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  #21  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2018, 5:52 PM
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Kanata’s Brookstreet Hotel opens $12M expansion

By Brier Dodge, OBJ
Published: Jan 24, 2018 3:03pm EST




Two years ago, the sales team at the Brookstreet Hotel was trying to book conferences for a brand new space – sight unseen – to clients. Hotel general manager Nyle Kelly had construction boots sitting under his office desk on a full-time basis.

Now, the new 20,000-square-foot expansion is officially open after a corporate banquet last Friday christened the 500-person capacity ballroom.

With 11,000 square feet in additional meeting space, plus the foyer area, Brookstreet now has 30,000 square feet in total meeting space.

It’s allowing the hotel to market to larger clients, said Brookstreet marketing manager Sharon Ravnas.

“Before this expansion, our biggest problem was we just weren’t big enough,” Ravnas said.

Large conferences need both a large meeting space, smaller meeting spaces as well as another large area where participants can eat. Before, the Brookstreet’s one large ballroom with a 300-person capacity presented limitations for some larger conferences.

The new space was added to the back of the property towards the golf course, and includes a new ballroom with a capacity of 500 people as well as a smaller ballroom that can fit 120, and several small meeting rooms.

The two-storey addition has a large foyer on both levels, with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking The Marshes Golf Club, and the outdoor pond that’s used for ice skating in the winter.

Kelly said the lower foyer is his favourite part of the project because of the cool parties and weddings he can see being hosted in the space.

The idea for the $12-million project was first conceived in 2005, two years after the hotel opened. But with the success of the hotel so closely tied to the success of the technology sector and neighbouring companies in the business park, it was put on hold when the economy took a downturn.

“But the business park right now is very healthy; there are more than 500 active businesses in Kanata North, and occupancy at the park itself is the highest it’s been since 2008-09,” Kelly said.

He anticipates a 12-per-cent increase in banquet revenue this year and a similar growth in staff numbers because of the new space. The first three months of 2018, compared to the first three months of 2017, show a 22 per cent increase in conference and meeting bookings for the hotel.

“We’re ahead of where we were last year, obviously the new conference space is helping,” he said.

Ravnas expects quite a few wedding bookings to come in for the new space, especially given the resort style of the hotel with the outdoor wedding space, onsite spa and neighbouring golf club.

The resort aspect of the hotel is a draw for conferences and customers who want to have the additional amenities, which makes the hotel compete less with the downtown giants and attract more of their own specific clientele, staff said.

“We’re all competing for the business that comes to the Ottawa region, but people make the choice to come downtown, or Kanata, or to come to the resort,” Kelly said. “So we really target our customers that want that resort-type experience. There’s nothing like this in the west end – I could argue there’s nothing like this in the city.”

While the hotel looks to continue to book more large trade shows and conferences, the next phase of the hotel’s expansion will be building another tower of rooms.

Kelly said he’d like to see another 80 hotel rooms added to the existing 276 in the next five years.



http://www.obj.ca/article/kanatas-br...-12m-expansion
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  #22  
Old Posted Jan 27, 2018, 3:50 PM
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Didn't even know they were expanding the meeting space.
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  #23  
Old Posted Jan 31, 2018, 12:41 AM
kevinbottawa kevinbottawa is offline
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Quote:
Ottawa's iconic downtown Westin Hotel up for sale

Vito Pilieci
Published: January 30, 2018
Updated: January 30, 2018 5:40 PM EST

The owners of the Westin Ottawa have placed the high profile hotel on the market as they continue to sell off several Canadian properties.

Starwood Capital has retained commercial real estate brokers Cushman & Wakefield to oversee the transaction. The company will also be overseeing the sale of Westin Hotels in Calgary and Edmonton.

The agent listing the properties refused to estimate the value of the hotels.

The move follows Starwood’s sale of Westin properties in Toronto and Vancouver in recent years.

