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・ Placebo-controlled study
・ Placedo Creek
・ Place de la Bastille
・ Place de la Bataille-de-Stalingrad
・ Place de la Bourse
・ Place de la Comédie
・ Place de la Concorde
・ Place De La Concorde (concert)
・ Place de la Concorde (painting)
・ Place de la Musique
・ Place de la Nation
・ Place de la République
・ Place de la République (disambiguation)
・ Place de la République, Lyon
・ Place de la Trinité
Place de Ville
・ Place de Wagram
・ Place Denfert-Rochereau
・ Place des Arts
・ Place des Arts (Coquitlam)
・ Place des Cordeliers à Lyon
・ Place des Célestins
・ Place des Fêtes (Paris Métro)
・ Place des Jacobins
・ Place des Martyres (paintings)
・ Place des Martyrs
・ Place des Martyrs, Brussels
・ Place des Martyrs, Luxembourg
・ Place des Pyramides
・ Place des Quinconces


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Place de Ville : ウィキペディア英語版
Place de Ville

Place de Ville is a complex of office towers in downtown Ottawa, Canada. It consists of four office buildings, Place de Ville A, B, and C, and the 'Podium' building, as well as two large hotels, the Ottawa Delta City Centre (411 rooms) and Ottawa Marriott Hotel (487 rooms) as well as the city's largest underground parking garage with space for 974 cars. The buildings are linked by an underground shopping complex. Place de Ville C is the tallest building in Ottawa. It was once advertised as "Ottawa's glittering answer to the Toronto Dominion Centre and Place Ville Marie".
==History and development==

The complex is located in downtown Ottawa on Albert Street between Kent Street and Lyon. Towers A and B are located on the south side of Queen Street while tower C is on the north of Queen. The buildings are mostly home to various federal government workers, with the Department of Transport, headquartered in Tower C, being the largest tenant.
For almost a century the area had been home to the city's streetcar garages. The streetcar system was closed in 1959. The land was purchased later by developer Robert Campeau. He conceived an ambitious plan to recentre Ottawa's downtown on the site. The scheme faced several barriers, the most important of which was that for many years buildings in downtown Ottawa faced a 45.7 metre (150 foot) height restriction so the Peace Tower would dominate the skyline. Despite strong opposition from Ottawa mayor Charlotte Whitton, the rule was changed to allow the only somewhat taller Towers A and B to be constructed. These two towers were completed in 1968. That same year Campeau began lobbying to build the much taller Tower C. Originally hoping to build a 145-metre (475 foot) tower (which would have made it about 42 storeys), although approved by the city, the National Capital Commission allowed it to only be 112 metres (367 feet) (29 storeys), but it was, and remains, the tallest building in the city.
In the early 1980s Campeau proposed building a fourth even taller tower but a deep recession and a glut of Ottawa office space ended these plans. The buildings also began to suffer a variety of problems including asbestos, mould, a fire and allegations of Sick Building Syndrome. In the late 1980s Towers A and B were gutted and completely renovated. Campeau's business empire was also struggling and after failed expansion attempts in the United States his company collapsed. In 1996 its remnants, including Place de Ville, were bought by the Reichmann's Olympia and York (O&Y).
In 2000 O&Y announced that work would begin on a third phase of the Place de Ville complex. This would consist of two new towers one 18 storeys and the other 12. They would be built on the large parking lot across from Tower B. Several other downtown building projects and another economic downturn put these plans on hold, however. In February 2005 O&Y announced it would be selling most of its Canadian holdings, including Place de Ville.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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