Contest open: city nails down Bank St public art process

Village bike rack design winners to get $1500 each; city sets May 22 deadline

A requirement that bike racks must “reflect the community” is as close as gays got to a recognition from the City of Ottawa in its call to artists. Nonetheless, the queer community will be able to make comments on proposed designs at a public meeting, according to documents released Apr 11.

Anyone living within 150 km of Ottawa — both established artists and scene newcomers — can submit up to two drawings for consideration. Entries will be judged on artistic merit, durability and “timelessness” of design. Finalists will be presented at an open house in the second or third week of June.

Winning designs will be cut from steel to make bike racks, part of the city’s first “functional art” program. Up to 30 designs will be chosen to spruce up 90 bike racks between Laurier and the Queensway.

The project is part of a redevelopment strategy spurred by the closure of Bank St starting this spring to replace ailing pipes below the street’s surface. That process has already been completed for the part of Bank St that lies between Wellington and Laurier.

Download the submission package (PDF files):

Marcus McCann

Marcus McCann is an employment and human rights lawyer, member of Queers Crash the Beat, and a part owner of Glad Day Bookshop. Before becoming a lawyer, he was the managing editor of Xtra in Toronto and Ottawa.

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Politics, Culture, Power, Quebec, Ottawa, Canada, Arts

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