Hunt Club | |
---|---|
Neighbourhood | |
Hunt Club | |
Coordinates: 45°21′00″N 75°40′30″W / 45.350°N 75.675°W | |
Country | Canada |
Province | Ontario |
City | Ottawa |
Government | |
• MPs | David McGuinty |
• MPPs | John Fraser |
• Councillors | Riley Brockington |
• Governing body | Hunt Club Community Association |
• President | Brian Wade[1] |
Area | |
• Total | 5.072 km2 (1.958 sq mi) |
Elevation | 95 m (312 ft) |
Population (2016) | |
• Total | 12,264 |
• Density | 2,418/km2 (6,260/sq mi) |
Canada 2016 Census | |
Time zone | UTC-5 (Eastern (EST)) |
Forward sortation area | K1V |
Website | Community Association |
Hunt Club is a community in River Ward, in the south end of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. The area is named after the Ottawa Hunt and Golf Club, which was first developed in 1876. Hunt Club Road and many local businesses were also named after the golf course.[2]
Hunt Club is located just north of the Ottawa Macdonald–Cartier International Airport and to the east of the Rideau River. The Hunt Club Community Organization defines the boundaries as the Rideau River to the west, the Airport Parkway to the east, the CN Albion line and Via Rail Beachburg Subdivision to the north, and Hunt Club Road to the south.[1][3] The population of the area is 12,264 as of the 2016 Canadian census.[4]
16% of the area is publicly accessible green space. It has three times as much green space as the Ottawa average, including the Sawmill Creek wetlands and Rideau River shoreline. Hunt Club has seven city parks: Cahill, McCarthy, Owl, Paul Landry, Riverwood, Uplands, and Uplands Riverside.
Hunt Club has a mixed demographic in terms of age groups, ethnocultural backgrounds, socio-economic levels, and family set-ups. The area also has the second-largest Asian Canadian population in Ottawa. Housing in the area includes single dwellings, semi-detached and townhouse units, apartment buildings, retirement homes, and housing projects.
Hunt Club was originally settled by Europeans in the early nineteenth century, and it was originally part of Gloucester Township. In 1950, the still largely rural area was annexed into the city of Ottawa. Development of the area began in the 1970s, and many houses and buildings in the area are from this period. It was designed as a bedroom community with little commercial space.
Sub neighbourhoods
(from west to east)
- Quinterra
- Hunt Club Woods
- Hunt Club Estate
- Western Community
See also
References
- 1 2 "Our Association". Hunt Club Community Association.
- ↑ Club, Hunt. "The Best Recruiters | Hunt Club". www.huntclub.com. Retrieved 2021-10-19.
- ↑ "Ottawa's Hunt Club Community - Our Area". hunt-club.ca. Archived from the original on 2020-06-14.
- ↑ Population calculated by combining Census Tracts 5050002.04, 5050002.06, 5050002.05 and 5050002.02, while removing dissemination blocks 35061248020, 35060875002 and 35061487015