Campaign Video

Https://youtu.be/zBxbnuPAazE

Friday, 5 June 2026

Coventry Road Animation


A Claude AI Action Plan


From Dead Space to Living Place: An Activation Plan for the Coventry Road Site

If you've walked across the Max Keeping Pedestrian Bridge lately, or driven down Coventry Road on a non-game day, you've seen it: a vast expanse of asphalt beside RCGT Park, concrete bridge pillars casting shadows over nothing in particular, and a lot of potential doing absolutely nothing.

I wrote earlier this week about the Universe 25 experiment and what it means for Rideau-Rockcliffe — the idea that even well-resourced communities collapse when residents lose meaningful roles and purposeful space. This site is the flip side of that argument. Here is an existing city-owned asset, already serviced, already connected to LRT at Tremblay Station, already adjacent to one of Ottawa's most exciting sports venues — sitting idle 300 days a year.

That's not a tragedy. That's an opportunity. Here's what I would do with it.


Three zones, one community hub

The site naturally divides into three distinct areas, each suited to different programming.

Zone A — Under the bridge. The Tremblay bridge deck creates natural, permanent weather protection over a generous footprint. This is the anchor: colourful food trucks and local vendor kiosks, year-round. Think Ottawa vendors — tacos, coffee, market food — operating rain or shine, winter included. Youth-led murals on the pillars. String lights. A reason to be there on a Tuesday in November.

Zone B — The parking lot plaza. The big asphalt expanse doesn't have to stay asphalt. Permeable paving, green lawn panels, shaded pergolas, multi-use courts, a youth skate and BMX zone, and flexible event space for markets, clinics, and concerts. On Titans game days, this becomes a pre-game commons. On every other day, it belongs to the neighbourhood.

Zone C — The stormwater edge. Along the perimeter, rain gardens and bioswales handle runoff while creating a green edge that connects the site to the Tremblay Station pathway network. This isn't decoration — it directly addresses drainage, improves the site's asset condition rating, and ties the development into the city's stormwater management obligations. Good urban design and good infrastructure policy at the same time.


A calendar that actually works year-round

The first objection I always hear is: "What happens in February?" Fair question. Ottawa winters are real, and too many "activation" proposals quietly assume a six-month season.

Not this one.

Spring kicks off with an opening market day and a youth mural launch — North-South Development's "It's A Trap" program provides the organizing backbone and gives young people from Overbrook visible, public roles. Schools bring students for coaching clinics and planting days in Zone C.

Summer is the peak: weekly food truck nights, BMX and skate sessions, game-day activations that layer community programming onto the Titans' existing audience, and an outdoor movie series under the bridge deck.

Fall brings a harvest market, a North-South youth fair, cultural celebration days reflecting the ward's genuine diversity, and playoff events if the Titans keep doing what they've been doing.

Winter is where this design earns its keep. The under-bridge warming hub operates through the coldest months — heated, lit, occupied. A holiday light installation turns the pillars into a landmark. Indoor pop-up events continue in the kiosk structures.

The goal is 52 market days a year. Not a summer pop-up. A community institution.


How we get there: three phases, realistic costs

I'm not going to promise you a finished plaza by next spring. What I will commit to is a realistic, phased approach that starts with what we can do immediately and builds toward something lasting.

Phase 1 (2027) — Quick wins, ~$250,000–$400,000. Lighting, safety improvements, first murals, food-truck pad permits, temporary seating and planters. This phase is fundable through the agile capital budgeting pilot already under staff discussion and existing Parks & Recreation activation budgets. No new levy. No multi-year wait. This is the "prove it works" phase, and it can begin within months of taking office.

Phase 2 (2028) — Plaza build-out, ~$1.2M–$2M. Permeable paving, rain gardens, multi-use courts, pergolas, permanent kiosk structures, and the BMX/skate zone. By this point, food truck permit revenue and event fees are already offsetting a meaningful share of maintenance costs. We build the business case as we go.

Phase 3 (2029 and beyond) — Full hub, ~$2M–$4M. A community pavilion, full transit integration with Tremblay Station, and eventually the kind of autonomous shuttle connection between the station and the stadium that makes this whole corridor genuinely car-optional. This is the long game — and it's worth playing.





Who sits at the table

None of this works without partnerships. As councillor, my first move is to convene a formal stakeholder roundtable — not a consultation exercise, an actual working group with a mandate and a timeline. The seats at that table:

  • The Ottawa Titans and RCGT Park management
  • North-South Development Roots and Culture Canada
  • City Parks & Recreation
  • OC Transpo and Tremblay Station stakeholders
  • The Overbrook Community Association
  • The Rideau-Rockcliffe Community Resource Centre
  • Ottawa Public Health
  • The local BIA

Each of these organizations brings something the others don't have. The Titans bring an existing audience and operational infrastructure. North-South brings community trust and youth programming that is already running. Parks & Rec brings the city's permitting and programming capacity. OC Transpo brings the transit connection that makes the whole site accessible without a car.

