Carleton researchers release guide to enjoy safe outdoor dining
The report by Azrieli School of Architecture & Urbanism researchers aims to help the restaurant industry and enhance public life during and after the pandemic.
Researchers at Carleton University’s Azrieli School of Architecture & Urbanism have released a guide that proposes new ways to enjoy safe outdoor dining in Ottawa during and after pandemic restrictions.
Titled Dinner in the Street: Dining Safely and Socially in the Pandemic City and Beyond , the project aims to help the restaurant industry and enhance public life while maintaining physical distancing for public health. It also looks for opportunities for local food production and aiding the underserved.
The illustrated 28-page handbook proposes closing select streets to traffic and offers design concepts for five Ottawa neighbourhoods. It also contains ideas for structures, physical distancing strategies, zoning changes, and themes that reinforce neighbourhood identity.
The research was funded by the MITACS Accelerate Grant Program, which opened a special category for COVID-19-related research last year. The researchers were recent master of architecture graduates Shelby Hagerman and Rehab Salama, working under the direction of Jill Stoner, former director of Carleton’s Azrieli School of Architecture & Urbanism.
They studied international precedents for outdoor communal dining and consulted Ottawa community leaders and restaurant owners to develop the following proposals:
- Argyle Avenue in Centretown could be closed for weekly communal feasts for the underserved beneath colourful umbrellas decorated with patterns inspired by flags of the world and Canada’s provinces and territories.
- Daly Avenue in Sandy Hill could be periodically closed for artist-themed benefit dinners, hosted by the Ottawa Art Gallery and food from Daly Avenue restaurants.
- George Street and York Street in the ByWard Market could be permanently closed to traffic, and host large numbers of people dining outside in a festive atmosphere. New paving or paint that graphically adds a pattern can help establish physical distancing.
- The cul-de-sacs off Preston Street in Little Italy could reduce the width of their traffic lane and develop community gardens for a farm-to-table experience. Meals can be delivered from Preston Street restaurants.
- One block of Hazel Street in Old Ottawa East could be planted as a wheat field, softening a large nearby housing development edge. Small mowed circles provide an area for physically-distanced tables for solo diners.
For more information, visit: https://newsroom.carleton.ca/2021/new-handbook-sets-a-vision-for-the-evolution-of-outdoor-dining-in-ottawa/