Committee approves designating the Ellis House at 2400 Bank Street | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: October 6, 2025 - 17:12

Committee approves designating the Ellis House at 2400 Bank Street

October 6, 2025

The Built Heritage Committee approved a heritage designation for the former Ellis House at 2400 Bank Street. The property meets three of nine criteria for designation under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act.

The two-and-a-half-storey, red brick farmhouse is one of the last remaining examples of a nineteenth century farmhouse in the area. The property was settled and farmed by four successive generations of the Tompkins-Ellis family, one of many farming families who cleared and settled the agricultural land in Gloucester Township. The Ellis House is also associated with the former rural village of Ellwood, which was formed in 1904 and named in part after William Ellis, who owned the Ellis House at the time. Still a landmark today, the house was also a landmark when Bank Street used to be Metcalfe Road – a key transportation route that connected the urban core to the rural villages, and to the former Canadian Pacific Railway line at the rear of the property.

Committee recommends no Heritage Conservation District (HCD) study for Wellington Street West

The Committee supported a recommendation to not undertake an HCD study for Wellington Street West in Hintonburg.

Designation of an HCD requires that at least 25 per cent of properties in an area meet two or more of the nine criteria for designation under the Ontario Heritage Act. The feasibility assessment found that Wellington Street West has high potential to meet or exceed only one of the nine criteria, relating to the role of individual properties in supporting an area’s character. Staff feel there are still properties in the neighbourhood worthy of designation and those individual designations will proceed in the future. Staff will also work with local residents, the Hintonburg Community Association and the Ward Councillor’s office to consider, develop and implement other opportunities to commemorate Hintonburg’s diverse histories.

City Council will consider most recommendations from today’s meeting on Wednesday, October 22.

Related topics


Unpublished Newswire

 
Election day 1944 was just like any other in Montreal: rival candidates hired teams of thugs to smash windows and fire pistols at each other (17 men suffered bullet wounds), while “telegraphers” impersonated dead voters at the ballot box. When the glass had been swept up and the results were tallied, the enormous, swaggering Mr. Montreal, Camillien Houde, had been re-elected, mere months after completing a four-year stint in a prison camp for urging French-Canadians to dodge military service. Dressed in spats, with a pearl-grey vest and an ascot tie under his morning coat, he twirled his...
November 1, 2025 - 08:00 | Eric Andrew-Gee | The Globe and Mail
As I get older, my parents begin to show me glimpses of their secret dreams. “Dad wants to move back to Vietnam when we retire,” Mum tells me. “We can live like kings and queens over there!” Dad hollers in the background. My mother hasn’t returned since 1978. For one, she couldn’t travel without a passport, and she didn’t get her Canadian citizenship until after she turned fifty-five and was no longer required to take the citizenship test. Second, she’s in no rush to go back to a land still soaked in blood and mired in misery. But then she surprises me one day. “I think I want to go...
November 1, 2025 - 06:30 | Rachel Phan | Walrus
The people of a small town on the southeastern tip of Newfoundland have had their prayers answered.The leaders of Portugal Cove South, a fishing town two hours from St. John’s, made headlines last year, including in this newspaper, for seizing their own church after learning the archdiocese was selling the building to help pay for a settlement in a historical sexual abuse scandal. Parishioners, hell-bent on keeping their church, changed the locks, posted no trespassing signs, banned the archbishop, thwarted a real estate sale and were eventually ordered by a court to stand down.
November 1, 2025 - 06:15 | Lindsay Jones | The Globe and Mail