Strathcona Park (Ottawa)

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Strathcona Park looking southeast toward the river
Strathcona Park looking southeast toward the river
Lord Strathcona's fountain
Lord Strathcona's fountain
Stephen Brathwaite's ruin like play structure
Stephen Brathwaite's ruin like play structure

Strathcona Park is a large park in Ottawa, Canada. It lies on the west bank of the Rideau River and marks the eastern edge of the Sandy Hill neighbourhood.

The area of the park was originally the swampy floodplain of the river, and was impossible to build on. The site first became home of the Dominion Rifle Range, where soldiers had trained before departing for the Second Boer War. The park was created by the Ottawa Improvement Commission between 1904 and 1907. It was named after Lord Strathcona a Canadian businessman and politician who had financed his own regiment in the Boer War.

The most prominent feature of the fifteen acre park is the fountain standing atop the hill in the park that was donated by Lord Strathcona in 1909. The park's original design was a classic example of English public park design. It contained a pair of small ponds, gazebos, and Ottawa's first golf course. In the 1940s the ponds were filled in due to their expense, and replaced with a wading pool. A baseball diamond was constructed at the southern end of the park in the 1920s and for many years was Ottawa's main venue for the sport.

The bank of the Rideau were once a popular swimming area, but there is today enough pollution to make this unpopular. During the summer the water level is low enough to ford the river and cross to Riverain Park in Vanier. Just to the south of Strathcona Park is Robinson Field, another large park. In winter the park, with its large hill at the northern end, is a popular site for tobogganing.

The park remained under the control of the OIC successor agency the National Capital Commission until 1987 when it did not renew its lease with the city. Since then it has been a municipally managed park. In the early 1990s the park was refurbished by the city. One of the most noted additions was the artist designed play structure. Unwilling to mar the park with a standard gaudy play structure the city turned to artist Stephen Brathwaite. He designed a structure to look like ruins, inspired by Mackenzie King's ruin garden at Kingsmere. The structure was assembled out of blocks of stone that had been part of the parliament buildings, the Chateau Laurier, and other prominent Ottawa structures.

Since 1986 the park has been home to Odyssey Theatre, a theatre company that puts on open air plays each summer on a stage at the northeast corner of the park.

The park is surrounded by a series of large homes that once housed the elite of Ottawa. Today they are mostly embassies and the area around the park is often called Ottawa's Embassy Row. Perched above the park is the Russian embassy, formerly that of the Soviet Union.

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