fbpx
Wikipedia

Gatineau

Gatineau (/ˈɡætɪn/ GAT-in-oh; French: [ɡatino]) is a city in southwestern Quebec, Canada. It is located on the northern bank of the Ottawa River, immediately across from Ottawa, Ontario. Gatineau is the largest city in the Outaouais administrative region of Quebec and is also part of Canada's National Capital Region. As of 2021, Gatineau is the fourth-largest city in Quebec with a population of 291,041,[6][7] and it is part of the Ottawa-Gatineau census metropolitan area with a population of 1,488,307 making it the fourth largest in Canada.[8][9][10]

Gatineau
Ville de Gatineau
Ville de Gatineau
Clockwise from top left: Canadian Museum of History, downtown, Ottawa River, Rue de l'Hôtel-de-Ville, and Macdonald-Cartier Bridge.
Nickname: 
G-town
Motto(s): 
Fortunae meae, multorum faber[1] ("Maker of my fate and that of many others")
Location of Gatineau (red) with adjacent municipalities
Gatineau
Location of Gatineau in Quebec
Coordinates: 45°29′N 75°39′W / 45.483°N 75.650°W / 45.483; -75.650[2]
CountryCanada
ProvinceQuebec
RegionOutaouais
RCMNone
Constituted1 January 2002
Government
 • TypeGatineau City Council
 • MayorFrance Bélisle
 • Federal ridingGatineau / Hull—Aylmer / Pontiac / Argenteuil—La Petite-Nation
 • Prov. ridingChapleau / Gatineau / Hull / Papineau / Pontiac
Area
 • City381.30 km2 (147.22 sq mi)
 • Land342.98 km2 (132.43 sq mi)
 • Metro2,999.90 km2 (1,158.27 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)[6]
 • City291,041
 • Density773.7/km2 (2,004/sq mi)
 • Metro
1,488,307
 • Metro density104.8/km2 (271/sq mi)
 • Pop 2011–2016
5.4%
 • Dwellings
125,608
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
Postal code(s)
Area codes819, 873
GDP Per CapitaCAD$ 38 079 (2018)
Websitewww.gatineau.ca

Gatineau is coextensive with a territory equivalent to a regional county municipality (TE) and census division (CD) of the same name, whose geographical code is 81. It is the seat of the judicial district of Hull.[11]

It is also the most bilingual (French-English) city in Canada.[12]

Toponomy edit

In 1613, during his first passage on the Ottawa River, the great explorer Samuel de Champlain was the first European to speak of "the river that comes from the north", traveled for millennia by Aboriginals, but he did not name it. In 1721, Canadian surveyor Noël Beaupré recorded the river, but did not give it a name. In short, the name Gatineau was not used in New France.[13]

In fact, it was not until 1783 that the river was mentioned as Lettinoe in a report by Lieutenant David Jones to the Governor of Quebec, Sir Frederic Haldimand. In 1817, a map by Theodore Davis shows Gatteno, a name taken up with Gatino, Gateno and Gattino on plans by Philemon Wright, the founder of Hull Township, and by Lieutenant-Colonel John By, the engineer responsible for building the Rideau Canal.

It was not until 1821 that the name Gatineau first appeared on a map of Nepean Township, Ontario. The same name appears again on William Henderson's map of 1831, and on another drawn thirty years later by surveyor Thomas Devine. Thereafter, the river was always referred to as the Gatineau.[13]

There are two hypotheses to explain the origin of the city's name. It would be either of Indigenous origin or of French origin:

  1. The name of the river and the city would come from the Anishinaabemowin (language of the Algonquin Anishinaabeg) Tenagatino Zibi, according to the elders of Kitigan Zibi.[14]
  2. In his 1889 article published in the Echo de la Gatineau,[15] Benjamin Sulte wrote: "One hundred years ago, the Gatineau family was extinct, or thereabouts; it is hardly likely that we waited for its disappearance to consecrate the memory of the three or four fur traders it produced. The custom must have been established during the lifetime of these men, and because they traded in these places. Of the latter fact, for instance, I am not certain." In his own words, Sulte writes that he is creating a myth and that the story that the Gatineau family gave the river its name is a myth, invented by Sulte himself. According to Sulte, the name Gatineau comes from the Gastineau family - not Gatineau - one of its members, Nicolas Gastineau sieur Duplessis (1627-1689).[16][17]

History edit

 
Hull (Lower Canada) on the Ottawa River; at the Chaudier [sic] Falls, 1830, by Thomas Burrowes. Chaudière Falls and Bytown are visible in the background.

Prior to European settlement, the Gatineau area was inhabited by Anishinaabe peoples including the Algonquins.[18] The current city of Gatineau is centred on an area formerly called Hull. It is the oldest European colonial settlement in the National Capital Region, but this area was essentially not developed by Europeans until after the American Revolutionary War, when the Crown granted land through the Leaders and Associates [19] program of the Lower Canada Executive, which brought settlement in the Ottawa Valley.[20]

Hull was founded on the north shore of the Ottawa River in 1800 by Philemon Wright at the portage around the Chaudière Falls, just upstream (or west) from the confluence of the Gatineau and Rideau rivers with the Ottawa River. Wright brought his family, four other families, and twenty-five (or 33, according to Philemon's own conflicting reports) labourers[21] with the hope of establishing an agricultural community, but by 1806, Wright and his family took advantage of the large forest stands and began the Ottawa River timber trade, floating the first square timber raft down the Ottawa River to Québec City. The original settlement was called Wright's Town, Lower Canada, and was later renamed as Hull, when it was incorporated in 1875. Bytown, founded in 1832, stood across the river from Wright's Town. In 2002, after amalgamation, Hull became part of a larger jurisdiction named the City of Gatineau.

In 1820, before immigrants from Ireland and Great Britain arrived in great numbers, Hull Township had a population of 707, including 365 men, 113 women, and 229 children. The high number of men were related to workers in the lumber trade. In 1824, there were 106 families and 803 persons. During the rest of the 1820s, the population of Hull doubled, with the arrival of Protestant immigrants from Ulster, now Northern Ireland. By 1851, the population of the County of Ottawa was 11,104, of which 2,811 lived in Hull. By comparison, Bytown had a population of 7,760 in 1851. By 1861, Ottawa County had a population of 15,671, of which 3,711 lived in Hull.

Gradually French Canadians also migrated to the township; their proportion of the population increased from 10% in 1850, to 50% in 1870, and 90% in 1920.[22] Industrial development in the mid-nineteenth century attracted large numbers of French-Canadian workers to Hull, radically altering its ethnic and religious composition.

The Gatineau River, like the Ottawa River, was a basic transportation resource for the draveurs, timber rafters who transported logs via the rivers from lumber camps to downriver destinations. (The Gatineau River flows south into the Ottawa River, which flows east to the St. Lawrence River near Montreal.) The log-filled Ottawa River, as viewed from Hull, was featured on the back of the Canadian one-dollar bill; the paper money was replaced by a dollar coin (the "loonie") in 1987. The last of the dwindling activity of the draveurs on these rivers ended a few years later.

Very little remains of the original 1800 settlement of Hull because the oldest sectors of the town were destroyed by several fires, especially the destructive fire in 1900. The fire also seriously damaged the pont des Chaudières (Chaudière Bridge), but the bridge was rebuilt to join Ottawa to Hull at Victoria Island.

In the 1940s, during World War II, Hull, along with various other regions within Canada, such as Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean, and Île Sainte-Hélène, was the site of prisoner-of-war camps.[23] Hull's prison was identified only by a number, as were Canada's other war prisons.[23][24] The prisoners of war (POWs) were organized by nationality and status: civilian or military status.[23] In the Hull camp, POWs were mostly Italian and German nationals who were detained by the government as potential threats to the nation during the war. As a result of the Conscription Crisis of 1944, Canadians who had refused conscription were also interned in the camp.[23] The prisoners were required to perform hard labour, which included farming and lumbering the land.[23]

During the 1970s and early 1980s, the decaying old downtown core of Hull was redeveloped. Old buildings were demolished and replaced by a series of large office complexes. In addition some 4,000 residents were displaced, and many businesses uprooted along what was once the town's main commercial area.[25]

On 11 November 1992, Ghislaine Chénier, Mayoress by interim for the city of Hull, unveiled War Never Again, a marble stele monument that commemorates the cost of war for the men, women and children of Hull.[26]

Geography edit

Gatineau is located in southwestern Quebec, on the northern bank of the Gatineau River. It is situated at an elevation of around 50 m (164.042 ft)[27] The Gatineau Hills are the foothills of the Laurentian Mountains and located in the region. It is also the location of the second largest urban park in the world. They supply great skiing and snowboarding opportunities within minutes of the city. Gatineau is situated close to where the Canadian shield and the Saint Lawrence Lowlands intersect. The area has several major fault lines[28] and small earthquakes do occur somewhat regularly, on average, there are at least one earthquake of intensity III or higher once every three years in Ottawa-Gatineau. The most memorable being the 2010 Central Canada earthquake that occurred in Quebec. The epicentre was situated approximately 56 kilometres (35 mi) north of Ottawa, Ontario, in the municipality of Val-des-Bois, Quebec.

