- City (2001)
- Canadian CD Rank
- Canadian Municipal Rank
- Density
Gatineau (2001 census population 226,296) is a city in western Quebec, Canada. It is situated on the northern bank of the Ottawa River, immediately across from Ottawa, Ontario, and is located within Canada's National Capital Region. Ottawa and Gatineau comprise a single Census Metropolitan Area.
The former City of Gatineau was itself the product of an amalgamation on January 1, 1975, when the municipalities of Gatineau, Pointe-Gatineau, Touraine, Templeton, Templeton-Ouest and Templeton-Est were merged in an effort to improve municipal services and coordinate urban growth. With the 1975 amalgamation, Gatineau became the largest city in the Outaouais. Despite the 1989 separation of the Cantley area from the (now former) City of Gatineau, Gatineau remained the fifth largest municipality in Quebec by population, behind Montreal, Laval, Quebec City and Longueuil.
Most of the citizens of the new city live in the urban cores of Aylmer, Hull and the former Gatineau. Buckingham and Masson-Angers are more rural communities.
On June 20, 2004, the current Liberal government of Quebec fulfilled a campaign promise by holding a referendum vote, giving the residents of the former cities the choice of separating from Gatineau. In order to separate, the residents of a former city required a double-win: more than 50% of the vote representing at least 35% of the electorate. The majority of the votes cast in Aylmer and Masson-Angers were in favour of separation, but they did not represent at least 35% of the electorate in their respective communities. The majority of voters in Buckingham and Hull, chose to remain part of Gatineau. The participation was very low, and the status quo can be partly attributed to the indifference of the citizens. There was no referendum in the former city of Gatineau.
It was originally reported that the residents of Masson-Angers were able to meet the 50%-35% rule, and that they would be separating from Gatineau. However, a recount caused seventeen votes to be rejected. Because of this, the number of votes cast in favour of separation was fifteen votes short of being at least 35% of the electorate. As a result, the city of Gatineau will remain intact.
A number of federal and provincial government offices are located in Gatineau, due to its proximity to the national capital, and its status as the main town of the Outaouais region of Quebec.
A policy of the federal government to distribute federal jobs on both sides of the Ottawa River led to the construction of several massive office towers to house federal civil servants in what was then Hull (now Hull sector in Gatineau); the largest of these are Place du Portage and Place du Centre, occupying part of what had been the downtown core of Hull.
There are many parks. Some of them are well gardened playgrounds or resting spaces while others, like Lac Beauchamp Park, are relatively wild green areas which often merge with the woods and fields of the surrounding municipalities. Streams of all sizes run through these natural expanses. Most of the city is on level ground but the Northern and Eastern parts lie on the beginnings of the foothills of the massive Canadian Shield, or Laurentian mountains. These are the "Gatineau Hills", and are visible in the background of the companion picture. One of Gatineau's urban parks, Jacques Cartier park is used by the National Capital Commission during the popular festival, Winterlude.
It is also the home of two provincial junior colleges (or CEGEPs): the francophone CEGEP de l'Outaouais and the anglophone Heritage College.
Ottawa and Gatineau have two distinct bus-based public transit systems, OC Transpo and the Société de transport de l'Outaouais, with different fare structures and connections only in the downtown cores of the two municipalities. Tickets are not interchangeable between the two, and use of passes and transfers from one system to the other can require payment of a surcharge on certain routes (such as express lines).
Many Gatineau highways and major arteries feed directly into the bridges crossing over to Ottawa, but once there the roads land into the dense downtown grid or into residential areas, with no easy connection to the main highway in Ottawa, the East-West 417 or Queensway. This difficulty is further magnified by the lack of a major highway on the Quebec side of the Ottawa River connecting Gatineau to the major city of Montreal, Quebec; most travellers from Gatineau to Montreal first cross over to Ottawa, and use Ontario highways to access Montreal. However, it is expected that Quebec Autoroute 50's gap between Gatineau and Lachute will be completed by 2010, making a new link between Gatineau and the Laurentians popular tourist area, and may serve as part of a Montreal by-pass by the north shore for Outaouais residents.
Here is the list of politicians leading the city of Gatineau which includes the mayor and 17 councillors.
Marc Bureau (since November 2005)
Ward 1 (Aylmer): Frank Therien
Ward 2 (Lucerne) : Andre Laframboise
Ward 3 (Deschenes) : Alain Riel
Ward 4 (Val-Tetreau) : Alain Pilon
Ward 5 (Wright-Parc-de-la-Montagne) : Patrice Martin
Ward 6 (L'Oree du Parc) : Louise Poirier
Ward 7 (Saint-Raymond-Vanier) : Pierre Phillion
Ward 8 (Hull) : Denise Laferriere
Ward 9 (Limbour) : Simon Racine
Ward 10 (Riverains) : Denis Tasse
Ward 11 (Promenades) : Luc Angers
Ward 12 (Versant) : Joseph De Sylva
Ward 13 (Bellevue) : Richard Cote
Ward 14 (Lac-Beauchamp) : Aurele Desjardins
Ward 15 (la Riviere-Blanche) : Yvon Boucher
Ward 16 (Masson-Angers) : Luc Montreuil
Ward 17 (Buckingham) : Jocelyne Houle
Gatineau is also served primarily by daily newspapers published in Ottawa, including the French Le Droit and the English Ottawa Citizen, although a number of weekly community newspapers are published in Gatineau.
See List of Ottawa media outlets.
Racial Groups
Religious Denomination
Language Spoken at Home
| North: Chelsea, Cantley, Val-des-Monts, L'Ange-Gardien | ||
| West: Pontiac | Gatineau | East: Mayo, Lochaber-Partie-Ouest |
| South: Ottawa |
Cities in Quebec | West Quebec | Ottawa
Gatineau | Gatineau | Gatineau | Gatineau | Gatineau | ガティノー | Gatineau (Quebec) | Gatineau | Gatineau
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"Gatineau, Quebec".
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