Saturday, October 4, 2014

More Excessive Honouring of China in Ottawa: Paving Stones/ the Chinese Zodiac

More Excessive Honouring of Beijing

[Chinese community et al], Ottawa: Paving Stones/ the Chinese Zodiac

Pedestrians on the newly redone stretch of Somerset St. in Chinatown between Booth and Preston, are in for a surprise. The sidewalk is paved in block precast concrete squares with a textured surface finish.
For some time, walkers may have noticed some squares marked thus:
These red dots marked where a few blocks were to be removed and replaced by a same size granite square inscribed with a shallow bas relief of a stylized Asian zodiac animal.
These alter the street's ambiance. The zodiac is repeated four times: twice on the south side, going from Preston up to Booth; and twice on the north side, going from Booth down to Preston. (There is a spare set in storage for replacements).
Two years ago, while in Boston, I saw a number of granite insets in their pavers near their Chinatown arch:
These became the pattern for Ottawa Chinatown.
Rather than a Chinese character that was not very engaging to non-Chinese, I suggested to the streetscaping public advisory committee that we employ similar blocks along the sidewalk, but with the zodiac animals, which will eventually cause children to demand to be walked along Somerset. Somewhat skeptical, the City challenged me to bring  them a cost. I tried getting prices from granite counter-top makers, but they don’t normally carve their counters. At last, I asked cj fleury, who did the carved granite sculptures on Preston, and she directed me to tombstone makers, who carve all sorts of things into granite, from jpegs, using computer-driven routers. I got three prices, and the city agreed in less than 30 seconds that they could be funded from the landscaping budget.
Initial designs were zodiac clip art from the web, which eventually became the illustrations by dint of repeated fixes. The first decision was whether to go with outline figures:
or bas-relief figures, such as this chicken:
The Chinatown BIA preferred the bas-relief, and worked with the contractors to refine the figures. The final stones came from George Brown & Sons, memorial makers, at the corner of Gladstone and Bronson, so they are even “local”.
Care had to be taken to ensure that the Rat and Mouse and Snake were not so realistic as to be frightening or off-putting to visitors. The Rat become cartooned and the other figures stylized the same way, acceptable to a wide group of interests. Care was still required in placement to make sure there wasn’t some inadvertent connection between a symbol and the adjacent business, whether viewed from an Asian cultural view or western view.
Here are some of the shallow bas-relief figures you will see on the sidewalk. For the rest, you’ll have to come out to see for yourself !
Genuine Asian Zodiac figure for Rat
A rooster designed by a committee …
Beware, there be dragons in Chinatown !

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