The partnership agreement isn't a courtesy — it's the mechanism that turns a city lot into something the ward actually owns.


Why this makes financial sense

Let me be direct about the money, because this is the question every taxpayer deserves an answer to.

This site requires no new land acquisition. Zero. The city already owns it.

Twelve or more food truck vendor permits per year generate revenue. Fifty-two market days generate revenue. Event space rentals generate revenue. My conservative estimate is that permit and event income can offset roughly 30% of the site's annual maintenance costs within three years of Phase 1 opening — and that number grows as the programming matures.

Every dollar invested here also improves the asset condition rating of existing city-owned infrastructure in the open capital register I've been calling for — infrastructure that currently shows up as an undifferentiated parking lot with no assigned improvement plan.

Phase 1 doesn't require a new levy or a new budget line. It requires a councillor willing to direct staff to find the activation funding that is already sitting in existing accounts, and to make this site a priority rather than an afterthought.


What I commit to doing

If elected, here is the specific ask I will make of city staff within my first 90 days:

  1. Commission an activation feasibility study for the Coventry Stadium site, using the open data fields I outlined in my earlier post on asset management.
  2. Convene the stakeholder roundtable with a six-month mandate to produce a Phase 1 partnership agreement.
  3. Direct staff to identify Phase 1 funding through the agile capital budgeting pilot and Parks & Recreation activation budgets.
  4. Establish annual public reporting on the site's asset condition, programming outcomes, and revenue — tracked in the open capital register and reported to the ward every year.

Rideau-Rockcliffe has one of the most interesting infrastructure assets in east Ottawa sitting largely unused. The Coventry Road site isn't a problem to manage — it's a community hub waiting to be built.

Let's build it.


If you believe Rideau-Rockcliffe deserves a councillor with the analytical skills and the vision to make things like this actually happen — vote differently. Vote wisely. Vote for Peter Karwacki.





This time around, vote differently, vote wisely, vote for Peter Karwacki for Rideau Rockcliffe.



Ball Diamond in the Rough

 


If you’ve driven down Coventry Road lately or walked across the Max Keeping Pedestrian Bridge to Tremblay Station, you know the spot I’m talking about.



 It’s right behind me in the photo I took this week: the big empty asphalt lot beside the Ottawa Titans’ stadium (RCGT Park at 300 Coventry Road), with the concrete bridge ramps and pillars creating classic “dead space” underneath.




This is classic underutilized city infrastructure — a major public asset sitting in the heart of Overbrook, part of that $13.43 billion 10-year capital ask I wrote about last week. Right now it’s mostly empty outside of game or concert days. But it doesn’t have to be.
What if we turned this space into a year-round community hub?




I asked Grok Imagine to create two concept sketches based on the exact photo and site layout. Here they are:

Look at the “AFTER” side. The big parking lot becomes a permeable-paving community plaza with green lawns, picnic tables, shaded pergolas, and string lights. Under the bridge itself — using the natural shelter of those thick concrete pillars and deck — we add 3–4 colourful food trucks and small local kiosks (tacos, coffee, Ottawa vendors). Rain gardens and bioswales handle stormwater. Multi-use courts, a youth skate/BMX zone, and flexible event space round it out.
Labels on the sketches show exactly how it works:

  • Food Trucks & Kiosks (Local Vendors)
  • Youth Role Hub (It’s A Trap / North-South Development)
  • Community Plaza & Markets
  • Green Stormwater Gardens
  • Under-Bridge Safe Gathering Space
  • Flexible Event Zone
  • 15-Minute Neighbourhood Node
This isn’t just pretty renderings. It’s practical space-making that directly applies the lessons from Calhoun’s Universe 25 experiment I wrote about yesterday. 
In the mouse utopia, even unlimited resources led to behavioural sink — aggression, withdrawal, family breakdown — because social roles and meaningful space disappeared. 
Here in Rideau-Rockcliffe we can do the opposite: create a “Creative Universe” where youth and families have real purpose, visibility, and belonging.

Overbrook already faces density pressures and the north-south challenges we all know. North-South Development Roots and Culture Canada’s “It’s A Trap” program is already fighting gang recruitment and giving kids alternatives. 
This activated space would be their natural home — youth-led murals on the pillars, event staffing, coaching clinics, market days. The Ottawa Titans already draw families; layering community programming turns passive spectators into active participants.
Why this fits our asset-management and budgeting conversation
  • It’s low-cost, high-impact activation of an existing city-owned site (no new land required).
  • It uses the agile capital budgeting pilot staff are testing for growth-related infrastructure.
  • Every dollar spent here improves the condition rating of this asset in the open capital register I’ve been calling for.
  • Revenue from food-truck permits and events could help offset maintenance — a win for taxpayers.
This is exactly the kind of thoughtful, creative urban design Calhoun later advocated after seeing his mice collapse. We don’t have to accept underused space or behavioural sink. We can design better.


