Westcliffe Estates
Encyclopedia
Westcliffe Estates founded in 1969, a growing community of over 2000 homes in the village of Bell’s Corners. Most of the older homes in this area were built by Assaly Construction and later the Thomas C. Assaly Corporation. The Westcliffe community is characterized by significantly higher residential densities than other parts of Bells Corners. There is a multi-storey housing complex operated by Nepean
Housing as well as a multi-storey seniors residence and co-operative housing project.
The 1962 zoning by-law shows plans, of what would eventually be known as Westcliffe Estates, for single-family homes (R3) on urban lots (60 x 100). North of what would be Oberon, Mill Hill, Terrace and Waterfall were zoned for light industry (M). By 1969, the layout for the northern section was rezoned: what would be Priam and Ariel, one side of Cymbeline and Oberon, and two small parcels on Tarquin, were designated single or double homes on smaller lots (R4); the remaining parts of Oberon and Cymbeline, Tybalt and Tarquin, garden homes and townhouses (R5). Roadways were outlined for Westcliffe and the northern leg of Seyton. A parcel of land to the east of Oberon was still zoned R3, as was the rest of the area. The park areas had not been designated at this time.
1970 also saw the start of a new official plan for Nepean
, which changed the face of the proposed Westcliffe Estates. The new plan also outlined proposals for industrial/commercial development on lands north of the Bell’s Corners strip.
The new plan was designed on the ‘neighbourhood unit’ concept, based on the distance young children could be expected to walk to school, and with a centrally located park. Internal roads were designed to discourage through traffic, no longer on the formal grid system, and only wide enough for the required traffic volume. Winding crescents would feed onto collector roads, which would then connect to the main arterial roads.
The ‘neighbourhood unit’ also designated apartment buildings and townhouses in the centre of the new community, along with single-family dwellings. Mixed zoning was a new concept, and Westcliffe’s new plan was a good blend of housing types. The mix also included resident homeowners and rental units.
Building rapidly continued until 1976, with the completion of homes on Tarquin, Tybalt, Priam, and Westcliffe. In the following years more building gradually started with the townhouses on Forester and Sonnet (1978/79), Seyton and Lovell (1982) single-family homes on Tyrrell (1983), Eileen Tallman (1985), Harmer House (1986) and single-family homes on the west ridge of the community, Seyton, Florizel, Robina, Fagus (Stonepark) and Betula (Forestview) (1989).
By 1980, changes were made from R3 to I (institutional) for the Catholic school, (St. Paul, now Franco Ouest), constructed in 1978. Lovell had been rezoned from R3 to R5, to allow for the town home clusters. What would be Hammill, the school parking lot, Eileen Tallman, Harmer House and the corner of Tyrrell and Seyton were all rezoned R6 for apartments.
In the late 80s, the land east of Oberon nearly became residential. Terrace, Mill Hill, and Waterfall were changed to residential, R4, R5, and R1C to allow a mixed development, and Institutional for Robertson House. Harmer House also went from R5 to Institutional. The land on Robertson was now mixed light industrial (M) and commercial (C). Florizel, Robina, Betula, Fagus, and the western part of Seyton had already been zoned for mixed housing, ranging from R3 to R5. In 1989, the R3 designation was removed to allow for larger singles on smaller lots and less townhouses. Betula and Fagus were renamed Forestview and Stonepark.
By 1992, the school parking lot finally lost its apartment designation and became institutional (I). Hammill Court, built by Nepean Housing in 1992, was again rezoned to allow for special mixed dwellings (R1C). Further development took place in the north of the community on Terrace, Mill Hill and Waterfall (1986), and in 1990, Westcliffe finally got a community centre.
Although zoning numbers have changed on Hammill, Terrace, and Waterfall (now R7) the designation remains the same. The Tyrrell / Seyton land (R6) was still vacant and the only land in the community that could bring change in the new millennium.
Then there are street names with a nature connection:
Which leaves:
Nepean
-People:* Augustus Nepean , Middlesex county cricketer* Charles Nepean , Middlesex county cricketer and Oxford University footballer* Evan Nepean , British politician and colonial administrator...
Housing as well as a multi-storey seniors residence and co-operative housing project.
