PtboPics: St. Paddy's Day Parade Brought Smiles And Green Throughout Downtown

The sun was shining and a sea of green could be seen for as far as the eye could see this afternoon at the St. Patrick's Day Parade in downtown Peterborough. 

 

Peterborough Theatre Guild promoting their upcoming show "Urinetown"

[Contributed by PtboCanada's Julie Morris]

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Backroom Briefing Q: Is Ashburnham Drive A Rough Road to Tourism?

Q: Ashburnham Drive: Are there any plans to upgrade or repave this road in order to make it attractive for our visiting tourists? We seem to have an active tourism office, but when people actually visit they shouldn’t have their travel memory include a description of a poorly-maintained access road. —JC Gonder

Goyette: JC's concern is understandable, in that he and his associates at Promotion Marketing and Design and Whatever Solutions and Media on Pido Road have a direct interest in the state of a key access road to their offices.

The research shows that they are not alone. People care about the quality of their roads, and especially in four season climates. When surveyed on municipal services, people routinely rank roads as a key concern in terms of safety, speeding, repair, parking, snow removal, litter, drainage, runoff, sidewalks and accessibility. Cynical pragmatists have long contended that decisions related to highway repair were closely correlated with political partisan representation and the timing of elections. In some constituencies, good roads are a magnet for good votes.

Ashburnham Drive is a gateway to a surprisingly large number of City sites, including Ecology, Beavermead , Farmcrest, Eastgate and Walker Parks; The Trans Canada Trail; Rogers Cove; the PUC and Parks Canada buildings; Lock 20 and the nationally significant Liftlock; and Ashburnham Memorial Park and Peterborough Museum and Archives.

The heritage of the road is strongly tied to the former Village of Ashburnham, a community on the east bank of the Otonabee founded in 1859 and connected to Peterborough at the time by the Howe truss wooden bridge. The Village was annexed by the City of Peterborough on December 2, 1903—the result of a vote favoured by only 99 of 178 Village voters. The village Council itself was very cautious about its own road expenditures: the first sidewalks on today’s Hunter Street were approved on condition that they were limited to two wooden planks per side, and that the planks be laid parallel to the roadway rather than at more expensive right angles.

Traffic counts on Ashburnham Drive from Lansdowne East to Marsdale Drive undertaken last November indicate that the road is heavily used; the average weekly traffic count was 7,148 (northbound) and 7,463. (southbound) This year, during March and April when the roadway is vulnerable, commercial vehicles on Ashburnham will be restricted to half loads.

The approved 2012 City of Peterborough Capital Budget includes $3.8 million (2011 dollars) for major reconstruction of Ashburnham Drive from Lansdowne to Maria Street involving new asphalt pavement, concrete curbs and gutters, sidewalks, bicycle lanes and storm sewers, all of which will coincide with water main improvements to be undertaken by the Public Utilities Commission. The detailed design will be completed in 2013 and the construction completed in 2014.

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David Goyette is the Executive Assistant to Peterborough Mayor Daryl Bennett. Email your burning questions for David about City Hall to feedback@ptbocanada.com.

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WestJet Could Be Coming To Peterborough In 2013

WestJet employees have voted overwhelmingly to endorse the company's plans to launch a regional airline subsidiary starting in 2013 with smaller planes to be added to the fleet, according to this CBC story. And Peterborough is mentioned as one of the possible new destinations to be added in this CBC TV report...

[via David Feeley]

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"Foxfire" Film Shooting In Peterborough

[Chex Newswatch]

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PtboPic: Saturday Morning At The Canal

[via @AlanaCallan]

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Here's A Guy Taking A Snowshoe Run On A Peterborough Trail

He is fast.

[YouTube]

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Two New Shows Opened This Weekend At Art Gallery Of Peterborough & Artspace

Opening this past Friday evening were shows at Artspace and the Art Gallery of Peterborough. Artspace presents Are We There Yet, a group show, presenting with diverse work of Lauren Hall, Gareth Lichty and Sam Mogelonsky.

The large front space features a playful "rug" woven of garden hose. It's fun, plastic nature is a poke at our collected yerning for the perfect outdoor space. It's an interesting piece to walk around.

Also featured are interesting colourful channelled landscapes from Hall, who uses clear corregate and coloured powders to create "perfect sunsets" with parallel gradients of colour. Mogelonsky pieces these diverse works together with his neon title piece, "Wish You Were Here".

The show runs January 13th, 2012 to February 25th, 2012.   

See Artspace-arc.org for more information.
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At The Art Gallery of Peterborough, opening on Friday evening was a range of work connected throughout the public spaces. Titled Steaming Alterity, this presentation brings together the diverse work of artists Rebecca Belmore, Natalie Wood, Christina Zeidler, Emelie Chhangur and Johanna Householder.

The work these women make draws from themes of activism, places, internal context and self within a wider world. Using photography, video, collage and physical still-life, an adventure awaits the visitor. Plan on being generous with your time here.

The show runs January 13th to March 4th.