How it's done in Japan.(see above)

Next steps I would push as councillor
  1. Direct staff to complete a quick “activation feasibility study” for the Coventry Stadium site (using the data fields I outlined in my open-data post).
  2. Bring North-South, the Titans, Parks & Rec, and Tremblay Station stakeholders to the table for a partnership plan.
  3. Fund the first phase (lighting, murals, food-truck pads, basic seating) through the agile budgeting tools already under discussion.
Rideau-Rockcliffe deserves more than just fixing potholes (though we’ll do that too). We deserve purposeful public space that builds resilience, gives our youth real roles, and makes better use of the assets we already own.
A full self driving shuttle from the train station

If you can accept that you need a different representative for Rideau Rockcliffe, somebody who wants to make a difference and has the skill, ability and know how to do so, vote differently, vote wisely, vote for Peter Karwacki










Thursday, 4 June 2026

Universe 25 - implications for Rideau Rockcliffe



What if Ottawa's predictions for population growth are wrong?

In Calhoun's famous mouse experiment, Universe 25, ultimately the mouse society broke down, they forgot how to function as mice they stopped mating started dying. The mouse population peaked at 2,200 mice well over a thousand short of the actual capacity of the habitat.  

The Final Phase ensued after just under five years after the first eight mice were placed inside.  the last mouse died and the universe was lifeless

Specific Implications for Rideau-Rockcliffe Ward (and North-South Development)


comparable sequence of events could also lead the human species to Extinction opportunities

Complex behaviors will become fragmented. Acquisition, creation and utilization of ideas appropriate for life in a post-industrial cultural conceptual technological Society all of them WERE  blocked. Loss of these respective complex behaviors could  mean death to humans   CALHOUN

Rideau-Rockcliffe (Ward 13) is a diverse east-end Ottawa ward (~19.8 km², population ~36,000–41,000, density ~1,820–2,000 people/km²) spanning affluent low-density areas (Rockcliffe Park, New Edinburgh, Manor Park) to more challenged, higher-density pockets (Overbrook, Viscount Alexander Park, areas near St. Laurent/Highway 417).

 It faces Ottawa-wide pressures: population growth toward 1 million city-wide, housing intensification debates, cost-of-living strains, transit gaps, and localized public safety issues (e.g., gangs, guns, youth recruitment in Overbrook).

North-South Development Roots and Culture Canada operates directly in this context — a community-led group focused on youth outreach, crime prevention ("It's A Trap" program against gang recruitment, drugs, exploitation), cultural roots, and resilience-building in Rideau-Rockcliffe. 

Their work anchors efforts at places like the Rideau Community Hub and directly targets the early behavioural-sink symptoms Calhoun observed:

 youth disengagement, 

violence, and social breakdown.

Applying Universe 25 here:

Risk of behavioural sink in uneven development:

 The ward's north-south socio-economic gradient (more stable/affluent northern riverfront vs. southern/central areas with higher reported crime and economic stress) mirrors how density stresses hit unevenly. 

Without careful planning, intensification (infill, higher-density housing) could amplify overload in vulnerable pockets — exacerbating gang activity, family strain, isolation, or "withdrawal" among youth/adults — even if resources (housing grants, food banks, community centres) increase. 

North-South's anti-gang/youth programs are a direct counter to the "violent male" or neglected-young phases seen in the mice.

Resources alone aren't enough — design the "universe" better

Just pumping in services risks creating a partial "utopia" that still fails if social fabric erodes 

(e.g., loss of purposeful roles for youth).

 Implications for the ward: prioritize built-environment choices that prevent sink — e.g., mixed-use spaces with community hubs, green corridors, safe public realms, and economic opportunities that give residents (especially youth) real roles and status. 

Support North-South-style initiatives as part of this, not just bandaids.

Opportunity for proactive resilience: Calhoun later tried redesigning enclosures for "creative" mice that thrived at higher densities through better social/info networks. 

Translate to the ward by leaning into 15-minute neighbourhood principles, heritage-preserving low-density zones where they work, equitable transit/housing, and expanded community resource centres. 

The ward's existing strengths (engaged community associations, CRC services) provide a foundation to avoid the full collapse trajectory.


• Longer-term warning: Ottawa's growth + ward-specific pressures (aging demographics in some areas, development disputes) could accelerate sink-like trends city-wide if ignored. 

North-South's focus on roots, culture, and prevention is a smart early intervention — but it needs pairing with ward-level planning to manage density humanely.

In short, Universe 25 doesn't doom Rideau-Rockcliffe, but it underscores that thoughtful urban design, strong community organizations like North-South Development, and deliberate efforts to preserve social roles/purpose are essential. 

Neglect these, and even well-resourced wards risk the sink. As a ward with real diversity and pressures, Rideau-Rockcliffe has the chance to model the "better universe" Calhoun hoped for — one where density builds community rather than breaks it. This informs priorities around safety, housing, and youth investment

If you can accept that you need a different representative for Rideau Rockcliffe, somebody who wants to make a difference and has the skill, ability and know how to do so, vote differently, vote wisely, vote for Peter Karwacki