Westcliffe Estates: the New Community
The 1879 map of Bell’s Corners, shows the lands that are now called Westcliffe as farmland and forest, owned by John Robertson, J.R. O’Grady, Owen Hammill, James Sparks and John Sparks. A 1952 map, has the Robertson land owned by Thomas Robertson, O’Grady’s by William Morrison, Hammill’s land by William Hammill and the Spark’s land owned by Ernest Byrne.The 1962 zoning by-law shows plans, of what would eventually be known as Westcliffe Estates, for single-family homes (R3) on urban lots (60 x 100). North of what would be Oberon, Mill Hill, Terrace and Waterfall were zoned for light industry (M). By 1969, the layout for the northern section was rezoned: what would be Priam and Ariel, one side of Cymbeline and Oberon, and two small parcels on Tarquin, were designated single or double homes on smaller lots (R4); the remaining parts of Oberon and Cymbeline, Tybalt and Tarquin, garden homes and townhouses (R5). Roadways were outlined for Westcliffe and the northern leg of Seyton. A parcel of land to the east of Oberon was still zoned R3, as was the rest of the area. The park areas had not been designated at this time.
The New Development
Westcliffe Estates was first developed by Assaly and Johannsen, with parcels of land later sold to other developers. Building had started in 1969/70 with families moving into their new homes on Oberon, Cymbeline, and Ariel in 1970.1970 also saw the start of a new official plan for Nepean
Nepean
-People:* Augustus Nepean , Middlesex county cricketer* Charles Nepean , Middlesex county cricketer and Oxford University footballer* Evan Nepean , British politician and colonial administrator...
, which changed the face of the proposed Westcliffe Estates. The new plan also outlined proposals for industrial/commercial development on lands north of the Bell’s Corners strip.
The new plan was designed on the ‘neighbourhood unit’ concept, based on the distance young children could be expected to walk to school, and with a centrally located park. Internal roads were designed to discourage through traffic, no longer on the formal grid system, and only wide enough for the required traffic volume. Winding crescents would feed onto collector roads, which would then connect to the main arterial roads.
The ‘neighbourhood unit’ also designated apartment buildings and townhouses in the centre of the new community, along with single-family dwellings. Mixed zoning was a new concept, and Westcliffe’s new plan was a good blend of housing types. The mix also included resident homeowners and rental units.
Building rapidly continued until 1976, with the completion of homes on Tarquin, Tybalt, Priam, and Westcliffe. In the following years more building gradually started with the townhouses on Forester and Sonnet (1978/79), Seyton and Lovell (1982) single-family homes on Tyrrell (1983), Eileen Tallman (1985), Harmer House (1986) and single-family homes on the west ridge of the community, Seyton, Florizel, Robina, Fagus (Stonepark) and Betula (Forestview) (1989).
The Changing Face of the Community
The 1971 plan officially designated parkland, including the small parks at Priam, Florizel, and Betula (Forestview). Lovell, the school, Betula and Florizel were still R3. The land east of Oberon was rezoned M for light industry. Tyrrell was zoned R4, Forester, Sonnet, Seyton and Hammill were zoned R5, for mutli-family housing. However, with the expansion of industrial and commercial development, and the ever-increasing demand for housing, developers kept coming back requesting changes to the 1971 plan.By 1980, changes were made from R3 to I (institutional) for the Catholic school, (St. Paul, now Franco Ouest), constructed in 1978. Lovell had been rezoned from R3 to R5, to allow for the town home clusters. What would be Hammill, the school parking lot, Eileen Tallman, Harmer House and the corner of Tyrrell and Seyton were all rezoned R6 for apartments.
In the late 80s, the land east of Oberon nearly became residential. Terrace, Mill Hill, and Waterfall were changed to residential, R4, R5, and R1C to allow a mixed development, and Institutional for Robertson House. Harmer House also went from R5 to Institutional. The land on Robertson was now mixed light industrial (M) and commercial (C). Florizel, Robina, Betula, Fagus, and the western part of Seyton had already been zoned for mixed housing, ranging from R3 to R5. In 1989, the R3 designation was removed to allow for larger singles on smaller lots and less townhouses. Betula and Fagus were renamed Forestview and Stonepark.
By 1992, the school parking lot finally lost its apartment designation and became institutional (I). Hammill Court, built by Nepean Housing in 1992, was again rezoned to allow for special mixed dwellings (R1C). Further development took place in the north of the community on Terrace, Mill Hill and Waterfall (1986), and in 1990, Westcliffe finally got a community centre.
