Constructing national identity in Canada's capital, 1900–2000: Confederation Square and the National War Memorial |
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Authors: | David LA Gordon Brian S Osborne |
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Institution: | aSchool of Urban and Regional Planning, Queen's University, Kingston, Ont., Canada K7L 3N6;bDepartment of Geography, Queen's University, Kingston, Ont., Canada K7L 3N6 |
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Abstract: | Ottawa's Confederation Square was initially planned to be a civic plaza to balance the nearby federal presence of Parliament Hill. A century of federal planning, with the direct involvement of Prime Minister W.L. Mackenzie King, repositioned it as a national space in the City Beautiful style. Recent renovations have improved its pedestrian amenity and restored much of the original plan by French urban designer Jacques Gréber. The square contains the National War Memorial and the National Arts Centre, yet is a weak public space due to weak edge definition, animation, and spatial enclosure. The war memorial design was selected in a 1925 international competition won by Britain's Vernon March. The Great War monument was not installed until the 1939 Royal visit, and Mackenzie King intended that the re-planning of the capital would be the World War II memorial. However, the symbolic meaning of the Great War monument gradually expanded to become the place of remembrance for all Canadian war sacrifices. The National War Memorial is more successful as a symbolic object than Confederation Square is as a public space, yet both have evolved into important elements of the Canadian capital's national identity. |
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Keywords: | National War Memorial Confederation Square National identity Canada Ottawa |
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