Heritage Ottawa pans latest attempt at Chateau Laurier addition: 'The most disgraceful act of heritage vandalism of our generation'

Latest revision for proposed Chateau Laurier addition. Rendering: architectsAlliance via Postmedia
 

Monday, June 4, 2018

OTTAWA CITIZEN, By Matthew Pearson

Heritage Ottawa has come out swinging against the latest plans for an addition to the venerated Château Laurier, calling the proposal “the most disgraceful act of heritage vandalism of our generation.”

“The revised design fails to resolve — or even address — the underlying flaw that impaired all of the previous attempts. The angular, blocky massing and style of the proposed addition remains intrinsically incompatible with the romantic sensibility of the historic Château,” the organization said in a statement released Sunday.

The strong reaction comes days after the historic hotel’s owner filed a new design for the proposed addition, which attempts to make the contemporary wing complement, not overwhelm, the original building.

A heritage brief submitted with the package from Larco Investments says “limestone fins” on the north-facing side, fronting Major’s Hill Park, will break up the height of the building, which is now proposed to be seven storeys instead of eight.

Larco asked its designers at architectsAlliance to go back to the drawing board after the last vision for the addition, released in February, received a strong rebuke from Heritage Ottawa, which said the design had “all the charm of a box store.”

The main problem with each of the proposed revisions, according to Heritage Ottawa, is one of incompatibility: The Château has an architectural sensibility that conveys a sense of romance, mystery, excitement, unpredictability and splendour, while the modernist addition conveys none of those qualities.

“Although the design has evolved several times, each evolution has found a different way to repeat the same mistake. No amount of refinement of exterior design details can overcome this fundamental incompatibility,” the Heritage Ottawa statement says.

The group argues the addition must also consider the hotel’s unique location immediately across the Rideau Canal from Parliament Hill, as it would be visible from these and other sites of national importance, such as the Ottawa River and Major’s Hill Park.

“If an addition to the Château is to be built, nothing less than excellence is good enough,” says Heritage Ottawa, characterizing the proposal as the single most important heritage application considered during this term of council.

There is a concern among some that after three attempts, city officials with the power to make the ultimate decision could shrug and conclude the current proposal is good enough.

Fearing the city may have “painted itself into a corner,” Peter Coffman, an architectural historian at Carleton University, says it’s unfortunate the city didn’t say from the start that the fundamentals were all wrong.  “The project has gone so far down the wrong road and we’re all going to pay for that,” he said.

Unless the architects address that original mistake, Coffman said the addition is just “not going to work.”

He described the current iteration as taking a “Toronto condo and bolting it on the back” of the Château and dismissed the addition of the “limestone fins.”

“The problem is much more fundamental,” Coffman said.

 

Heritage Ottawa Link | Updated June 25, 2018:

Share Your Views with our Elected Officials: VOICE YOUR OPINION | Château Laurier Addition

LAST CHANCE before Planning Committee and Ottawa City Council vote on June 26 and 27!

 

Related Reading:

Heritage Ottawa: Response to Latest Design for Proposed Addition to Chateau Laurier | June 3, 2018

Hear Heritage Ottawa president David Jeanes discuss the Chateau Laurier addition on CBC's All in a Day | June 4, 2018