residents of Gatineau not just those who live nearby.

"It's one of the only buildings of that [period]that's still standing. They had fires, they had demolitions, expropriations," she said.

"So I think it's important to save [it]."

Micheline Lemieux, president of the Aylmer Heritage Association, says the presbytery has historic value to all of the city's residents not just those who live nearby. (Radio-Canada)

Many of the presbytery's original features were significantly altered more than two decades ago, when it was first converted into a retirement home.

Kate Helwig, another signatory to the letter, told Radio-Canada that the presbytery stands as a testament to the long history of the Saint-RdempteurCatholic parish.

"The original parts of the building date from 1902, and it's the only part of the parish that remainsbecause the church burned down in 1915 and wasn't rebuilt until the 1960s," she said.

"A lot of people are attached to this building, and we feel that [for] the developer who wants to tear it down there are other options."

One of those options could include expanding the retirement home onto nearby surface-level parking lots, Helwig said.

Kate Helwig is one of a dozen people who've added their names to a letter calling for the 116-year-old Trs-Saint-Rdempteur presbytery to be saved from demolition. (Radio-Canada)

The former presbytery is owned by the Katasa Group, which has argued that the building's demolition would allow for the expansion of the current retirement homefrom 35 rooms to about 100.

Katasafiled an application to tear down the presbytery in March 2017, whichwas given the go-ahead by the city's demolitions approval committee in October.

However, the committee later agreed to a request that a new heritage assessment of the building be undertaken.

In poor condition, owners say

KatherineChoweri, the property manager for the KatasaGroup, told Radio-Canada in a French-language interview Saturday that the building's foundation and windows are bothin poor condition.

The presbytery's wooden structure would also pose a risk to residents if there were a fire, Choweri said.

"The city asked us twice to do various studies to ensure that the building was not heritage. Both studies came back negative," she said.

Gatineaucity council is expected to meet Feb. 13 to set a date where both sides can present their arguments.

With files from Florence Ngue-No