The New Millennium
In 2000, the City of Nepean consolidated its urban zoning by-law.Although zoning numbers have changed on Hammill, Terrace, and Waterfall (now R7) the designation remains the same. The Tyrrell / Seyton land (R6) was still vacant and the only land in the community that could bring change in the new millennium.
Westcliffe Estates Names
Most of the names in Westcliffe may seem quite unusual, but obviously, someone was interested in Shakespeare:Name | Origin |
---|---|
Ariel | The Tempest (Spirit) |
Cymbeline | Cymbeline (King of Britain) |
Florizel | The Winter’s Tale (Prince of Bohemia) |
Forester | As You Like It (woodsman) |
Lovell | Richard III (Sir Francis) Henry VIII (Sir Thomas) |
Oberon | A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Fairy King) |
Priam | Troilus and Cressida (King of Troy) |
Seyton | Macbeth (Macbeth’s officer) |
Sonnet | 14-line poem (Shakespeare wrote 154 sonnets, about the same as the number of houses on Sonnet) |
Tarquin | The Rape of Lucrece (Etruscan King) (Also mentioned in Julius Caesar, Coriolanus, Macbeth, Titus Andronicus and Cymbeline) |
Tybalt | Romeo and Juliet (Juliet’s cousin) |
Tyrrell | Richard III (Sir James) |
Then there are street names with a nature connection:
Name | Origin |
---|---|
Betula | (old name for Forestview) birch tree |
Fagus | (old name for Stonepark) beech tree |
Forestview | self explanatory |
Robina | locust tree |
Which leaves:
Name | Origin |
---|---|
Eileen Tallman | a labour union organizer who pioneered unions at Eaton’s |
Hammill | a pioneer farmer of Westcliffe land |
Harmer House | Frederick Harmer, a long-serving Town Clerk, 1866–1905 |
Moodie Moodie Drive Moodie Drive is a road in Ottawa's west end. It runs approximately south from Carling Avenue in Crystal Beach through Bells Corners, to Brophy Drive south of the Ottawa urban area. It is a four-lane route from Crystal Beach through Bells Corners but becomes a two-lane road at the intersection... |
a pioneer farmer |
Robertson Robertson Road Robertson Road is a road in Ottawa's west end. It runs approximately west from the junction of Richmond Road in Bells Corners where Richmond Road makes a 90° turn southward, to Eagleson Road in Kanata, where it becomes Hazeldean Road west of the intersection... |
a pioneer farmer of Westcliffe land |
Stonepark | it used to be ‘park’ land and a lot of stones were in this area |
Westcliffe | the western cliff in Nepean |
Zoning definitions and their uses
Zoning | Usage |
---|---|
Zoning By-law 39-62 | |
R3 | lot 6500 sq. ft., maximum height 35 ft. – detached one-family dwelling, park, day nursery, church |
R4 | lot 7000 sq. ft., maximum height 35 ft. – same as R3, plus semi-detached, duplex, boarding house, religious institution, library, private club, hospital, home for the aged |
R5 | lot 10000 sq. ft., maximum height 110 ft. – same as R4 plus double duplex, apartment |
Zoning By-law 39-81 | |
R3 | types of buildings slightly modified |
R4 | lots 5000 – 7000 sq. ft., one semi-detached or one detached or two detached, park |
R5 | lot 1776 sq. ft., changed for each unit – semi-detached, multiple attached, apartment removed |
R5B | lots 1 acre, maximum height 35 ft. – multiple attached (15.37 units per acre), apartment removed |
R6B | lots 2 acres, maximum height 110 ft. – apartment (45.32 units per acre) |
I | maximum height 80.5 ft. – cemetery, church, school, nursery, seniors’, hospital, nursing home, funeral parlour, municipal office, police/fire station |
R1C | mixed lot sizes, maximum height 82 ft. – attached, semi-detached, multiple attached, apartment |
Zoning By-law 100-2000 | |
R4 | one semi-detached or one detached or two detached, smaller lots added, park removed |
R5 | as R4, semi-detached, multiple attached |
R5B | as before |
R6B | as before |
R7 | multiple attached, apartment – Hammill Court has modifier on height (82 ft.) and density (from 45.32 to 27.35 per acre) |
I | nursery, school removed |
IS | maximum height 35.10 ft. – nursery, school – place of assembly, place of worship as secondary uses only |