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ByWard Market

Coordinates: 45°25′38″N 75°41′32″W / 45.4271°N 75.6923°W / 45.4271; -75.6923
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ByWard Market
Market building
Coordinates45°25′38″N 75°41′32″W / 45.4271°N 75.6923°W / 45.4271; -75.6923
Address55 ByWard Market Square
Ottawa, Ontario
K1N 9C3
Goods soldProduce, Souvenirs, Food, Jewellery
Websitewww.byward-market.com
York street in the ByWard Market
The Byward Market provides fresh produce throughout the warm months

The ByWard Market (French: Marché By), is a retail and entertainment district in the downtown core of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It is located east of the government and business district. The Market district includes the market buildings and open-air market along George, York, ByWard, and William street.

The district is bordered westwardly by Sussex Drive and Mackenzie Avenue, and eastwardly by Cumberland Street. It stretches northwards to Cathcart Street, while to the south it is bordered by Rideau Street.[1] The name refers to the old "By Ward" of the City of Ottawa ('By' deriving from the surname of the engineer, John By, who was the area's original surveyor). The district comprises the main commercial part of the historic Lower Town area of Ottawa. According to the Canada 2011 Census, the population of the area was 3,063.[2]

The BeaverTail is a fried dough pastry that is sold in a variety of flavours.

The market itself is regulated by a City of Ottawa municipal services corporation named the ByWard Market District Authority, which also operates the smaller west-end Parkdale Market.[3] The corporation is run by a nine-member board of directors.[4] The market building is open year-round, and open-air stalls offering fresh produce and flowers are operated in the warmer months.

Neighbourhood

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Map of the east-end of Downtown Ottawa
Sussex Drive by the Market

Traditionally, the ByWard Market area has been a focal point for Ottawa's French and Irish communities. The large Catholic community supported the construction of the Notre-Dame Cathedral Basilica, one of the largest and oldest Roman Catholic churches in Ottawa. The shape of the cathedral was taken into account in the design of the National Gallery of Canada, which was built across Sussex Drive.

The ByWard Market has been an area of constant change, adapting to the increasingly cosmopolitan nature of downtown Ottawa, as well as trends in Canadian society as a whole. Recently, a multitude of restaurants and specialty food stores have sprouted around the market area, making this neighbourhood one of the liveliest in Ottawa outside of normal business hours. A four-block area around the market provides the densest concentration of eating places, bars, and nightclubs in the National Capital Region. The areas beyond this zone also offer boutiques and restaurants in abundance, and are frequented by a considerable number of buskers. Having acquired a reputation as the city's premier bar district, the Byward Market is thronged (brimming) at night with university students and other young adults.

Condominium construction in the ByWard Market

Over the years, the city has developed five open-air courtyards immediately east of Sussex Drive, stretching from Saint Patrick Street to George Street. These cobblestone courtyards are filled with flowers, park benches, fountains, and sculptures. Several of the houses surrounding them are historic buildings. On the west side of Sussex Drive is the United States Embassy. The building's design, by noted architect David Childs, was supposedly widely criticized by surrounding residents, as one particular Ottawa Sun newspaper article reported that the bronze building-block sculpture created by Joel Shapiro and dedicated by Hillary Clinton was "glaringly and gratingly American", whereas some critics declared that the building's new design "reflected a cautious world view".[5]

Jeanne D'Arc Court, the courtyard at George and Sussex

The neighbourhood today is markedly heterogeneous; being visited by a mix of young professionals, many families, and tourists. The area is mainly English-speaking, but there exists a significant francophone population as well. The Market is located in close proximity to the downtown Rideau Centre shopping mall, to Parliament Hill, and to a number of foreign embassies.

York Street in the ByWard Market c. 1911
The ByWard Market in 2008

In October 2000, broadcaster CHUM Limited opened a new studio complex in the ByWard Market at 87 George Street, known as the CHUM MarketMediaMall. CHUM's then-NewNet station CHRO moved its primary operations from its original facilities in Pembroke to the new building (including a Speaker's Corner video booth); the facility also housed CHUM Radio stations CKKL-FM, CJMJ-FM, CFRA and CFGO. The facility came under CTV ownership when CTVglobemedia bought CHUM Limited in 2006, and then under Bell ownership when Bell Media re-purchased the CTV assets in 2011. When a fire broke out at the studio complex of CTV owned-and-operated station CJOH-DT in Nepean in 2010, destroying it, this meant CJOH moved into the MarketMediaMall complex as well.[6][7][8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ ByWard Market Business Association
  2. ^ Population calculated by combining Dissemination area 35060252, 35060251, 35061789, 35061790, 35061788 and Dissemination Blocks 3506025306, 3506025505, 3506025405 and 3506025406 and removing 3506178812
  3. ^ "What is the ByWard Market District Authority?". ByWard Public Market. Retrieved 2023-02-10.
  4. ^ Dept., Service Innovation & Performance (2017-09-07). "Inaugural Board of Directors appointed for ByWard and Parkdale Markets' new management structure". ottawa.ca. Retrieved 2018-05-04.
  5. ^ Brooke, James (14 October 1999). "A New Embassy Design Reflects a Cautious World View". The New York Times. nytimes.com. Retrieved 20 April 2019.
  6. ^ "CHRO-TV | History of Canadian Broadcasting". www.broadcasting-history.ca. Archived from the original on 2020-04-11. Retrieved 2020-04-11.
  7. ^ Howell, Elizabeth (April 24, 2010). "After the CTV fire, one last reunion at Merivale Road". CTV News Ottawa. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  8. ^ "CTV Ottawa newsroom destroyed by fire". CTV News Ottawa. February 7, 2010. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
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