Alta Vista Drive

Alta Vista Drive is a suburban road in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It runs from Bank Street in the south to Industrial Avenue in the north covering the neighbourhoods of Ridgemont, Alta Vista and Riverview.

Alta Vista was created as the result of major residential developments in the region following World War II. It was originally named Churchill Avenue but changed names as the result of Ottawa annexing that part of Gloucester Township (there was already a Churchill Avenue in Ottawa). The first stretch was built between Smyth Road and Kilborn Avenue in 1939.

Alta Vista originally ran past Industrial and connected with the Vanier Parkway, but the intersection, which also involved Riverside Drive was re-aligned in 1986. Furthermore, in the 1990s, Alta Vista gained bicycle lanes along its entire stretch. Alta Vista is so named for its general height, as the neighbourhoods it runs through are generally higher than the rest of the city (the name means "a view from above" or "high view").

For the most part, Alta Vista runs through residential areas, and it is a two to four-lane minor arterial road, with a speed limit of 50 km/h (31 mph). The area consists mostly of single-home houses, with the exception of two apartment-style, low-rent buildings named the "Alta Vista Towers" located in the north near Industrial Avenue and the Alta Vista Plaza. Alta Vista Drive consists of mixed housing, ranging from small modest houses in the northern parts, to more expensive, small Colonial-style houses and bungalows in the area immediately south to Smyth Road.

The road is characterized by large trees along both sides and the Via Rail train track running parallel between Alta Vista Drive and Riverside Drive from Industrial Avenue to Smyth Road.

Alta Vista is home to the National Defence Medical Centre, Canadian Pharmacists Association, Canadian Blood Services, Canadian Dental Association, Ontario Medical Association, the Canadian Medical Association, and its affiliate MD Management, and the Conference Board of Canada, located in the area north of the Smyth Road intersection in a stretch of the road that is not residential, as well as Ridgemont High School and St. Patrick's High School located south from Smyth Road. The area is home to the Anglican Church St. Thomas the Apostle, the United Church Rideau Park, and the Presbyterian Church St. Timothy's. There is one branch of the Ottawa Library and two shopping centres, one being at the northern-most stretch near Industrial Avenue, and the other at the southern-most section abutting Bank Street.

Roads in Ottawa
Provincial Highways
  • 7
  • 416
  • 417
Major Arteries
  • 4th Line
  • Tenth Line
  • Airport
  • Albion
  • Bank
  • Baseline
  • Blair
  • Bronson
  • Carling
  • Carp
  • Cedarview
  • Conroy
  • Donnelly
  • Dwyer Hill
  • Eagleson
  • Elgin
  • Fallowfield
  • Greenbank
  • Hazeldean
  • Heron
  • Hunt Club
  • Innes
  • King Edward
  • March
  • Merivale
  • Mitch Owens
  • Moodie
  • Montreal
  • Parkdale
  • Prince of Wales
  • Regional Road 174
  • Richmond
  • Rideau
  • River
  • Riverside
  • Robertson
  • St. Joseph
  • St. Laurent
  • Strandherd
  • Terry Fox
  • Vanier
  • Walkley
  • Wellington
  • Woodroffe
Collectors/Secondary Arteries
  • Albert
  • Alta Vista
  • Bankfield
  • Beechwood
  • Booth
  • Brookfield
  • Gladstone
  • Hawthorne
  • Hog's Back
  • Jockvale
  • Katimavik
  • Kent
  • Laurier
  • Lees
  • Leitrim
  • Main
  • Maitland
  • Meadowlands
  • Metcalfe
  • Nicholas
  • North Gower
  • O'Connor
  • Old Prescott
  • Osgoode Main
  • Pinecrest
  • Preston
  • Russell
  • Slater
  • Smyth
  • Somerset
  • Sparks
  • St. Patrick
  • Sussex
  • Tremblay
  • Trim
Federal arteries
  • Aviation
  • Colonel By
  • Island Park
  • Rockcliffe
  • Sir John A. Macdonald
  • Queen Elizabeth
Roads in Ontario

Famous quotes containing the words vista and/or drive:

    The day has gone by into the dim vista of the past when idleness was considered a virtue in woman.
    Caroline A. Huling (1857–1941)

    To drive Paul out of any lumber camp
    All that was needed was to say to him,
    “How is the wife, Paul?” and he’d disappear.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)