The company collected between $350 million and $400 million for the Westin Harbour Castle in downtown Toronto at the foot of Yonge Street. It’s been reported that the Westin Bayshore in Vancouver sold for $290 million.


Starwood reportedly bought all five of the Canadian properties in 2014 for $765 million.

The hotels all have long-term management contracts which will see them continue on as Westin properties even after the sale to a new owner is complete.

The Westin Ottawa is a 492-room property that is connected to the city’s largest shopping centre, the Rideau Centre, as well as the Shaw Convention Centre. The property, which was built in 1983, has had about $50 million worth of renovations in recent years to update its foyer, meeting rooms and convention space.

It’s also located on the city’s soon to be opened Light Rail Transit (LRT) line, adding to its value to potential investors.
http://ottawasun.com/news/local-news...0-cb6a2d6ce373
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  #24  
Old Posted Jan 31, 2018, 12:54 PM
sleye sleye is offline
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The property, which was built in 1983, has had about $50 million worth of renovations in recent years to update its foyer, meeting rooms and convention space.
I was really hoping they would reclad the building to match the new rooftop addition. As it is right now it looks extremely dated next to the renewed Shaw and Rideau Centres.
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  #25  
Old Posted Jan 31, 2018, 2:09 PM
kevinbottawa kevinbottawa is offline
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Originally Posted by sleye View Post
I was really hoping they would reclad the building to match the new rooftop addition. As it is right now it looks extremely dated next to the renewed Shaw and Rideau Centres.
Agreed. I've never been impressed with the Westin. The best thing about it is its views of Parliament. The exterior looks horrible. They don't have much competition when it comes to higher end downtown hotels in the 500 room range so they can afford to sit back and look dated. Hopefully a large, higher end hotel gets built at Lebreton Flats that gives them some competition and forces them to make more changes, like recladding the exterior.
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  #26  
Old Posted Jan 31, 2018, 4:32 PM
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I don't mind the tower portion. In fact, I kind of like it. It's the podium that needs to be completely re-done IMO.
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  #27  
Old Posted Jan 31, 2018, 11:49 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kevinbottawa View Post
Agreed. I've never been impressed with the Westin. The best thing about it is its views of Parliament. The exterior looks horrible. They don't have much competition when it comes to higher end downtown hotels in the 500 room range so they can afford to sit back and look dated. Hopefully a large, higher end hotel gets built at Lebreton Flats that gives them some competition and forces them to make more changes, like recladding the exterior.
??? To each his/her own... but I'm curious as to what you find so offensive about the exterior? I don't mind it at all... Monster windows, angles and non-boxy design... what exactly is "horrible" and/or "dated" ?
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  #28  
Old Posted Feb 1, 2018, 4:59 AM
kevinbottawa kevinbottawa is offline
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Originally Posted by HighwayStar View Post
??? To each his/her own... but I'm curious as to what you find so offensive about the exterior? I don't mind it at all... Monster windows, angles and non-boxy design... what exactly is "horrible" and/or "dated" ?
You don't see a problem with this being our premiere downtown hotel? If this was just a random downtown hotel it's fine, but if this is the best we have to offer, that's sad. I personally hate precast concrete, or whatever the exterior is made of. It almost looks dirty. I also don't like the Delta.

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  #29  
Old Posted Feb 20, 2018, 2:54 AM
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This has probably been covered in the Gatineau board, but I haven't seen it in the Ottawa boards. So, here goes...

As per a job opportunity on indeed.com, the Wakefield Mill's "OBrien House" boutique hotel will be opening soon:

Quote:
Wakefield Mill Hotel & Spa is expanding! We are opening a second, intimate boutique hotel, including a high end cuisine by Executive Chef Pat Marion, set to open shortly…
* News of the purchase of The O'Brien House by the folks at The Wakefield Mill was first mentioned in a CBC article from September 2016 among other news outlets (probably mentioned somewhere on the O/G SSP boards).