The city is covered in parks and green spaces. The beautiful Gatineau Park occupies almost 360 square kilometers of forest. The park offers hiking, biking, cross-country skiing and beaches. The Ottawa and Gatineau Rivers flow through Gatineau and Gatineau offers boat rides on the Ottawa River.[29] Gatineau Park has 165 km of pathways and more than 200 km of groomed cross-country ski trails, making it one of the largest trail networks in North America.[30]

Hydrography edit

Gatineau's entire territory is drained by the Ottawa River, the main tributary of the St. Lawrence. The river marks the city's southern boundary. To the southwest, it widens to form Lac Deschênes. The city is also crossed by several rivers: the Gatineau, the Lièvre and the Blanche. The territory is also criss-crossed by a dozen streams, including the ruisseau de la Brasserie, which forms an island in the downtown area.

There are several lakes in Gatineau, the most notable of which are Lac Leamy, Lac Beauchamp, Lac des Fées, Lac de la Carrière and Lac Pink. Pink is one of the few meromictic lakes in North America.

Climate edit

Gatineau has a humid continental climate (Köppen Dfb)[31] with four distinct seasons and is between Zones 5a and 5b on the Canadian Plant Hardiness Scale.[32] The climate in Gatineau is cold and temperate. Gatineau receives significant precipitation, even during the driest month. The average temperature in this city is 6.5 °C (43.7 °F).[33]

Summer lasts from the end of June to the end of September.[33] The precipitation peaks in June, with an average of 102 mm.[34] From 21 May to 18 September, the warm season lasts 3.9 months, with an average daily high temperature above 20 °C. July is the hottest month in Gatineau, with average highs of 26 °C and lows of 15 °C.

The cold season lasts 3.2 months, from 3 December to 11 March, with an average daily high temperature of less than 1 degree Celsius. January is the coldest month in Gatineau, with an average low of -15 °C and a high of -5 °C.[34]

Climate Data for Gatineau


January February March April May June July August September October November December
Avg. Temperature °C (°F) -9.8 °C

(14.3) °F

-8.2 °C

(17.2) °F

-2.8 °C

(26.9) °F

5.1 °C

(41.1) °F

13 °C

(55.4) °F

17.9 °C

(64.3) °F

20.8 °C

(69.4) °F

19.9 °C

(67.9) °F

16.2 °C

(61.2) °F

8.9 °C

(48) °F

2.1 °C

(35.7) °F

-5.2 °C

(22.6) °F

Min. Temperature °C (°F) -14 °C

(6.7) °F

-12.5 °C

(9.5) °F

-7.1 °C

(19.3) °F

0.5 °C

(32.9) °F

8.1 °C

(46.7) °F

13.4 °C

(56.1) °F

16.5 °C

(61.7) °F

16.1 °C

(60.9) °F

12.5 °C

(54.5) °F

5.9 °C

(42.7) °F

-0.5 °C

(31.1) °F

-8.3 °C

(17) °F

Max. Temperature °C (°F) -5 °C

(23.1) °F

-2.9 °C

(26.8) °F

2.4 °C

(36.3) °F

10.6 °C

(51.2) °F

18.5 °C

(65.4) °F

23 °C

(73.4) °F

25.5 °C

(78) °F

24.4 °C

(75.9) °F

20.8 °C

(69.4) °F

12.7 °C

(54.9) °F

5.5 °C

(42) °F

-1.5 °C

(29.3) °F

Precipitation / Rainfall mm (in) 78

(3)

63

(2)

74

(2)

94

(3)

92

(3)

102

(4)

101

(3)

92

(3)

97

(3)

102

(4)

87

(3)

86

(3)

Humidity(%) 76% 72% 69% 63% 65% 70% 70% 72% 74% 75% 78% 79%
Rainy days (d) 9 7 8 8 9 9 9 8 8 9 9 9
avg. Sun hours (hours) 4.0 4.8 6.3 7.9 9.2 10.2 10.6 9.2 7.3 5.4 3.9 2.9

Data: 1991 - 2021 Min. Temperature °C (°F), Max. Temperature °C (°F), Precipitation / Rainfall mm (in), Humidity, Rainy days. Data: 1999 - 2019: avg. Sun hours

December has the highest relative humidity (78.52%). April is the month with the lowest relative humidity (63.29%). The wettest month is December (12.07 days), while February (9.43 days) is the driest.[33]

Metropolitan area edit

Gatineau is one of two major parts of the National Capital Region (French: Région de la capitale nationale), also referred to as Canada's Capital Region and Ottawa–Gatineau (formerly Ottawa–Hull).It is an official federal designation for Ottawa, Ontario, as well as the neighboring city of Gatineau, and the surrounding suburban and exurban communities.[citation needed] Which include larger urban communities such as Clarence-Rockland, Russell, North Grenville, Val-des-Monts and Cantley. It also includes smaller villages such as Bowman, Denholm, Lochaber and Val-des-Bois.

The NCR has numerous attractions, including world-famous festivals, national museums, famous buildings and architecture, sports, and entertainment. Ottawa has some of the best examples of Gothic Revival architecture in North America.

Amalgamation edit

As part of the 2000–06 municipal reorganization in Quebec, the five municipalities that constituted the Communauté urbaine de l'Outaouais (Outaouais urban community) were merged on 1 January 2002 to constitute the new city of Gatineau. They were:

Although Hull was the oldest and most central of the merged cities, the name Gatineau was chosen for the new city. The historic municipality of Gatineau had more residents than Hull, and this name was strongly associated with the area: it was the name of the former county, valley, hills, and park and the main river within the new city limits.

After the 2003 election, the new Liberal government of Jean Charest passed Bill 9, which created a process by which former municipalities could be reconstituted. Contrary to Charest's election promise of full de-amalgamation, Bill 9 restored only selected powers to the de-merged cities (e.g., animal control, garbage pickup, local street maintenance, some cultural facilities). The bigger expenses (e.g., police, fire, main streets, expansion programs) and the majority of the taxes remained in the hands of urban agglomerations. These are controlled by the central merged city because their larger populations give them greater voting weight. 10% of the eligible voters in each former municipality would have to sign a "register" in order to hold a referendum on de-amalgamation.

Residents of Aylmer, Buckingham, Hull and Masson-Angers all surpassed this threshold and sought referendums on de-merge. A simple majority of "yes" votes, based on a turnout of at least 35% of voters, is needed to de-merge. All of the above jurisdictions had the required turnout. A majority of voters in each jurisdiction rejected the de-merger.[35]

Division of population by sector in the city of Gatineau.
Gatineau
45.4%
Hull
29.2%
Aylmer
15.9%
Buckingham
5.1%
Masson-Angers
4.3%
Former municipality # of Yes votes Yes vote (%) Total votes Turnout (%)
Aylmer 7,412 26.48 12,844 45.89
Buckingham 1,779 20.27 4,302 49.02
Hull 7,820 15.71 19,885 39.94
Masson-Angers 2,563 34.8 3,900 52.88

Neighbourhoods edit

Gatineau is divided into 5 sectors. Hull, Aylmer, Gatineau, Masson-Angers and Buckingham.

Demography edit

Historical populations
YearPop.±%
19412,822—    
19515,771+104.5%
19568,423+46.0%
196113,022+54.6%
196617,727+36.1%
197122,321+25.9%
197673,479+229.2%
198174,988+2.1%
198677,708+3.6%
199192,284+18.8%
1996100,684+9.1%
2001102,898+2.2%
2006242,124+135.3%
2011265,349+9.6%
2016276,245+4.1%
2021291,041+5.4%

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Gatineau had a population of 291,041 living in 126,476 of its 133,225 total private dwellings, a change of 5.4% from its 2016 population of 276,245. With a land area of 341.84 km2 (131.99 sq mi), it had a population density of 851.4/km2 (2,205.1/sq mi) in 2021.[36]

According to the 2011 census the city of Gatineau had a population of 265,349. This was an increase of 9.6% compared to 2006. Most of the population live in the urban cores of Aylmer, Hull and the former Gatineau. Buckingham and Masson-Angers are more rural communities. Gatineau is the fourth largest city in Quebec after Montreal, Quebec City, and Laval.

