Village support overwhelming
COMMUNITY / Gays rally behind rainbow flag on Bank St
Marcus McCann / Ottawa / Thursday, December 20, 2007
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Leaders of the drive to recognize a portion of Bank St as Ottawa's gay village have released promising numbers that suggest the queer community is solidly behind the project.

Some 89 percent of respondents to an online survey by Glenn Crawford say they want to see official recognition for Ottawa's gay strip, running from approximately Nepean to James.
IN THE BANK. Gay business owner Glenn Crawford of Jack of all Trades Design is helping planners understand why gay is good - good business.
(Marcus McCann)
As well, respondents — to the tune of 86 percent — want the six-stripe rainbow flag to be used to denote the special character of the neighbourhood. And they want it called The Village.

Crawford, a gay businessman who lives in The Village area, collected 326 responses to questions ranging from the preferred name of the area to the type of signage Ottawans would like to see.
The survey was conducted online throughout the fall and is not considered statistically accurate.

"Right away, from the number of people that took the time to fill out the survey and join the [500 users on the Rainbow Village] Facebook site, what that says is that there is an interest in our community.
They're saying, 'We want this,' " says Crawford.

Ottawa's queer community will be able to articulate itself directly to city planners in February. That's because an open house is in the works, at which a proposal for the street's redevelopment will be presented for citizens to give their input. A date for that meeting has not been finalized.

Crawford and his Facebook cohorts are looking to both city hall and the the Bank St BIA (Business Improvement Area) to help realize their goal of seeing rainbows on Bank street. If the City of Ottawa gets on board, the queer icon could grace anything from pavement markers to street signs. If the BIA incorporates the flag, it could appear on silk or canvas banners or other decorative elements of the revamped design.

"Both city hall and the BIA have been for the most part very supportive. The only quibble is where the boundary of The Village is," says Crawford.

The results of the survey suggest Ottawa's gays see the borders as fluid, but if the area is to be recognized, it's going to have to have a definitive beginning and end points.

Richard Holder is the city planner in charge of redeveloping Bank St after the area from Laurier to Gladstone is torn up over the next two years to replace aging sewers.

The city pays for "basic" streetscaping, while the BIA tops up the fund for extra beautification, says Holder.

"The BIA is providing the direction in terms of branding," says Holder, but he adds that there's a public consultation process that will help firm up the route the city takes.

That puts the onus back on people to attend the February open house to make their opinions known to planners.

In the meantime, a group of about 15 citizens has met twice at the request of the city to give their thoughts on the project. Crawford is one. He's joined on the Public Advisory Committee (PAC) by Ricky Barnes from Pink Triangle Services.

"With the PAC, it's important that we get in and we get people to recognize that this is the downtown of the queer community," says Barnes. "It's one of the pieces that will come together inevitably to form the Village."

The character and branding were not extensively discussed at the November meeting, because disagreements over parking, bus stop locations and business loading zones took up the bulk of the time. Another PAC is planned for January.

Members of the PAC now have copies of Crawford's survey and some planners have sat down for one-on-one meetings with Crawford.

Barnes points out that there are other ways for the neighbourhood to be officially recognized for its queer residents. There's a clutch of documents — from neighborhood plans to large-scale vision documents — that should be amended to include a rainbow designation for the Bank St corridor.

But simple visual cues installed after the construction is finished remains the simplest and most viable way to make the area identifiably queer friendly.

The city has earmarked one percent of the redevelopment budget to public art. Since Capital Xtra announced news of a city-sponsored statue project in Sep, some of those details have now been nailed down, according to Karen Nesbitt, the woman in charge of the public art aspect of the city plan.

In the new year, the city will call for designs from artists with the goal of producing between 10 and 30 designs in metal, attached to bike racks. The designs will repeat on 90 racks distributed between Laurier and the Queensway.

"We'll actually make them, but we're asking artists to design them," says Nesbitt.

That means that the pool of potential contributors to the project is considerably wider than if a statue were to be built by a sculptor. Painters, graphic designers, or anyone else who's interested could conceivably contribute winning designs.

"We're going to be encouraging queer artists. We're fully expecting to be represented," in the designs, says Barnes.

Both Barnes and Crawford suggested queer themes ought to be represented.

The final format and exact dimensions will be determined after the bike racks are chosen — which means after February's open house.

