Winter activities in the works for popular Centretown Park

By Brett Throop and Kyle Duggan

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Mary O’Reilly, a student at Algonquin College.

 

The stairs may be closed for the winter but the park isn't.

The stairs may be closed for the winter but the park isn’t.

Children still come to the park in the winter.

Clearing the snow off the slide after Saturday’s snowfall.

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Snow covered.

 

Christina Marchant, director of Community Health Promotion at Centretown Community Health Centre

Mary O’Reilly, a student at Algonquin College.

A Dundonald Park working group is urging people to come out and play in the park during the winter months.

The park, a century-old Centretown landmark on Somerset Street at Bay Street, is a hub for community activities in the summer and one of the most trodden parks in the city. But when the mercury plummets, the visitors dwindle, a 2012 report by a Toronto-based urban consulting firm found.

The report researched use of the park and how to improve it. Among other things, it found the park sees about six times fewer visitors in winter.

“We are really encouraging people to keep using their community park,” said Christina Marchant, director of Community Health Promotion at Centretown Community Health Centre. The centre works closely with the Dundonald Park working group, which is in charge of getting more visitors to the park based on recommendations from the report.

By Brett Throop

Clearing the slide after Saturday’s snowfall.

The working group is looking at activities such as cross-country ski and show-shoe lessons, Chinese New Year celebrations and a winter carnival. The carnival could include a snowman making competition, roasted-chestnut vendors and a park-lighting celebration.

During summer, the park’s calendar is filled with daily tai chi classes, children’s music programs, line and folk dancing and movie nights. But there is only one listing for November and December on the park’s online calendar of events: a free weekly community meal held by Food Not Bombs.

“When it gets to be winter we all want to cocoon a bit more and then our physical activity levels can go down,” Marchant said. “That’s not very healthy for us.”

Marchant said that social isolation is greater in winter when people spend more time indoors, and that isolation is a year-round issue for many in Centretown who face language and income barriers.

“Getting people out into the park in the winter is a way to break some of that isolation, maybe make some friends and basically support people’s mental health,” she said.

Since new activities aren’t expected on the calendar this year, Marchant said the focus is currently on getting people to make their own fun.

A group of Algonquin College students is working with the health centre to develop posters to encourage people to enjoy classic winter activities like making snowmen and snow angels in the park.

“Once you’re moving and running around and having fun, you don’t feel the cold anymore,” said Mary O’Reilly, one of the students who designed the posters. “We don’t get enough sunlight, so having access to sunlight at all is very beneficial for your mood and getting out and being with people does the same.”

Marchant said the health centre could encourage parents to take their children to play in the park, when their parent-child drop-in is not offered.

“It takes time to change attitudes,” Marchant said. There needs to be a change in what people see as a good time to be in the park and more willingness to brave the cold, according to Marchant.

The working group is scheduled to address winter usage of the park at its next meeting in January.

Click to view the map of skating rinks in Ottawa

Click to view the map of skating rinks in Ottawa

Click to view a map of sledding hills in Ottawa

Click to view a map of sledding hills in Ottawa

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With files from Kyle Duggan

Author: Brett Throop

Brett entered the Master of Journalism program at Carleton University after earning a BA in Canadian Studies from Trent University. There, he completed an honours thesis examining winter in Canadian newspaper discourse. He got a start in broadcasting with Trent Radio and for three years reported for Trent’s Arthur Newspaper. His writing has appeared in The Globe and Mail. He likes long walks in the snow.

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