The Quebec part of Ottawa-Gatineau Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) – which includes various peripheral municipalities in addition to Gatineau – had a total population of 314,501. Between 2001 and 2006 there was a net influx of 5,205 people (equivalent to 2% of the total 2001 population) who moved to Gatineau from outside of the Ottawa – Gatineau area. There was also a net outmigration of 630 anglophones (equivalent to 2% of the 2001 anglophone population). Overall there was a net influx of 1,100 people from Quebec City, 1,060 from Montreal, 545 from Saguenay, 315 from Toronto, 240 from Trois-Rivières, 225 from Kingston, and 180 from Sudbury.[37]

Ethnicity edit

The 2001 census found that 4.3% of the population self-identified as having a visible minority status, including, among others, about 1.3% who self-identified as Black, about 1.0% self-identifying as Arab, 0.5% as Latin American, 0.4% as Chinese, 0.3% as Southeast Asian, 0.2% as South Asian, and about 0.1% as Filipino. (Statistics Canada terminology is used throughout.)[38] First Nations comprise 2.7% of the population.[39] The area is home to more than five thousand recent immigrants (i.e. those arriving between 2001 and 2006), who now comprise about two percent of the total population. 11% of these new immigrants have come from Colombia, 10% from China, 7% from France, 6% from Lebanon, 6% from Romania, 4% from Algeria, 3% from the United States and 3% from Congo.[40]

The cultural diversity of the city of Gatineau is noteworthy. The city welcomes between 800 and 1,000 newcomers to Canada each year. They come from some sixty countries and enrich the Gatineau identity.[29]

Canadians were able to self-identify one or more ethnocultural ancestries in the 2001 census. (Percentages may therefore add up to more than 100%.) The most common response was Canadian/Canadien and since the term 'Canadian' is as much an expression of citizenship as of ethnicity these figures should not be considered an exact record of the relative prevalence of different ethnocultural ancestries. 43.1% of respondents gave a single response of Canadian / Canadien while a further 26.5% identified both Canadian/Canadien and one or more other ethnocultural ancestries. 10.4% of respondents gave a single response of French, 1.1% gave a single response of Portuguese, 1.0% gave a single response of Irish, 0.9% gave a single response of Lebanese, 0.8% gave a single response of English, 0.7% gave a single responses of Québécois and 0.7% gave a single response of North American Indian. According to Statistics Canada, counting both single and multiple responses, the most commonly identified ethnocultural ancestries were: 70.7% North American, 37.8% French, 14.3% British Isles, 4.5% Aboriginal, 4.0% Southern European, 3.8% Western European, 1.9% Arab, 1.7% Eastern European, 1.0% East and Southeast Asian, 0.8% African, 0.7% Latin, Central and South American, 0.7% Caribbean and 0.5% Northern European.

Panethnic groups in the City of Gatineau (2001−2021)
Panethnic
group
2021[41] 2016[42] 2011[43] 2006[44] 2001[45]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
European[a] 219,350 76.77% 224,670 82.64% 225,670 86.24% 217,290 90.55% 97,250 94.98%
African 27,145 9.5% 16,670 6.13% 10,165 3.88% 5,715 2.38% 1,040 1.02%
Indigenous 11,705 4.1% 10,420 3.83% 9,065 3.46% 6,270 2.61% 1,355 1.32%
Middle Eastern[b] 11,370 3.98% 9,180 3.38% 7,045 2.69% 4,210 1.75% 1,320 1.29%
Latin American 5,595 1.96% 4,170 1.53% 3,855 1.47% 2,415 1.01% 370 0.36%
East Asian[c] 3,865 1.35% 2,830 1.04% 2,500 0.96% 1,785 0.74% 335 0.33%
Southeast Asian[d] 2,965 1.04% 1,805 0.66% 1,725 0.66% 1,430 0.6% 225 0.22%
South Asian 1,840 0.64% 955 0.35% 795 0.3% 455 0.19% 225 0.22%
Other/Multiracial[e] 1,885 0.66% 1,155 0.42% 845 0.32% 400 0.17% 265 0.26%
Total responses 285,715 98.17% 271,850 98.41% 261,665 98.61% 239,980 99.11% 102,385 99.5%
Total population 291,041 100% 276,245 100% 265,349 100% 242,124 100% 102,898 100%
Note: Totals greater than 100% due to multiple origin responses

Language edit

The following statistics refer to the Quebec portion of the Ottawa–Gatineau CMA (as it was defined in the 2021 census): Counting both single and multiple responses, French was a mother tongue for 78.27% of residents in 2021, English for 16.96%, Arabic for 2.74%, Portuguese for 0.85% and Spanish for 2.0%.[46](Figures below are for single responses only.)[47]

Mother tongue Population Percentage
French 204 290 71.1%
English 33,825 11.8%
Arabic 7,880 2.74%
Portuguese 2,465 0.85%
Spanish 5,730 2.00%
Mandarin 1,715 0.60%
Serbo-Croatian 1,195 0.42%
Romanian 1,040 0.36%
German 45 0.02%
Berber 780 0.27%
Polish 470 0.16%
Italian 445 0.2%
Haitian Creole 1,200 0.42%
Russian 1,815 0.63%
Kirundi 915 0.32%
Persian 475 0.17%
Lao 105 0.04%
Bosnian 245 0.09%
Dutch 115 0.04%
Serbian 705 0.25%
Kinyarwanda 735 0.26%
Hungarian 120 0.04%
Canada Census Mother Tongue - Gatineau, Quebec[48]
Census Total
French
English
French & English
Other
Year Responses Count Trend Pop % Count Trend Pop % Count Trend Pop % Count Trend Pop %
2021
287,510
204,290  0.50% 71.1% 33,825   10.32% 11.8 8,640   86.40% 3% 34,165   16.7% 11.9%
2016
273,265
205,335   0.9% 75.14% 30,660   5.5% 11.22% 4,635   4.9% 1.69% 29,275   22.72% 10.7%
2011
263,255
203,360   6.22% 77.24% 29,060   14.56% 11.04% 4,415   65.3% 1.6% 23,855   16.33% 9.06%
2006
239,980
191,445   4.35% 79.77% 25,365   3.57% 10.56% 2,670   20.93% 1.11% 20,505   42.6% 8.54%
2001
224,755
183,455   3.6% 81.6% 24,115   5.18% 10.7% 2,810   4.9% 1.25% 14,380   30.9% 6.39%
1996
215,995
177,065 n/a 81.97% 23,995 n/a 11.1% 3,005 n/a 1.39% 10,985 n/a 5.08%

Religion edit

According to the 2021 census, religious groups in Gatineau included:[41]

About 83% of the population identified as Roman Catholic in 2001 while 7% said they had no religion and 5% identified as Protestant (1.3% Anglican, 1.3% United, 0.7% Baptist, 0.3% Lutheran, 0.2% Pentecostal, 0.2% Presbyterian). About 1% of the population identified as Muslim, 0.5% as Jehovah's Witnesses, 0.3% as Buddhist, and 0.2% as Eastern Orthodox.[49]

Immigration edit

Immigrants by country of birth (2016 Census)[50]
Rank Country Population
1 Haiti 2,530
2 Lebanon 2,450
3 France 2,050
4 Morocco 1,985
5 Democratic Republic of the Congo 1,710
6 Colombia 1,710
7 China 1,530
8 Algeria 1,435
9 Portugal 1,275
10 Philippines 1,095

There are a total of 44,180 immigrants (by status) in Gatineau or 15,5% of the whole population and 5,300 non permanent resident.[51]

Economy edit

Originally, Gatineau's economy was based almost entirely on pulp and paper. However, a number of federal and provincial government offices are located in Gatineau, due to its proximity to the national capital, and its status as the main town of the Outaouais region of Quebec.

A policy of the federal government to distribute federal jobs on both sides of the Ottawa River led to the construction of several massive office towers to house federal civil servants in downtown Gatineau[citation needed]; the largest of these are Place du Portage and Terrasses de la Chaudière, occupying part of the downtown core of the city. Some government agencies and ministries headquartered in Gatineau are the Public Works and Government Services Canada, Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada, Environment Canada, Transportation Safety Board of Canada.[52]

The following federal government departments have their main offices in Gatineau:

The following agencies have their main offices in Gatineau.

In addition to housing a significant portion of federal government offices, the city is also an important regional centre for the Outaouais region. The city serves as the location for the Superior Court of the District of Gatineau, which encompasses all neighboring municipalities. It also houses two of the region's major hospitals as well as numerous provincial colleges.

