Campanile Church and Court Yard, 1966
1 2021-04-14T22:19:21-07:00 Maddison Schmidt 4a0fdcb2a560b2c542180d9fd406e2047c70522c 38971 9 Campanile Church and court yard in front. Image: Hans-Ludwig Blohm. https://heritageottawa.org/news/campanile-church-federal-study-centre-future-uncertain. plain 2023-07-25T12:15:13-07:00 Maegen Sargent f8c37f900ecb77afe0a6ed383bd0b77ea6c1266bThis page is referenced by:
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History of Campanile
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A brief history of the development and uses of Campanile Church and complex.
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The Campanile Church is part of a complex built in 1965 commissioned by the Sisters of Congress of Notre Dame. The area has been known under many names including Campanile Campus, Campanile Complex, the Notre Dame Convent, or more recently the Federal Study Complex. It is located at 1495 Heron Road in Ottawa, Ontario. The complex was commissioned by the Sisters of the Congress of Notre Dame as the sisters were looking to expand their educational facilities and move from their existing facilities which had been their location for almost 100 years. They wanted to create an updated and modern location that was better suited for the current needs of the secondary school education system. The change was also highly motivated by the Catholic reforms of the Second Vatican Council which was the motivation behind numerous church updates and new constructions during the 1960s and 1970s. The church itself was composed of the original chapel that was used for the convent and the school. The building only became known as the Federal Study Centre when the complex was sold to the federal government of Canada in the early 1970s.
The church along with the rest of the complex was designed by Tim Murray. The Campanile Church was one of Murray's earliest projects of architectural significance. He continued to design other buildings in the Ottawa area, but this major project remains his largest commission. The church was the centre of the complex with twelve other buildings surrounding it. All the original buildings in the complex are currently recognised as having historical and architectural significance by the Federal Heritage Buildings Review Office. The complex was first recognised by this office in 2004, although there were attempts for it to be recognized much earlier. The main reasons for its consideration as significant include the building’s association with the Sisters of Congress of Notre Dame, its association with Tim Murray, and its association with the expansion of Ottawa along with the expansion of the federal government.
After the complex was built in 1965 the nuns remained there for only eight years. During these eight years an all-girls Catholic high school functioned from the space. In 1967 an all-boys high school moved in to share the space offered by Campanile. In 1973 Campanile was sold to the federal government due to financial issues. Some of these financial difficulties arose as a direct result of the Catholic schools’ private instruction of grades 11, 12, and 13, and therefore were not funded by the province of Ontario. As a result, private tuition was necessary to cover the cost associated with offering instruction to these grades. With fewer women interested in becoming nuns and lower levels of enrolment in the high school, funding the school and convent became more difficult. After selling the complex to the federal government the nuns rented a section of the complex until 1974 while waiting for either new missions or new residence.