|
Ottawa,
Canada
Canadian Parliament, Hull, Quebec
The capital of the second biggest
country on the planet, OTTAWA struggles with its reputation as a
bureaucratic labyrinth of little charm and character. The problem
is that many Canadians who aren't federal employees - and even some
who are - blame the city for all the country's woes. All too aware
of this, the Canadian government have spent lashings of dollars
to turn Ottawa into "a city of urban grace in which all Canadians
can take pride" - so goes the promotional literature, but predictably
this very investment is often resented. Furthermore, the hostility
is deeply rooted, dating back as far as 1857 when Queen Victoria,
inspired by some genteel watercolours, declared Ottawa the capital,
leaving Montréal and Toronto smarting at their rebuff.
In truth, Ottawa is neither grandiose
nor tedious, but a lively cosmopolitan city of 330,000 with a clutch
of outstanding national museums , a pleasant riverside setting and
superb cultural facilities like the National Arts Centre, plus acres
of parks and gardens and miles of bicycle and jogging paths. It
also possesses lots of good hotels and B&Bs and a busy café-bar
and restaurant scene - enough to keep the most diligent sightseer
going for a day or three, maybe more. Here too, for once in English-speaking
Ontario, Canada's bilingual laws make sense: Québec's Hull
is just across the river and on the streets of Ottawa you'll hear
as much French as English.
Canada Luxury Hotels
takes the hassle out of finding the perfect city
escape, romantic getaway or five-star business accomodation. See
our regularly updated hand-picked list of top luxury
destinations in Canada.
|