Other important economic sectors are health care, tourism, education, small business and the provincial public service. The health care and education sectors are particularly important because they represent the region's largest sources of permanent employment outside the federal government. The provincial public service also has a strong presence in the city, due to its status as the region's principal city. There are two hospitals in the city, one in the Hull sector and the other in the Gatineau sector, as well as numerous other clinics and health centers. There are also numerous primary and secondary schools scattered throughout the city. They are managed by four school boards, three of which are French-speaking and one English-speaking. The city is also a major tourist region, with over a million tourists a year visiting the city's museums, parks, lakes and other outdoor attractions.

The Gatineau-Ottawa metropolitan region has over 1,900 technology companies, employing close to 80,000 workers. There are also over 65 research centers and six universities with over 160,000 students (20% of whom are enrolled in science, engineering, and technology programs).[53]

Gatineau's economy relies on a few important sectors. A majority of jobs are accounted for between the federal government, construction and service industries. There is however a large effort to modernize the economy in the region through recent initiatives in the entrepreneurial and innovation ecosystem. The Innovation Gatineau Institute is a regional innovation centre that boasts co-working space as well as startup incubation and acceleration programs to spur innovative business creation. In 2020, The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Economic Development and Official Languages, visited the Outaouais region to announce a total of $1,553,448 in financial assistance. This funding will help expand the entrepreneurial ecosystem.[54]

Arts and Culture edit

 
Filling the balloons in the park

Gatineau is home to many attractions and cultural events. It is home to national museums such as the Canadian Museum of History and the Canadian Children's Museum. Nightlife within the city of Gatineau is mostly centered in the "Vieux-Hull" sector behind the Federal office complexes of downtown. The area features many bars and restaurants within walking distance from Ottawa. It is a popular spot for young Ontarians as the legal drinking age in Quebec is 18 (as opposed to Ontario's 19).

Retail edit

Gatineau is home to Les Promenades. It is a major shopping centre located in Canada's National Capital Region in the city of Gatineau, Quebec. The mall is the intersection of Gréber and Maloney Boulevards, one of the city's busiest intersections, and is just off Autoroute 50. It is the city's largest shopping mall by retail space and by shoppers.

Arenas and Performing arts edit

La maison de la culture is a multidisciplinary complex housing the Salle Odyssée. This 830-seat auditorium is the city's main performance venue. The complex also houses the Art-Image exhibition center, the municipal library and many other cultural activities, such as dance and the Gatineau archives.[55]

The newest in multidisciplinary complex is called the Centre Slush Puppy. A 4,000-seat arena, including three community ice rinks managed by the non-profit organization Vision Multisports Outaouais, the management model is based on the signing of a 45-year emphyteutic lease. The building will be transferred to the City at the end of the lease. This arena not only hold the QMJHL hockey team Les Olympiques, but also host larger artists such as Flo Rida[56]

Festivals edit

The Casino du Lac-Leamy is also one of the largest tourist attraction in the city. In August, the Casino hosts an international fireworks competition which opposes four different countries with the winner being awarded a Prix Zeus prize for the best overall show (based on several criteria)[57] and can return in the following year. At the beginning of September, on Labour Day weekend, Gatineau hosts an annual hot air balloon festival which fills the skies with colourful gas-fired passenger balloons. One of Gatineau's urban parks, Jacques Cartier Park, is used by the National Capital Commission during the popular festival, Winterlude. In December, the Gatineau Playground Festival takes place at Complex Branchaud-Brière in Gatineau. This one-of-a-kind event provides children and adults with 67,000 square feet of gaming, sports, go-karts, trampolines, and other activities.[58]

Music edit

As Gatineau is the smaller of the two cities in its CMA, most major artist perform in Ottawa. However, since the construction of the Centre Slush Puppy, there has been a demand for more events. The first of which was Flo Rida, who was able to sell out the arena with a 3,500 capacity.

Parks edit

There are many parks. Some of them are well gardened playgrounds or resting spaces while others, like Lac Beauchamp Park, are relatively wild green areas which often merge with the woods and fields of the surrounding municipalities. Streams of all sizes run through these natural expanses. Most of the city is on level ground but the Northern and Eastern parts lie on the beginnings of the foothills of the massive Canadian Shield, or Laurentian Mountains. These are the "Gatineau Hills", and are visible in the background of the companion picture.

Gatineau is also the home of the second largest urban park in the world.

Sports edit

Government edit

 
Gatineau

The Gatineau City Council (French: Conseil municipal de Gatineau) is the city's main governing body. It is composed of 19 city councillors and a mayor. The city serves as the seat of the judicial district of Gatineau, which encompasses the entirety of the city of Gatineau as well as several outlying municipalities such as Chelsea, Cantley and Pontiac. The superior court serving the Outaouais region is located in Gatineau across from City Hall on the corner of Laurier and Hôtel-de-Ville. Most of the law firms that represent local businesses throughout the region are also based in Gatineau.

Gatineau federal election results[59]
Year Liberal Conservative Bloc Québécois New Democratic Green
2021 51% 69,519 11% 15,772 20% 27,674 11% 14,521 2% 2,687
2019 53% 76,367 10% 14,324 18% 26,401 12% 17,330 5% 7,874
Gatineau provincial election results[60]
Year CAQ Liberal QC solidaire Parti Québécois
2018 35% 39,861 34% 39,242 16% 18,277 10% 11,473
2014 13% 16,126 59% 71,916 8% 9,695 18% 22,352

Police and law enforcement edit

With more than 250 officers, the Service de police de la Ville de Gatineau (SPVG) provides day-to-day policing for the city, in collaboration with other agencies such as the Sûreté du Québec and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police assisting as necessary. They are also responsible for patrolling sections of the highways located within the city limits, including Autoroute 50 and Autoroute 5. The SPVG is equipped with a CID unit, marine unit, drugs unit, gang suppression unit, and a tactical unit (Groupe d'intervention, or GI). Patrol officers are armed with Smith & Wesson M&P .40 calibre pistols. The SPVG uses the same vehicles as similar police forces throughout North America.

Crime edit

Ottawa and Gatineau have some of the lowest crime rates in Canada. In 2022, the national crime rate in Canada increased by 5% to 5,668 crimes per 100,000 people.

With a crime rate of 4,019 crimes per 100,000 people, Ottawa ranks 27th out of 35 cities in Canada. Gatineau is the 28th most dangerous city in Canada, with a crime rate of 3,737 crimes per 100,000 people.[61]

Infrastructure edit

The Gatineau-Ottawa Executive Airport is Gatineau's municipal airport, capable of handling small jets. There are Canada customs facilities for aircraft coming from outside Canada, a car rental counter and a restaurant. The airport has a few regularly scheduled flights to points within Quebec, but most residents of Gatineau use the nearby Ottawa Macdonald–Cartier International Airport or travel to Montréal–Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport in Montreal.

Public transport edit

Ottawa and Gatineau have two distinct bus-based public transit systems with different fare structures, OC Transpo and the Société de transport de l'Outaouais. Tickets are not interchangeable between the two, however passes and transfers from one system to the other do not require payment of a surcharge on any routes. There is a proposed LRT system that would connect Gatineau to Bayview and Rideau Centre Stations in Ottawa.[62]

Roads edit

Many Gatineau highways and major arteries feed directly into the bridges crossing over to Ottawa, but once there the roads lead into the dense downtown grid or into residential areas, with no direct connection to The Queensway. This difficulty is further magnified by the lack of a major highway on the Quebec side of the Ottawa River connecting Gatineau to Montreal, the metropolis of the province; most travellers from Gatineau to Montreal first cross over to Ottawa, and use Ontario highways to access Montreal. However, it is expected that since Autoroute 50 has been completed,[63] the new link between Gatineau and the Laurentides popular tourist area may serve as part of a Montreal by-pass by the north shore for Outaouais residents.

Education edit

The education system in Quebec is different from other systems in Canada. Between high school, which ends at grade 11, and university, students must go through an additional school called CEGEP, or Collège d'enseignement général et professionnel. CEGEPs offer both pre-university (2-years) and technical (3-years) programs.

With 28.3% of its population over 20 years of age having completed university studies, Gatineau is well ahead of the rest of the Canada. Gatineau also has one of the highest bilingualism rates, with 63.5% of its population fluent in both English and French.[64]

The city of Gatineau, within its Hull neighborhood, houses the main campus of the Université du Québec en Outaouais (UQO), part of the Université du Québec network. The UQO counts over 5,500 students, mostly within its multiple social science programs. It is world-renowned[weasel words] for its cyber-psychology laboratory. Faced with a limited number of domains of study, many Quebec students attend other universities, either in Ottawa or Montreal. Every year, the UQO hosts the Bar of Quebec course for certification of new lawyers.