Quote:

(Photo: National Capital Commission via CBC)
Here's the website for the hotel: http://www.theobrienhouse.ca/
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  #30  
Old Posted Apr 3, 2018, 5:11 PM
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Former Crowne Plaza GM Denis Gilles returns to Ottawa to lead new Hilton properties

By: David Sali, OBJ
Apr 3, 2018 7:30am EDT


After spending decades living the nomadic lifestyle so typical of a top-level hotel manager, Denis Gilles feels like he’s finally where he’s meant to be.

“Ottawa is home,” says the new general manager of Hilton’s first two downtown properties in the nation’s capital, the Garden Inn and Homewood Suites.

Gilles, who officially assumed his new post on March 5, is back in Ottawa following a seven-year absence. After overseeing the former Crowne Plaza’s conversion to the Delta Ottawa City Centre, he criss-crossed the country with the SilverBirch Hotels & Resorts chain, managing properties in Sainte-Hyacinthe, Que., Fort McMurray, Alta., Halifax and finally, for the past year, Regina.

“I was on the road for seven years and now basically I’m back home,” says Gilles, who was born in Paris and grew up in Quebec City but now considers the capital his city. “It was the perfect opportunity.”

The new Hilton lodgings are set to open this fall at the site of the former National Hotel & Suites at 361 Queen St. The chain is pouring $40 million into a full-scale makeover of the Morguard-owned property, which will be home to a 175-room Garden Inn geared toward leisure travellers and the 171-unit Homewood Suites catering to extended-stay guests.

Gilles, who spent 15 years at hotels in Vietnam, the Philippines and China before returning to North America in 2008 to manage the Crowne Plaza’s downtown Ottawa property, says Hilton – which operates nearly 600 hotels and resorts in 85 countries – was long overdue to establish a presence in the heart of Canada’s capital.

“For the brand, it’s very high exposure,” he says. “It’s very high-profile. Wherever you turn (in Ottawa), it’s a Marriott property. We need to be able to compete. There is only room for Hilton to grow.”

The new facilities will have all the amenities tourists would expect from one of the world’s most famous hotel brands, including 4,500 square feet of conference space, a bar, restaurant, pool and fitness facility. But Gilles says he’s also hoping to inject a quality that’s harder to define into the guest experience at the new properties, which are expected to employ about 130 people.

“I’ve been around long enough to know that it’s not possible for anybody to be the best (in all facets),” he explains. “I want the properties to be memorable – when (guests) come, they say, ‘Hey, I don’t know what it is in here, but it’s different.’”

Gilles, who left Ottawa in 2011, says he feels a bit like that when he strolls the central business district and sees how projects such as light rail, Lansdowne Park, Zibi and the pending redevelopment of LeBreton Flats are poised to transform the city’s core.

“When I left Ottawa, there was no construction anywhere,” he recalls. “Everything, day after day, was the same. Now, when you go anywhere, there’s construction everywhere. It’s moving. You feel some evolution in Ottawa. It’s not the sleepy town that it is used to be known as. You feel that something is happening.”

The new Hiltons aren’t the only hotel properties slated to make their Ottawa debut this year. Le Germain is gearing up for its grand opening at the new ArtHaus complex on Daly Avenue later this month, while three more new lodgings are expected to be completed near the airport before the year is out.

All told, the region’s total room inventory could jump by more than 1,000 in 2018, an increase of 10 per cent. Steve Ball, the head of the Ottawa Gatineau Hotel Association that represents more than 50 properties throughout the region, says it remains to be seen how quickly the industry can absorb the addition of so many extra rooms in such a short span of time.

“Does the pool get any deeper or do we just share more clients among more properties?” he says. “Who knows?”

Ball says he’s encouraged by what he’s hearing from local hoteliers, who seem to have dodged the much-dreaded “hangover” following a record year for the city’s tourism industry in 2017.

