Copeland Park
Neighbourhood
Copeland Park
Copeland Park
Copeland Park is located in Ottawa
Copeland Park
Copeland Park
Location in Ottawa
Coordinates: 45°21′52″N 75°44′52″W / 45.364358°N 75.747778°W / 45.364358; -75.747778
CountryCanada
ProvinceOntario
CityOttawa
Electoral districtOttawa West—Nepean
First house1956
Government
  MPAnita Vandenbeld
  MPPChandra Pasma
  CouncillorLaine Johnson
Area
  Total0.809 km2 (0.312 sq mi)
Elevation
95 m (312 ft)
 Canada 2006 Census
Time zoneUTC−5 (Eastern (EST))
  Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
Forward sortation area
K2C

Copeland Park[2] (French: Parc Copeland) is a neighbourhood located in College Ward in the west end of Ottawa, Canada. It is bounded to the west by Agincourt Road, to the south by Baseline Road, to the east by Clyde Avenue and to the north by the Central Experimental Farm Pathway.[3]

The community was built in the late 1950s and early 1960s by A.B. Taylor Construction Ltd.[4] The first home was built in 1956.[5] In the 1970s, a 21-storey high-rise called the Castle Hill was built at the corner of Castle Hill Crescent and Clyde Avenue. The high-rise is owned by Minto. During that same decade more townhouses and three high-rises were built on Baseline Road at Clyde Avenue. The neighbourhood is mostly surrounded by woods.

The neighbourhood is home to Copeland Park on Navaho Drive, Agincourt Park and Greenlawn Park. There are two schools: Agincourt Public School and Tancook Bell School (also home to a daycare, the building was St. Daniel's Catholic School until 2001) Laurentian High School was located on the corner of Baseline and Clyde until it closed in 2005 to make way for a Wal-Mart shopping complex and an office building. The community is also home to Trinity United Church, located on Maitland Avenue.

The population of the neighbourhood is roughly 4150.

References

  1. Pinecrest Creek/Westboro Stormwater Management Retrofit Study, May 2011
  2. "Place names - Copeland Park".
  3. "A Woman Toiling for Others". Ottawa Citizen. December 1, 2008.
  4. "Variety of Designs, Colors (sic) Add Appeal to Quality". Ottawa Journal. April 24, 1959.
  5. "Copeland Park Project to Include 1,000 Homes". Ottawa Journal. September 28, 1956.
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