Gatineau is also the home of two CEGEPs, including the francophone Cégep de l'Outaouais with three campuses across the city and the anglophone Heritage College.

The main French-language school boards in Gatineau are the Commission scolaire des Portages-de-l'Outaouais, the Commission scolaire au Coeur-des-Vallées, and the Commission scolaire des Draveurs. There are also four private high schools: the all-girl Collège Saint-Joseph, the Collège Saint-Alexandre, and École secondaire Nouvelles-Frontières and le Centre académique de l'Outaouais (CADO). Elementary and secondary education in English is held under the supervision of the Western Quebec School Board.

Since 1995, the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) has a campus in Gatineau.[65][66] A military training centre, Defence Public Affairs Learning Centre, is also located in Gatineau.

Campus médical Outaouais edit

In 2019, McGill University announced the construction of a new campus for its Faculty of Medicine in the Outaouais region, which will run the undergraduate medical education program in French and allow students to complete their undergraduate medical training entirely in the Outaouais.[67] Official communication with politicians has been ongoing since 2016.[68] The new facility will be erected above the emergency room at the Gatineau Hospital, part of the Centre intégré de santé et de services sociaux de l'Outaouais, in addition to new offices for the associated Family Medicine Unit for residency training.[67][needs update] Although the preparatory year for students entering the undergraduate medical education program from CEGEP was initially planned to be offered solely at the McGill downtown campus in Montreal,[67][69] collaboration with the Université du Québec en Outaouais finally made it possible to offer the program entirely in Gatineau.[70]

Key roads edit

Media edit

Gatineau is the city of licence for several television and radio stations serving the National Capital Region, which is a single media market. Many of the Ottawa-Gatineau region's TV and FM broadcast stations transmit from Camp Fortune just north of Gatineau. All of the stations licensed directly to Gatineau broadcast in French.

Weekly newspapers published in Gatineau include Le Bulletin d'Aylmer (bilingual) and The West Quebec Post. Although Gatineau does not have its own daily newspaper, it is served by daily newspapers published in Ottawa, including the French Le Droit and the English Ottawa Citizen and Ottawa Sun.

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, the Canadian regulatory agency for broadcasting, is based in Gatineau at Terrasses de la Chaudière.

Notable people edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Statistic includes all persons that did not make up part of a visible minority or an indigenous identity.
  2. ^ Statistic includes total responses of "West Asian" and "Arab" under visible minority section on census.
  3. ^ Statistic includes total responses of "Chinese", "Korean", and "Japanese" under visible minority section on census.
  4. ^ Statistic includes total responses of "Filipino" and "Southeast Asian" under visible minority section on census.
  5. ^ Statistic includes total responses of "Visible minority, n.i.e." and "Multiple visible minorities" under visible minority section on census.

References edit

  1. ^ "Ville de Gatineau (1933–1974) – Armoiries". from the original on 8 August 2014. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
  2. ^ "Banque de noms de lieux du Québec: Reference number 24715". toponymie.gouv.qc.ca (in French). Commission de toponymie du Québec.
  3. ^ a b "Répertoire des municipalités: Geographic code 81017". www.mamh.gouv.qc.ca (in French). Ministère des Affaires municipales et de l'Habitation.
  4. ^ "Gatineau (Code 2481017) Census Profile". 2011 census. Government of Canada - Statistics Canada.
  5. ^ Ottawa – Gatineau (Quebec part) (Census metropolitan area), 2011 Census profile 6 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine. The census metropolitan area (Quebec part) consists of Gatineau, Bowman, Cantley, Chelsea, Denholm, L'Ange-Gardien, La Pêche, Mayo, Notre-Dame-de-la-Salette, Pontiac, Val-des-Bois, Val-des-Monts. In the 2006 census, the census metropolitan area had not included Bowman, Mayo, Notre-Dame-de-la-Salette, Val-des-Bois.
  6. ^ a b "Gatineau (Code 2466023) Census Profile". 2016 census. Government of Canada - Statistics Canada.
  7. ^ "2021 Census". Statistics Canada. Government of Canada. 9 February 2022. from the original on 25 August 2022. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  8. ^ Canada, Government of Canada, Statistics (8 February 2017). "Census Profile, 2016 Census – Ottawa – Gatineau (Quebec part) [Census metropolitan area], Quebec and Quebec [Province]". www12.statcan.gc.ca. from the original on 7 August 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ Canada, Government of Canada, Statistics (8 February 2017). "Census Profile, 2016 Census – Ottawa – Gatineau [Census metropolitan area], Ontario/Quebec and Ontario [Province]". www12.statcan.gc.ca. from the original on 24 September 2019. Retrieved 22 June 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ "2021 CMA Census". Statistics Canada. Government of Canada. 9 February 2022. from the original on 25 August 2022. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  11. ^ Territorial Division Act 26 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine. Revised Statutes of Quebec D-11.
  12. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (21 June 2023). "English–French bilingualism in Canada: Recent trends after five decades of official bilingualism". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  13. ^ a b "L'origine incertaine du toponyme Gatineau - French". L'info de la vallee. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  14. ^ Rick Henderson, https://www.capitalchronicles.ca/post/gatineau-paddling-through-the-history-of-a-river-s-name 27 March 2023 at the Wayback Machine www.capitalchronicles.ca, 13 novembre 2021
  15. ^ Benjamin Sulte, « Gatineau », L'Écho de la Gatineau, 6 juillet 1889, http://data2.collectionscanada.ca/001094/pdf/18890706-echo-de-la-gatineau-pointegatineau.pdf, pg. 1 and 2
  16. ^ Rick Henderson, https://www.capitalchronicles.ca/post/gatineau-paddling-through-the-history-of-a-river-s-name 27 March 2023 at the Wayback Machine, 31 novembre 2021
  17. ^ Commission de toponymie du Québec — ville de Gatineau [archive], https://toponymie.gouv.qc.ca/ct/ToposWeb/fiche.aspx?no_seq=24715 28 August 2023 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ "Gatineau | the Canadian Encyclopedia". from the original on 7 January 2023. Retrieved 7 January 2023.
  19. ^ "Leaders and Associates – the unique land grant system of early Lower Canada". 19 November 2020. from the original on 27 March 2023. Retrieved 27 March 2023.
  20. ^ http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/wright_philemon_7E.html 27 March 2023 at the Wayback Machine, 3rd & 4th paragraphs
  21. ^ John H. Taylor, Ottawa: An Illustrated History, James Lorimer & Company, Publishers, Toronto, 1986, p.11
  22. ^ Martin, Michael, Working Class Culture and the Development of Hull QC 11 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine p. 48, 2006.
  23. ^ a b c d e Tremblay, Robert, Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, et al. "Histoires oubliées – Interprogrammes : Des prisonniers spéciaux" Interlude. Aired: 20 July 2008, 14h47 to 15h00.
  24. ^ Note: See also List of POW camps in Canada.
  25. ^ Harold Kalman and John Roaf, Exploring Ottawa: An Architectural Guide to the Nation's Capital. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1983. p. 88
  26. ^ . National Defence Canada. 16 April 2008. Archived from the original on 23 May 2014. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