“January (occupancy) this year was better than January last year,” he says. “We’ve got nice momentum. Hopefully, it’s the carryover halo from (the Canada 150 celebrations in) 2017. There’s optimism that we’ll maintain the momentum for sure. February was also a good month. March, I’m hearing, is a little softer, but there is great optimism that we’ll hold our numbers going into the summer.”

http://www.obj.ca/article/former-cro...ton-properties
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  #31  
Old Posted Jan 29, 2019, 5:50 PM
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Embassy Hotel & Suites turns heads at Ottawa relaunch party
Downtown Ottawa hotel spends $7 million on room renovations, improving food and beverage services

By: Caroline Phillips, OBJ
Published: Jan 27, 2019 12:15pm EST


I can't tell you how many times I've scurried past the Embassy Hotel & Suites without taking much notice of it. Not anymore. Not after attending its fabulous winter launch party Friday night to show of its latest renovations.

The invite-only reception, held at the downtown Ottawa hotel, attracted a diverse crowd, served great food and drinks, and created an electric party atmosphere through music, lighting and live installations. The only thing missing was an epic pillow fight.

Guests spotted at the party ranged from Steve Ball, president of the Ottawa Gatineau Hotel Association, to Redblacks defensive back Antoine Pruneau, to media personalities and fashion and social media influencers.

The reception took place over two floors, allowing for people to also mingle upstairs in one of the suites.

The Embassy Hotel is located at 25 Cartier St., at the corner of Cartier and Cooper streets in the city’s central Golden Triangle neighbourhood. The 14-storey building is a stone’s throw away from City Hall, the National Arts Centre and the Rideau Canal.

In the days leading up to the Canada 150 celebrations held in 2017, the independent hotel opted for a major refurbishment. Last summer, it completed improvements to its food and beverage services, spending $500,000 on its commercial kitchen and its restaurant, Cooper’s Gastropub.

The Embassy, which invested a total of $7 million on renovations, decided to bring attention to its new and improved look by throwing a party. It chose January — a month that can always use some jazzing up.

“What we’re looking to do is open people’s eyes to what Embassy is today,” hotel general manager Colin Morrison told OBJ.social. “A lot of people have walked by the building and not even noticed that we’re here. We are a relatively nondescript building on the outside. We’re a lot of fun on the inside.”

James Jefferson and Daniel Mackinnon, owners of boutique PR agency Blackbook Lifestyle, worked their party magic that night. The pair has coordinated many unforgettable functions over the years, such as the star-studded Genie Awards Official After-Party at Arc The Hotel, back when Morrison was manager. He joined Embassy Hotel & Suites in July 2014, bringing with him some of his staff, including executive chef Jason Duffy, a past finalist in Ottawa's Gold Medal Plates culinary competition.

The Embassy Hotel has been around since the 1960s. It was originally a converted apartment building and, for the longest time, an extended-stay hotel. Said Morrison: “Not much happened with it. It existed and not much more than that.”

That is, until the hotel recognized its potential, with its very spacious rooms and its quiet yet central location, continued Morrison, who’s also board chair of the Ottawa Gatineau Hotel Association. “It was a bit of a diamond in the rough.

“The owners decided that they wanted to dress it up a little bit, and that’s what we’ve done,” he said of the new bathrooms, kitchens, wall and floor coverings and furniture. The rooms — of which 120 of the 140 are suites — were gutted back to concrete and rebuilt. “It’s hard to say if there’s anything that hasn’t been touched.”

Morrison said the hotel is less focused now on the long-term-stay market. It welcomes all guests, particularly those wanting to drop their luggage down in a room with a small kitchen to do a little cooking, store restaurant meal leftovers or keep their drinks cold.

Since the renovations, the hotel has upped its room prices to $200-plus per night (not exclusively). Business “is very strong,” said Morrison, adding that their occupancy rates are in line with other the hotels in the downtown core. “We’re enjoying very healthy revenues.

