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Pimisi station

Coordinates: 45°24′50″N 75°42′48″W / 45.41389°N 75.71333°W / 45.41389; -75.71333
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(Redirected from Lebreton Station)
Pimisi
O-Train station
General information
LocationBooth Street, Ottawa, Ontario
Canada
Coordinates45°24′50″N 75°42′48″W / 45.41389°N 75.71333°W / 45.41389; -75.71333
Owned byOC Transpo
Platforms2 (O-Train), 2 (bus)
Tracks2
Construction
Structure typeUnderpass
Bicycle facilitiesYes
AccessibleYes
History
Opened1983 (Transitway)
September 14, 2019 (O-Train)[1]
Rebuilt2015–2019
Previous namesLeBreton
Services
Preceding station OC Transpo Following station
Bayview Line 1 Lyon
toward Blair

Pimisi is a light rail station on the Ottawa Confederation Line as part of the O-Train network.

Location

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The stop is located under Booth Street in LeBreton Flats.[2] and opened on September 14, 2019.[3] It serves the redeveloped flats area, including the New Central Library, Chinatown, and Little Italy.

History

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The Transitway station was originally named LeBreton. By proposal of the local Algonquin leaders it was renamed "Pimisi" (Algonquin: eel) when it was rebuilt to accommodate the O-Train.[4]

Layout

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The station features an island platform located at grade. Unusually, the platform level is an intermediate level. Above it, two entrance buildings with entrance barriers are located on either side of Booth Street. Below the platform, a concourse with its own ticket barrier gives access to the green space and plaza north of the station and to Albert Street.

The station features several artworks by Algonquin artists. Nadia Myre's work Eel Spirit, Basket, and Fence[5] is a trilogy consisting of two sculptures (the eel and basket) located in the plaza north of the station, and a series of forest designs on the glass platform walls. The sculpture Algonquin Moose by Simon Brascoupé is also located in the plaza, while another work by him, Algonquin Birch Bark Biting Designs, is located on the glass wall of the entrance on the west side of Booth Street. Finally, Màmawi: Together[6] is a work featuring 100 wooden paddles painted by four Algonquin artists mentored by Brascoupé—Emily Brascoupé-Hoefler, Doreen Stevens, Sherry-Ann Rodgers, and Sylvia Tennisco—as well as Algonquin community members who participated in workshops led by these artists.[7] It is suspended above the platform.

Platform level

Service

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The following routes serve Pimisi station as of October 6, 2019:[8]

O-Train
 E1  Shuttle Express
 R1   R2  O-Train replacement bus routes
 98   39  Rapid routes
 N75  Night routes
 40   11  Frequent routes
 55   162  Local routes
 284  Connexion routes
 405  300s: Shopper routes
400s: Event routes
600s: School routes
Additional info:
  • Line 1: O-Train Confederation Line
  • Route 2: Trillium Line (currently a bus route)
     
  • Routes 5 to 99: Custom routing that connects to Line 1 and/or Route 2
  • Routes 100 to 199: Custom routing that does not connect to Line 1 and/or Route 2
  • Routes 200 to 299: Connexion (peak-period only routes that connect to the O-Train)
  • Routes 301 to 305: Shopper Routes (limited rural service)
  • Routes 404 to 406: Canadian Tire Centre events
  • Routes 450 to 456: Lansdowne Park events
  • Routes 602 to 698: School Routes
     
  • Route R1: replaces Line 1 when out of service
  • Route R2: alternative name for current Route 2
  • Routes N39 to N97: night service (replaces Line 1)
  • White backgrounds: service may be limited
     
  • Last two digits represent service area:
Stop Routes
East O-Train
West O-Train
A Booth St. North  61   63   66   75   85 
B Booth St. South  61   63   66   75   85 
C Albert St. West  R1   16   N57   N61   N75 
D Albert St. East  R1   16   N57   N61   N75 

References

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  1. ^ Watson, Jim (August 23, 2019). "Line 1 opens on Sept. 14". octranspo.com. Retrieved August 23, 2019.
  2. ^ "Expanding O-Train Service". OC Transpo. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  3. ^ "Overview | Pimisi | The Build | Ottawa Confederation Line". www.ligneconfederationline.ca. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  4. ^ "'Pimisi' label for LeBreton transit station gets approval". Ottawa Citizen. Archived from the original on August 21, 2013.
  5. ^ "aabaakwad Speakers". Art Gallery of Ontario. Retrieved September 16, 2019.
  6. ^ Brascoupé, Simon. "About | Màmawi : Together". Retrieved September 16, 2019.
  7. ^ "Confederation Line's Pimisi Station Painted Paddle Project" (PDF). Algonquins of Ontario. Retrieved September 16, 2019.
  8. ^ "Pimisi | OC Transpo". Retrieved October 10, 2019.