  27. ^ "Carte topographique Gatineau, altitude, relief". Cartes topographiques (in French). Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  28. ^ . Gsc.nrcan.gc.ca. 14 April 2009. Archived from the original on 18 May 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  29. ^ a b George (14 March 2015). "Historique de la ville de Gatineau". Histoire du Québec (in Canadian French). from the original on 27 February 2023. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  30. ^ "Why Gatineau?". Why Gatineau?. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  31. ^ "Climatic Regions [Köppen]". Atlas of Canada. Natural Resources Canada. June 2005. from the original on 3 April 2012. Retrieved 25 December 2012.
  32. ^ "phz1981-2010". Canada's Plant Hardiness Site. Natural Resources Canada. from the original on 7 August 2018. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  33. ^ a b c "Gatineau climate: Weather Gatineau & temperature by month". en.climate-data.org. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  34. ^ a b "Gatineau Climate, Weather By Month, Average Temperature (Canada) - Weather Spark". weatherspark.com. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  35. ^ . Directeur-Général des Élections. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  36. ^ "Population and dwelling counts: Canada, provinces and territories, and census subdivisions (municipalities), Quebec". Statistics Canada. 9 February 2022. from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved 29 August 2022.
  37. ^ "Ottawa – Gatineau (Que. part – Partie Qc)". Census Metropolitan Area of Residence 5 Years Ago (37), Mother Tongue (8), Immigrant Status and Period of Immigration (9), Age Groups (16) and Sex (3) for the Inter-Census Metropolitan Area Migrants Aged 5 Years and Over of Census Metropolitan Areas, 2006 Census – 20% Sample Data. Statistics Canada. 1 March 2007. from the original on 31 July 2020. Retrieved 6 February 2008.
  38. ^ "Ottawa – Hull (Que. part – Partie Qc)". Visible Minority Groups (15) and Immigrant Status and Period of Immigration (11) for Population, for Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas 1 and Census Agglomerations, 2001 Census – 20% Sample Data. Statistics Canada. 1 March 2007. Retrieved 6 February 2008.
  39. ^ "Ottawa – Gatineau (Que. part – Partie Qc)". Aboriginal Identity (8), Sex (3) and Age Groups (12) for the Population of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2006 Census – 20% Sample Data. Statistics Canada. 15 January 2008. Retrieved 6 February 2008.
  40. ^ "Ottawa – Gatineau (Que. part – Partie Qc)". Immigrant Status and Period of Immigration (8) and Place of Birth (261) for the Immigrants and Non-permanent Residents of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2006 Census – 20% Sample Data. Statistics Canada. 4 December 2007. Retrieved 6 February 2008.
  41. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (26 October 2022). "Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population". www12.statcan.gc.ca. from the original on 11 November 2022. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  42. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (27 October 2021). "Census Profile, 2016 Census". www12.statcan.gc.ca. from the original on 28 August 2023. Retrieved 12 January 2023.
  43. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (27 November 2015). "NHS Profile". www12.statcan.gc.ca. from the original on 28 August 2023. Retrieved 12 January 2023.
  44. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (20 August 2019). "2006 Community Profiles". www12.statcan.gc.ca. from the original on 1 February 2023. Retrieved 12 January 2023.
  45. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2 July 2019). "2001 Community Profiles". www12.statcan.gc.ca. from the original on 13 January 2023. Retrieved 12 January 2023.
  46. ^ Gouvernement du Canada, Statistique Canada (9 February 2022). "Tableau de profil, Profil du recensement, Recensement de la population de 2021". www12.statcan.gc.ca. from the original on 15 February 2023. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  47. ^ "Ottawa – Gatineau (Que. part – Partie Qc)". Detailed Mother Tongue (186), Knowledge of Official Languages (5), Age Groups (17A) and Sex (3) for the Population of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2001 and 2006 Censuses – 20% Sample Data. Statistics Canada. 20 November 2007. Retrieved 6 February 2008.
  48. ^ Statistics Canada: 1996, 2001, 2006, 2011, 2016census, 2021census 27 February 2023 at the Wayback Machine
  49. ^ "Ottawa – Hull (Que. part – Partie Qc)". Religion (95A), Age Groups (7A) and Sex (3) for Population, for Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 1991 and 2001 Censuses – 20% Sample Data. Statistics Canada. 1 March 2007. Retrieved 6 February 2008.
  50. ^ https://www12.statcan.gc.ca 27 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine › dp-pd 2016 Census of Population – Data products - Statistics Canada
  51. ^ Gouvernement du Canada, Statistique Canada (9 February 2022). "Tableau de profil, Profil du recensement, Recensement de la population de 2021". www12.statcan.gc.ca. from the original on 15 February 2023. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  52. ^ "Contact Us." Transportation Safety Board of Canada. Retrieved 31 May 2009.
  53. ^ "Why Gatineau?". Why Gatineau?. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  54. ^ Regions, Canada Economic Development for Quebec (27 August 2020). "Gatineau: a key player in Quebec's economy". canada.ca. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  55. ^ Gatineau, La Maison de la culture de. "Maison de la culture de Gatineau". maisondelaculture.ca (in French). Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  56. ^ "À propos • Centre Slush Puppie • Aréna multidisciplinaire". Centre Slush Puppie (in French). Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  57. ^ "History and Recognitions". Casino Lac-Leamy Sound of Light. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
  58. ^ "Gatineau Playground Festival". quebecgetaways.com. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  59. ^ "Official Voting Results Raw Data (poll by poll results in Gatineau)". Elections Canada. 7 April 2022. from the original on 5 March 2023. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
  60. ^ "Official Voting Results by polling station (poll by poll results in Gatineau)". Elections Québec. from the original on 28 August 2023. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
  61. ^ "Ottawa and Gatineau see spike in crimes in 2022, StatsCan reports". Ottawa. 27 July 2023. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  62. ^ "Gatineau reveals $2.1B LRT plan, eyes 2028 launch". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 20 June 2018. from the original on 14 November 2018. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  63. ^ Crews will work through winter to have Highway 50 open in 2012 | The Review 10 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Thereview.ca (21 October 2010). Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  64. ^ "Why Gatineau?". Why Gatineau?. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  65. ^ . 100.unam.mx. Archived from the original on 22 August 2014.
  66. ^ "UNAM-Canada, Gatineau, Quebec". Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. from the original on 28 August 2023. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  67. ^ a b c "Preliminary work under way on construction of the McGill University Faculty of Medicine's new campus in Outaouais: Med e-News". Retrieved 11 February 2019.
  68. ^ Eidelman, David; Brousseau, Gilles (17 September 2016). "Campus médical: l'Outaouais a assez attendu". Le Devoir. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  69. ^ "L'UQO déçue de ne pas accueillir la future faculté de médecine". CBC/Radio-Canada. 7 September 2016. from the original on 20 September 2020. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  70. ^ "McGill est l'UQO vont offrir l'année préparatoire en médecine à Gatineau". Université du Québec. Université du Québec en Outaouais. 13 February 2020. Retrieved 27 April 2020.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  •   Gatineau travel guide from Wikivoyage
  •   Geographic data related to Gatineau at OpenStreetMap
  • Gatineau at Curlie