See Agp.on.ca for more information.

[Text and pic by PtboCanada's Jeffrey Macklin]


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51 Things We Hope To See In Peterborough In 2012

In no particular order, here we go...

 

1. A place(s) to play ping pong in downtown Peterborough.
2.
PCVS
3.
More hilarious tweets from @/PTBO_Y_U_NO.
4.
More jobs being created in Peterborough.
5.
Buses running later at night in Peterborough. It's near impossible to get a cab when the bars close. And we don't want to see people ever drinking and driving.
6.
More music and cultural festivals. The more, the merrier. (Our music scene is one of the best in Canada.)
7.
More people biking on Peterborough's streets and trails. More people biking in general.
8.
The Peterborough Petes in the playoffs.
9.
More great music acts at the likes of Historic Red Dog, Market Hall, Showplace, The Spill, Spanky's and Gordon Best.
10.
More plaid.
11.
An authentic Irish pub.
12.
PCVS
13.
More restaurants and businesses opening, and less closing.
14.
Less blackouts for no real reason.
15.
Reggie's launching a hot dog version of their burger.
16.
More tourists coming to our great city.
17.
More great anti-bullying programs in the city. More people standing up to bullies.
18.
More Creative Cocktails, which was one of the best things to come to Peterborough this year.
19.
More funny typos on signs.
20.
Continued generosity of Peterborough community.
21.
A continued resurgence of the downtown—and the continued good work of the DBIA.
22.
Continued transparency from city council, the Mayor's office and our tweeting Mayor, who has settled into the role nicely and is having a great first year in office.
23.
A couple town hall meetings. Or one. Hey, why not? Healthy thing to try to bring community together.
24.
People doing random things like dancing on bubble wrap.
25.
Another great Festival of Trees downtown.
26.
More Tom Phillips columns.
27.
More people trying breakfast at The Only Cafe. It's worth the wait.
28.
More readers submitting tips.
29.
More local people and businesses joining the Twitterverse.
30.
More parody accounts on Twitter. Good satire can be a great equalizer.
31.
Continued development of the Peterborough Wednesday Market and Saturday Farmer's Market.
32.
A splash pad at Nicholl's Oval.
33.
PCVS
34.
Peterborough Roller Derby taking off.
35.
Less domestics on police reports. Less drug busts. Less break and enters. Less stabbings. Less crime. More jobs.
36.
More flash mobs around Peterborough.
37.
CP Rail bridge gets fixed, allowing pedestrian walkway/bikeway again (and our shortcut back to East City)
38.
More Peterborough playlists.
39.
The return of 4 Dudes On The Balcony.
40.
More Stormtroopers. More Band Wagons.
41.
Continued impact/recognition of Peterborough's Creative Class.
42.
More shocked looks on the faces of visitors to our Zoo when they discover it's free.
43.
Peterborough Square and Portage Place making an Eighties comeback.
44.
Less complaining and whining about what's wrong with the city, and more solutions for how to fix things.
45.
More/continued attention to the amazing artists, musicians and athletes in this city.
46.
PCVS
47.
A show called Culturally Speaking on TV Cogeco as spinoff of Politically Speaking.
48.
The excellent owners of the now closed Have You Seen... returning with a new venture.
49.
More people visiting our awesome galleries and museums—the Canadian Canoe Museum is world class.
50. Not as many people wearing pajamas as outdoor wear.
51. A town square. Well, at least more discussion about it.

That's it, you rock.

What do you hope to see in Peterborough in 2012? Add to our comments section below.

Tip us at tips@ptbocanada.com. Follow us on Twitter @Ptbo_Canada.

Winter Parking Restrictions Have Started in Peterborough

Today marks the beginning of Winter parking restrictions in Peterborough.

  • From December 1- April 1, parking is prohibited on all City streets from 2:00 a.m. – 6:00 a.m. This allows better snow clearing of city streets and at a lower cost because equipment will not have to return to clear areas where vehicles were parked. The fine for a violation is $15.
  •  

  • During a snowstorm, when snow-clearing operations are underway, no stopping of a vehicle is permitted on any city street. Snow-clearing operations typically take place between midnight and 8 a.m. The fine is $50 for this violation and your vehicle will be towed. All vehicles will be towed to Morrow Park and must be claimed the following day. After 24hrs all unclaimed vehicles will be towed to an impound yard at the owners expense.

Where does that leave you to park? Free overnight parking is allowed at all Municipal parking lots such as the King Street Parkade and Simcoe Parking Garage. Vehicles parked overnight at either parking garage can obtain a gate arm ticket upon entry to the garage to be used for a free transit trip home.

So remember the rule of thumb... no parking any time of the year on city streets for longer than 3 hours, except where a sign indicates otherwise. If you still have questions, call Parking at 705-742-7777 ext. 2802.

[Contributed by PtboCanada's Evan Holt]

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PtboPics: Downtown There's Ice Sculptures, Reindeer, BeaverTails, An Ice Rink & Free Parking

 

[pictures by PtboCanada's Christi Morton]

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