Gerry Lepage, director of the Bank St BIA, did not return calls by press time.
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Reader Comments


 
Reflection on Bank Street Village
I, personally, will take this report in stride – considering that a majority of people who participated in that poll had to register themselves to take it, and probably wouldn’t have if they were against the notion. Don’t get me wrong – I’m ALLLLLL for establishing a Gay Village in Ottawa. I practically salivate at the possibilities that a Village could bring to the downtown core. (For those that aren’t “in the know” the proposed Village would run on Bank St. from Laurier to Gladstone.) I think it is of the highest importance that gays and lesbians have a dedicated section of the city to call their “own,” like Chinatown on Sommerset or Little Italy on Preston St. It sends a signal to the rest of the city that we exist, and allows people to conjugate without fear. But I think that’s where I’m getting caught up in the myth - That suddenly Bank Street would be St. Catherines, Davie, or Church St, or somehow like Chelsea in NYC or Boystown in Chicago. I have lived in Ottawa for eight years now, and downtown for two and a half of those. Bank Street has gone from bad to worse during that time. I mean, look at the place – a bunch of slummy buildings that have low grade retailers selling such useless crap one wonders how on earth they manage to stay in business. There are a few notable exceptions of course, but they are few indeed. Even Hartman’s groceries couldn’t be bothered to renovate the side of their building that faces the street when they overhauled the complex. Not to mention the insane homelessness and drug issues that breaks my heart every time I go for a walk. Apparently there’s a Bank Street Business Improvement Association. To say they’re asleep at the switch would be the understatement of the decade. The point I’m trying to make is this: I’m not sure turning Bank Street into a gay village would actually a) improve the area, or b) bring credit to the gay community. Honestly, what makes the neighbourhood gay? The answer: not much. There are only four
Tim Campbell, Ottawa ON
12/21/07 9:07 PM EST
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Reflection on Bank Street Village (Pt. 2)
gay bars in this city, one of which is located a block away from the proposed Village; same goes for the three bathhouses. Our porn shops and gay bookstores have lost major business to the internet. Then there’s places like Café Supreme… which closes at 6:00, and decorates with Conservative Party signs during election. The other major elephant in the room is the issue of residency. What’s the point of having a gay village if nobody lives in it? Bank Street has very little residency – and what is available is often low-grade housing that would turn off high-minded younger gays and lesbians, the lifeblood of any Village. I’m very glad that Glenn has taken on the enormous challenge of creating a Village for all of us – but the task involves much, much more than hanging some pride flags on the lampposts. The city, and by extension Counselor Diane Holmes, must start rezoning and laying the foundations to rejuvenate Bank Street. We must not be afraid to call in the bulldozer and demolish some of these eyesores that prevent real progress from being made in the area. There is absolutely no reason why Bank Street can’t be the mecca we’re all dreaming of, but it needs real investment, a facelift, and encouragement to bring shops, services and other amenities that gays and lesbians would actually use. The gay and lesbian community tends to shrug off and give a collective yawn to any activist initiatives that start today. Unless these people are willing to shop, live, work, and play in the proposed Village, all will be in vain. Research by Urban Planners have noted that cities without strongly rooted Gay Villages are noticing the areas disappearing because of social integration, and housing crunches that have prevented GLBT youth from experiencing what their forefathers have. Now is the most appropriate time for our community to act, but unless we do it right a Village will serve no meaning or purpose.
Tim Campbell, Ottawa ON
12/21/07 9:10 PM EST
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comments on Tim Campbell's comments
Social integration is probably the biggest difference between now and the time that other villages came into existence. The 'gay ghettos' created themselves 25- 30 years ago, during times when laws and attitudes were different. They were created during a time when inner cities were experiencing flight of capital to the suburbs, and rents were cheap. Bank Street has important differences from Church or St Catherines - it is a main street, and no gay village has ever taken over a main street. All citizens should take note: there is an increasing trend to claim vital downtown areas and plant flags - the Chinese have claimed a swath of Somerset Street and a 'cultural center' on Kent, the Vietnamese want a cultural center, and the mosque on Scott street dominates the skyline. It's like the gold rush of '49 with claims being staked. Bank Street should not have a village imposed on it , nor should any other special interest group claim it. If it is to be a village, it should occur from a critical mass of gay residents and gay-owned businesses, and both are small in number. Gay-friendly businesses should be encouraged to continue putting rainbow stickers in their windows, but that's as far as it should go.
C.E., Ottawa Ontario
12/28/07 11:38 AM EST
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