gatineau, this, article, about, canadian, city, other, uses, disambiguation, french, ɡatino, city, southwestern, quebec, canada, located, northern, bank, ottawa, river, immediately, across, from, ottawa, ontario, largest, city, outaouais, administrative, regio. This article is about the Canadian city For other uses see Gatineau disambiguation Gatineau ˈ ɡ ae t ɪ n oʊ GAT in oh French ɡatino is a city in southwestern Quebec Canada It is located on the northern bank of the Ottawa River immediately across from Ottawa Ontario Gatineau is the largest city in the Outaouais administrative region of Quebec and is also part of Canada s National Capital Region As of 2021 Gatineau is the fourth largest city in Quebec with a population of 291 041 6 7 and it is part of the Ottawa Gatineau census metropolitan area with a population of 1 488 307 making it the fourth largest in Canada 8 9 10 Gatineau Ville de GatineauCityVille de GatineauClockwise from top left Canadian Museum of History downtown Ottawa River Rue de l Hotel de Ville and Macdonald Cartier Bridge FlagCoat of armsLogoNickname G townMotto s Fortunae meae multorum faber 1 Maker of my fate and that of many others Location of Gatineau red with adjacent municipalitiesGatineauLocation of Gatineau in QuebecCoordinates 45 29 N 75 39 W 45 483 N 75 650 W 45 483 75 650 2 CountryCanadaProvinceQuebecRegionOutaouaisRCMNoneConstituted1 January 2002Government 3 TypeGatineau City Council MayorFrance Belisle Federal ridingGatineau Hull Aylmer Pontiac Argenteuil La Petite Nation Prov ridingChapleau Gatineau Hull Papineau PontiacArea 3 4 City381 30 km2 147 22 sq mi Land342 98 km2 132 43 sq mi Metro 5 2 999 90 km2 1 158 27 sq mi Population 2021 6 City291 041 Density773 7 km2 2 004 sq mi Metro1 488 307 Metro density104 8 km2 271 sq mi Pop 2011 20165 4 Dwellings125 608Time zoneUTC 5 EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT Postal code s J8L J8M J8P J8R J8T J8V J8X to J8Z J9A J9H to J9J various K1A Government Offices Area codes819 873GDP Per CapitaCAD 38 079 2018 Websitewww wbr gatineau wbr caGatineau is coextensive with a territory equivalent to a regional county municipality TE and census division CD of the same name whose geographical code is 81 It is the seat of the judicial district of Hull 11 It is also the most bilingual French English city in Canada 12 Contents 1 Toponomy 2 History 3 Geography 3 1 Hydrography 3 2 Climate 3 3 Metropolitan area 3 3 1 Amalgamation 3 4 Neighbourhoods 4 Demography 4 1 Ethnicity 4 2 Language 4 3 Religion 4 4 Immigration 5 Economy 6 Arts and Culture 6 1 Retail 6 2 Arenas and Performing arts 6 3 Festivals 6 4 Music 6 5 Parks 7 Sports 8 Government 8 1 Police and law enforcement 8 1 1 Crime 9 Infrastructure 9 1 Public transport 9 2 Roads 10 Education 10 1 Campus medical Outaouais 10 2 Key roads 11 Media 12 Notable people 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 External linksToponomy editIn 1613 during his first passage on the Ottawa River the great explorer Samuel de Champlain was the first European to speak of the river that comes from the north traveled for millennia by Aboriginals but he did not name it In 1721 Canadian surveyor Noel Beaupre recorded the river but did not give it a name In short the name Gatineau was not used in New France 13 In fact it was not until 1783 that the river was mentioned as Lettinoe in a report by Lieutenant David Jones to the Governor of Quebec Sir Frederic Haldimand In 1817 a map by Theodore Davis shows Gatteno a name taken up with Gatino Gateno and Gattino on plans by Philemon Wright the founder of Hull Township and by Lieutenant Colonel John By the engineer responsible for building the Rideau Canal It was not until 1821 that the name Gatineau first appeared on a map of Nepean Township Ontario The same name appears again on William Henderson s map of 1831 and on another drawn thirty years later by surveyor Thomas Devine Thereafter the river was always referred to as the Gatineau 13 There are two hypotheses to explain the origin of the city s name It would be either of Indigenous origin or of French origin The name of the river and the city would come from the Anishinaabemowin language of the Algonquin Anishinaabeg Tenagatino Zibi according to the elders of Kitigan Zibi 14 In his 1889 article published in the Echo de la Gatineau 15 Benjamin Sulte wrote One hundred years ago the Gatineau family was extinct or thereabouts it is hardly likely that we waited for its disappearance to consecrate the memory of the three or four fur traders it produced The custom must have been established during the lifetime of these men and because they traded in these places Of the latter fact for instance I am not certain In his own words Sulte writes that he is creating a myth and that the story that the Gatineau family gave the river its name is a myth invented by Sulte himself According to Sulte the name Gatineau comes from the Gastineau family not Gatineau one of its members Nicolas Gastineau sieur Duplessis 1627 1689 16 17 History edit nbsp Hull Lower Canada on the Ottawa River at the Chaudier sic Falls 1830 by Thomas Burrowes Chaudiere Falls and Bytown are visible in the background Prior to European settlement the Gatineau area was inhabited by Anishinaabe peoples including the Algonquins 18 The current city of Gatineau is centred on an area formerly called Hull It is the oldest European colonial settlement in the National Capital Region but this area was essentially not developed by Europeans until after the American Revolutionary War when the Crown granted land through the Leaders and Associates 19 program of the Lower Canada Executive which brought settlement in the Ottawa Valley 20 Hull was founded on the north shore of the Ottawa River in 1800 by Philemon Wright at the portage around the Chaudiere Falls just upstream or west from the confluence of the Gatineau and Rideau rivers with the Ottawa River Wright brought his family four other families and twenty five or 33 according to Philemon s own conflicting reports labourers 21 with the hope of establishing an agricultural community but by 1806 Wright and his family took advantage of the large forest stands and began the Ottawa River timber trade floating the first square timber raft down the Ottawa River to Quebec City The original settlement was called Wright s Town Lower Canada and was later renamed as Hull when it was incorporated in 1875 Bytown founded in 1832 stood across the river from Wright s Town In 2002 after amalgamation Hull became part of a larger jurisdiction named the City of Gatineau In 1820 before immigrants from Ireland and Great Britain arrived in great numbers Hull Township had a population of 707 including 365 men 113 women and 229 children The high number of men were related to workers in the lumber trade In 1824 there were 106 families and 803 persons During the rest of the 1820s the population of Hull doubled with the arrival of Protestant immigrants from Ulster now Northern Ireland By 1851 the population of the County of Ottawa was 11 104 of which 2 811 lived in Hull By comparison Bytown had a population of 7 760 in 1851 By 1861 Ottawa County had a population of 15 671 of which 3 711 lived in Hull Gradually French Canadians also migrated to the township their proportion of the population increased from 10 in 1850 to 50 in 1870 and 90 in 1920 22 Industrial development in the mid nineteenth century attracted large numbers of French Canadian workers to Hull radically altering its ethnic and religious composition The Gatineau River like the Ottawa River was a basic transportation resource for the draveurs timber rafters who transported logs via the rivers from lumber camps to downriver destinations The Gatineau River flows south into the Ottawa River which flows east to the St Lawrence River near Montreal The log filled Ottawa River as viewed from Hull was featured on the back of the Canadian one dollar bill the paper money was replaced by a dollar coin the loonie in 1987 The last of the dwindling activity of the draveurs on these rivers ended a few years later Very little remains of the original 1800 settlement of Hull because the oldest sectors of the town were destroyed by several fires especially the destructive fire in 1900 The fire also seriously damaged the pont des Chaudieres Chaudiere Bridge but the bridge was rebuilt to join Ottawa to Hull at Victoria Island In the 1940s during World War II Hull along with various other regions within Canada such as Saguenay Lac Saint Jean and Ile Sainte Helene was the site of prisoner of war camps 23 Hull s prison was identified only by a number as were Canada s other war prisons 23 24 The prisoners of war POWs were organized by nationality and status civilian or military status 23 In the Hull camp POWs were mostly Italian and German nationals who were detained by the government as potential threats to the nation during the war As a result of the Conscription Crisis of 1944 Canadians who had refused conscription were also interned in the camp 23 The prisoners were required to perform hard labour which included farming and lumbering the land 23 During the 1970s and early 1980s the decaying old downtown core of Hull was redeveloped Old buildings were demolished and replaced by a series of large office complexes In addition some 4 000 residents were displaced and many businesses uprooted along what was once the town s main commercial area 25 On 11 November 1992 Ghislaine Chenier Mayoress by interim for the city of Hull unveiled War Never Again a marble stele monument that commemorates the cost of war for the men women and children of Hull 26 Geography editGatineau is located in southwestern Quebec on the northern bank of the Gatineau River It is situated at an elevation of around 50 m 164 042 ft 27 The Gatineau Hills are the foothills of the Laurentian Mountains and located in the region It is also the location of the second largest urban park in the world They supply great skiing and snowboarding opportunities within minutes of the city Gatineau is situated close to where the Canadian shield and the Saint Lawrence Lowlands intersect The area has several major fault lines 28 and small earthquakes do occur somewhat regularly on average there are at least one earthquake of intensity III or higher once every three years in Ottawa Gatineau The most memorable being the 2010 Central Canada earthquake that occurred in Quebec The epicentre was situated approximately 56 kilometres 35 mi north of Ottawa Ontario in the municipality of Val des Bois Quebec The city is covered in