Department of National Defence Headquarters

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The Major-General George R. Pearkes Building, looking north from the neighbourhood of Vanier.
The Major-General George R. Pearkes Building, looking north from the neighbourhood of Vanier.

The Department of National Defence Headquarters (NDHQ) is the headquarters for Canada's Department of National Defence (DND) and is located in Ottawa, Ontario.

NDHQ actually comprises a collection of offices spread across the National Capital Region, however it is most commonly identified with the Major-General George R. Pearkes Building at 101 Colonel By Drive in Ottawa.

The MGen George R. Pearkes Building and the adjacent Rideau Centre are both served by OC Transpo's Mackenzie King Transitway station.

NDHQ is often referred to tongue-in-cheek by DND workers and Canadian Forces personnel as "The Puzzle Palace", "Disneyland North" or "Fort Fumble on the Rideau", especially by service personnel not serving there.

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[edit] Design controversy

The Major-General George R. Pearkes Building, viewed from Colonel By Drive, formerly the coach yard for Ottawa Union Station.
The Major-General George R. Pearkes Building, viewed from Colonel By Drive, formerly the coach yard for Ottawa Union Station.

The NDHQ building, named after Major-General G.R. Pearkes, was constructed between 1969 and 1974, and was originally intended for use by the Department of Transport. When a planned National Defence Headquarters complex on the LeBreton Flats was not built, however, DND acquired the Colonel By Drive structure.

The concept for the building (actually a group of buildings) was developed by French town planner Jacques Gréber immediately after World War II at the invitation of Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. Gréber, a proponent of boulevards and highways as opposed to rail corridors, advised that the city redevelop the east bank of the Rideau Canal which was, at that time, covered with railway tracks leading to Ottawa Union Station.

This was accomplished and with the removal of the station tracks and relocation of passenger rail service to a new suburban station; the Ottawa Union Station building has since become the Government Conference Centre. The remaining land that contained the coach yard for Ottawa Union Station was vacant and ready for developments that would contain the Pearkes Building and the Rideau Centre.

Architects John C. Parkin, Searle, Wilby, and Rowland designed the buildings in the then popular Brutalism style. Over the years many critics have generally conceded that they are among the ugliest of Ottawa government towers. They were conceived as the first phase of the planned redevelopment, the Rideau Centre, which opened across Rideau St in 1983, being the second phase.

[edit] Attack vulnerability

During the Cold War, the threat of nuclear attack on the National Capital Region saw a Central Emergency Government Headquarters constructed 30 km west of Ottawa at CFS Carp; this facility was to house a scaled-down NDHQ, along with the federal cabinet and other political, military and government leaders.

The threat of terrorist attacks in recent decades, particularly following the September 11, 2001 attacks, led to the permanent closure of an access road that runs beneath the connecting section of the two structures comprising the MGen George R. Pearkes Building.

A dramatic architectural feature (and potential vulnerability), it was initially cordoned off using temporary concrete barriers. Work has now been completed permanently closing off the thoroughfare that formerly linked Nicholas Street to Colonel By Drive and the adjacent Rideau Canal by building permanent concrete barriers, metal fencing, and a gatehouse equipped with the capability to stop unauthorised vehicles from entering.

[edit] Possible relocation

The MGen George R. Pearkes Building underwent extensive renovations during the mid-1990s as each floor was gutted to replace the hodge podge of outdated offices and furnishings dating to the building's opening in 1974. Modular office furnishings produced by CORCAN (constructed in Canadian prisons) were installed.

By the mid-2000s it became apparent that the NDHQ complex at the MGen George R. Pearkes Building was overcrowded, forcing DND to spread headquarters staff out across the National Capital Region. Sizeable NDHQ offices have been established in the past, or are still currently located in, Place Export Canada, the Constitution Building, l'Esplanade Laurier, Louis St Laurent Building (Gatineau, QC) and the Berger Building among others.

Recent cutbacks among high-technology companies in the Ottawa region has led DND to consider buying a surplus JDS Uniphase campus in suburban Barrhaven at the intersection of Merivale Road and Prince of Wales Drive, west of the Ottawa International Airport. JDS's Barrhaven campus comprises two large buildings with extensive computer networking capacity, and is currently selling for a fraction of what it cost to construct. The location is far more secure, in being set back from public roads, and has ample parking and transit connections for the several thousand employees it was designed to support.

[edit] External links

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