Ottawa·Photos

Kìwekì Point reopens as 'a place that invites reflection, connection and renewal'

The National Capital Commission has officially reopened Kìwekì Point overlooking the Ottawa River, finalizing a redevelopment project a decade in the making.

New pedestrian bridge connects former Nepean Point to Major's Hill Park

People look over a river between two cities on a cloudy spring day.
Visitors look out over the Ottawa River and the skylines of Ottawa and Gatineau, Que., from the reopened Kìwekì Point on Friday. (Antoine Fontaine/Radio-Canada)

The National Capital Commission (NCC) officially reopened Kìwekì Point on Friday, finalizing a downtown Ottawa redevelopment a decade in the making.

Planning for what used to be known as Nepean Point beside the National Gallery of Canada began in 2014 and, after a design was chosen, the demolition of the old lookout began in 2019.

That plan included a new pedestrian bridge connecting the lookout to Major's Hill Park to the south. 

Someone rides a bike on a pedestrian bridge on a cloudy spring day.
A cyclist crosses the Pìdàban Passage footbridge between Kìwekì Point and Major's Hill Park. (Antoine Fontaine/Radio-Canada)

In 2022, the lookout and pedestrian bridge were given Algonquin names: The lookout was renamed Kìwekì Point (pronounced key-WHECK-ee), and the bridge was dubbed Pìdàban Passage (pronounced pee-DAH-ben).

Kìwekì is an Algonquin word meaning "returning to one's homeland," and Pìdàban is the word for "dawn."

A white path climbs a green field on an overcast day.
Kìwekì Point will be open year-round and features an accessible path. (Nkele Martin/CBC)

The $45-million renovation offered a way to highlight Algonquin voices, showcase elements of Algonquin culture and language, and give people visiting the site a chance to learn more about the Algonquin Nation, the NCC wrote in a news release at the time.

"Together we've created something truly special. A place that invites reflection, connection and renewal," said Norm Odjik, director general of the Algonquin Anishinābeg Nation Tribal Council, at Friday's unveiling.

Ottawa sits on unceded Algonquin territory. Kìwekì Point overlooks the Kichi Sibi — or the Ottawa River as it later became known — an important Indigenous travel and trading route connecting to the nearby Rideau and Gatineau rivers.

Parliament Hill is seen from a distance. A statue of a bird in an Indigenous style is seen in the foreground.
Kìwekì Point features several animal sculptures including this bird. (Antoine Fontaine/Radio-Canada)
Someone crosses a pedestrian bridge on a sunny spring day.
A visitor crosses the Pìdàban Passage footbridge between Kìwekì Point and Major's Hill Park. (Antoine Fontaine/Radio-Canada)
A statue of an Indigenous man looking into the distance.
The Kichi Zïbï Innini (Great River Man) statue, created in 1918, has been moved back to Kìwekì Point from Major's Hill Park. (Nkele Martin/CBC)
A man bikes past a statue on an overcast day. The statue depicts a man in a hat and cape raising a cross.
This Samuel De Champlain statue was moved from the apex of Kìwekì Point to the landscape below. (Nkele Martin/CBC)

With files from Nkele Martin and Radio-Canada's Antoine Fontaine