“We did something that is somewhat unusual in the hotel industry: We completely changed our market. The rooms are, in my opinion, on par with anything the city offers, including The Westin and the Château (Laurier).”

caroline@obj.ca

https://obj.ca/article/embassy-hotel...relaunch-party
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  #32  
Old Posted Apr 28, 2019, 2:05 AM
DavefromSt.Vital DavefromSt.Vital is offline
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Residence Inn Downtown has de-flagged from Marriott and is now the Carleton Suite Hotel
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  #33  
Old Posted May 23, 2019, 7:26 PM
DavefromSt.Vital DavefromSt.Vital is offline
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While the press release is focused on Niagara Falls, there are some Ottawa properties mentioned;

2020 - Hyatt Place Ottawa Bells Corners

2022 - Hyatt Place/Hyatt House Ottawa Byward Market

https://newsroom.hyatt.com/news-releases?item=123839
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  #34  
Old Posted May 23, 2019, 10:20 PM
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The new Market Hyatt is probably the proposed tower attached to Andaz.

https://forum.skyscraperpage.com/sho...203360&page=22
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  #35  
Old Posted May 24, 2019, 7:09 PM
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I doubt it. I'm pretty sure the new tower would just become an expanded Andaz Hotel.

My bet is this might be the hotel part of Claridge District proposal for the Metro Site on Rideau St.

This one:
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  #36  
Old Posted May 24, 2019, 7:20 PM
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Hadn't even thought of that one. Good catch.
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  #37  
Old Posted May 28, 2019, 2:12 AM
ryan1 ryan1 is offline
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Originally Posted by OTSkyline View Post
I doubt it. I'm pretty sure the new tower would just become an expanded Andaz Hotel.

My bet is this might be the hotel part of Claridge District proposal for the Metro Site on Rideau St.
You mean Claridge Royale at Rideau & Cumberland!

http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...=208587&page=9

Last edited by ryan1; May 28, 2019 at 2:14 AM. Reason: Add link.
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  #38  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2019, 2:01 PM
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Looks like the SANDMAN SIGNATURE OTTAWA AIRPORT HOTEL on Hunt Club Rd. is FINALLY open.
(After being under construction for over 5 years now???)
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  #39  
Old Posted Oct 3, 2019, 1:07 AM
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NCC looking to lease historic O'Brien House, again

Luke Carroll, Ottawa Citizen
Updated: October 2, 2019




Less than two years after opening as a boutique hotel in Gatineau Park, the O’Brien House is back on the market.

What was once the getaway of the industrialist owner of the Montreal Canadiens became an intimate 11-room boutique hotel after Wakefield Mill Developments Inc. took over the property in March 2018.

Wakefield Mill general manager Robert Milling said his organization will continue leasing the property from the National Capital Commission until Oct. 31.

The NCC’s board of directors approved the use as a hotel in September 2016 and gave its staff the authority to approve the design of a $3.9-million rehabilitation. The lease was for five years with the option of a 20-year renewal. Milling said he couldn’t comment on why the lease ended early.

In July, the O’Brien House Facebook page made a post that the facility would focus on events, as hotel bookings weren’t “financially sustainable.”

An NCC spokesperson said in an email that rent for the O’Brien House continues to be paid by the current operator and all bookings made until Oct. 31 will be honoured.

One of the first homes in Gatineau Park, the O’Brien House sits imposingly atop a winding road, but the materials — granite, log siding and cedar — link it to the Canadian wilderness, according to the NCC, which acquired the property in 1964.

The O’Brien House is now in need of a new tenant, and has already garnered some interest from the hospitality industry, the NCC said.

A lease fact sheet said the annual rent is $150,000 along with eight per cent of revenues over $1 million.

– With files from Megan Gillis

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...en-house-again
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  #40  
Old Posted Oct 3, 2019, 1:55 AM
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Best Western is proposing a two-storey addition above the north wing of their existing hotel at 1272 Carling Avenue.

Development application:
http://app01.ottawa.ca/postingplans/...appId=__BN27LJ

Streetview:
https://www.google.ca/maps/@45.38633...7i13312!8i6656




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