parks and green spaces The beautiful Gatineau Park occupies almost 360 square kilometers of forest The park offers hiking biking cross country skiing and beaches The Ottawa and Gatineau Rivers flow through Gatineau and Gatineau offers boat rides on the Ottawa River 29 Gatineau Park has 165 km of pathways and more than 200 km of groomed cross country ski trails making it one of the largest trail networks in North America 30 Hydrography edit Gatineau s entire territory is drained by the Ottawa River the main tributary of the St Lawrence The river marks the city s southern boundary To the southwest it widens to form Lac Deschenes The city is also crossed by several rivers the Gatineau the Lievre and the Blanche The territory is also criss crossed by a dozen streams including the ruisseau de la Brasserie which forms an island in the downtown area There are several lakes in Gatineau the most notable of which are Lac Leamy Lac Beauchamp Lac des Fees Lac de la Carriere and Lac Pink Pink is one of the few meromictic lakes in North America Climate edit Gatineau has a humid continental climate Koppen Dfb 31 with four distinct seasons and is between Zones 5a and 5b on the Canadian Plant Hardiness Scale 32 The climate in Gatineau is cold and temperate Gatineau receives significant precipitation even during the driest month The average temperature in this city is 6 5 C 43 7 F 33 Summer lasts from the end of June to the end of September 33 The precipitation peaks in June with an average of 102 mm 34 From 21 May to 18 September the warm season lasts 3 9 months with an average daily high temperature above 20 C July is the hottest month in Gatineau with average highs of 26 C and lows of 15 C The cold season lasts 3 2 months from 3 December to 11 March with an average daily high temperature of less than 1 degree Celsius January is the coldest month in Gatineau with an average low of 15 C and a high of 5 C 34 Climate Data for GatineauJanuary February March April May June July August September October November DecemberAvg Temperature C F 9 8 C 14 3 F 8 2 C 17 2 F 2 8 C 26 9 F 5 1 C 41 1 F 13 C 55 4 F 17 9 C 64 3 F 20 8 C 69 4 F 19 9 C 67 9 F 16 2 C 61 2 F 8 9 C 48 F 2 1 C 35 7 F 5 2 C 22 6 FMin Temperature C F 14 C 6 7 F 12 5 C 9 5 F 7 1 C 19 3 F 0 5 C 32 9 F 8 1 C 46 7 F 13 4 C 56 1 F 16 5 C 61 7 F 16 1 C 60 9 F 12 5 C 54 5 F 5 9 C 42 7 F 0 5 C 31 1 F 8 3 C 17 FMax Temperature C F 5 C 23 1 F 2 9 C 26 8 F 2 4 C 36 3 F 10 6 C 51 2 F 18 5 C 65 4 F 23 C 73 4 F 25 5 C 78 F 24 4 C 75 9 F 20 8 C 69 4 F 12 7 C 54 9 F 5 5 C 42 F 1 5 C 29 3 FPrecipitation Rainfall mm in 78 3 63 2 74 2 94 3 92 3 102 4 101 3 92 3 97 3 102 4 87 3 86 3 Humidity 76 72 69 63 65 70 70 72 74 75 78 79 Rainy days d 9 7 8 8 9 9 9 8 8 9 9 9avg Sun hours hours 4 0 4 8 6 3 7 9 9 2 10 2 10 6 9 2 7 3 5 4 3 9 2 9Data 1991 2021 Min Temperature C F Max Temperature C F Precipitation Rainfall mm in Humidity Rainy days Data 1999 2019 avg Sun hoursDecember has the highest relative humidity 78 52 April is the month with the lowest relative humidity 63 29 The wettest month is December 12 07 days while February 9 43 days is the driest 33 Metropolitan area edit Main article National Capital Region Canada Gatineau is one of two major parts of the National Capital Region French Region de la capitale nationale also referred to as Canada s Capital Region and Ottawa Gatineau formerly Ottawa Hull It is an official federal designation for Ottawa Ontario as well as the neighboring city of Gatineau and the surrounding suburban and exurban communities citation needed Which include larger urban communities such as Clarence Rockland Russell North Grenville Val des Monts and Cantley It also includes smaller villages such as Bowman Denholm Lochaber and Val des Bois The NCR has numerous attractions including world famous festivals national museums famous buildings and architecture sports and entertainment Ottawa has some of the best examples of Gothic Revival architecture in North America Amalgamation edit As part of the 2000 06 municipal reorganization in Quebec the five municipalities that constituted the Communaute urbaine de l Outaouais Outaouais urban community were merged on 1 January 2002 to constitute the new city of Gatineau They were Aylmer Buckingham Hull Gatineau Masson AngersAlthough Hull was the oldest and most central of the merged cities the name Gatineau was chosen for the new city The historic municipality of Gatineau had more residents than Hull and this name was strongly associated with the area it was the name of the former county valley hills and park and the main river within the new city limits After the 2003 election the new Liberal government of Jean Charest passed Bill 9 which created a process by which former municipalities could be reconstituted Contrary to Charest s election promise of full de amalgamation Bill 9 restored only selected powers to the de merged cities e g animal control garbage pickup local street maintenance some cultural facilities The bigger expenses e g police fire main streets expansion programs and the majority of the taxes remained in the hands of urban agglomerations These are controlled by the central merged city because their larger populations give them greater voting weight 10 of the eligible voters in each former municipality would have to sign a register in order to hold a referendum on de amalgamation Residents of Aylmer Buckingham Hull and Masson Angers all surpassed this threshold and sought referendums on de merge A simple majority of yes votes based on a turnout of at least 35 of voters is needed to de merge All of the above jurisdictions had the required turnout A majority of voters in each jurisdiction rejected the de merger 35 Division of population by sector in the city of Gatineau Gatineau 45 4 Hull 29 2 Aylmer 15 9 Buckingham 5 1 Masson Angers 4 3 Former municipality of Yes votes Yes vote Total votes Turnout Aylmer 7 412 26 48 12 844 45 89Buckingham 1 779 20 27 4 302 49 02Hull 7 820 15 71 19 885 39 94Masson Angers 2 563 34 8 3 900 52 88Neighbourhoods edit See also Neighbourhoods of Gatineau Gatineau is divided into 5 sectors Hull Aylmer Gatineau Masson Angers and Buckingham Demography editHistorical populationsYearPop 19412 822 19515 771 104 5 19568 423 46 0 196113 022 54 6 196617 727 36 1 197122 321 25 9 197673 479 229 2 198174 988 2 1 198677 708 3 6 199192 284 18 8 1996100 684 9 1 2001102 898 2 2 2006242 124 135 3 2011265 349 9 6 2016276 245 4 1 2021291 041 5 4 In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada Gatineau had a population of 291 041 living in 126 476 of its 133 225 total private dwellings a change of 5 4 from its 2016 population of 276 245 With a land area of 341 84 km2 131 99 sq mi it had a population density of 851 4 km2 2 205 1 sq mi in 2021 36 According to the 2011 census the city of Gatineau had a population of 265 349 This was an increase of 9 6 compared to 2006 Most of the population live in the urban cores of Aylmer Hull and the former Gatineau Buckingham and Masson Angers are more rural communities Gatineau is the fourth largest city in Quebec after Montreal Quebec City and Laval The Quebec part of Ottawa Gatineau Census Metropolitan Area CMA which includes various peripheral municipalities in addition to Gatineau had a total population of 314 501 Between 2001 and 2006 there was a net influx of 5 205 people equivalent to 2 of the total 2001 population who moved to Gatineau from outside of the Ottawa Gatineau area There was also a net outmigration of 630 anglophones equivalent to 2 of the 2001 anglophone population Overall there was a net influx of 1 100 people from Quebec City 1 060 from Montreal 545 from Saguenay 315 from Toronto 240 from Trois Rivieres 225 from Kingston and 180 from Sudbury 37 Ethnicity edit The 2001 census found that 4 3 of the population self identified as having a visible minority status including among others about 1 3 who self identified as Black about 1 0 self identifying as Arab 0 5 as Latin American 0 4 as Chinese 0 3 as Southeast Asian 0 2 as South Asian and about 0 1 as Filipino Statistics Canada terminology is used throughout 38 First Nations comprise 2 7 of the population 39 The area is home to more than five thousand recent immigrants i e those arriving between 2001 and 2006 who now comprise about two percent of the total population 11 of these new immigrants have come from Colombia 10 from China 7 from France 6 from Lebanon 6 from Romania 4 from Algeria 3 from the United States and 3 from Congo 40 The cultural diversity of the city of Gatineau is noteworthy The city welcomes between 800 and 1 000 newcomers to Canada each year They come from some sixty countries and enrich the Gatineau identity 29 Canadians were able to self identify one or more ethnocultural ancestries in the 2001 census Percentages may therefore add up to more than 100 The most common response was Canadian Canadien and since the term Canadian is as much an expression of citizenship as of ethnicity these figures should not be considered an exact record of the relative prevalence of different ethnocultural ancestries 43 1 of respondents gave a single response of Canadian Canadien while a further 26 5 identified both Canadian Canadien and one or more other ethnocultural ancestries 10 4 of respondents gave a single response of French 1 1 gave a single response of Portuguese 1 0 gave a single response of Irish 0 9 gave a single response of Lebanese 0 8 gave a single response of English 0 7 gave a single responses of Quebecois and 0 7 gave a single response of North American Indian According to Statistics Canada counting both single and multiple responses the most commonly identified ethnocultural ancestries were 70 7 North American 37 8 French 14 3 British Isles 4 5 Aboriginal 4 0 Southern European 3 8 Western European 1 9 Arab 1 7 Eastern European 1 0 East and Southeast Asian 0 8 African 0 7 Latin Central and South American 0 7 Caribbean and 0 5 Northern European Panethnic groups in the City of Gatineau 2001 2021 Panethnicgroup 2021 41 2016 42 2011 43 2006 44 2001 45 Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop European a 219 350 76 77 224 670 82 64 225 670 86 24 217 290 90 55 97 250 94 98 African 27 145 9 5 16 670 6 13 10 165 3 88 5 715 2 38 1 040 1 02 Indigenous 11 705 4 1 10 420 3 83 9 065 3 46 6 270 2 61 1 355 1 32 Middle Eastern b 11 370 3 98 9 180 3 38 7 045 2 69 4 210 1 75 1 320 1 29 Latin American 5 595 1 96 4 170 1 53 3 855 1 47 2 415 1 01 370 0 36 East Asian c 3 865 1 35 2 830 1 04 2 500 0 96 1 785 0 74 335 0 33 Southeast Asian d 2 965 1 04 1 805 0 66 1 725 0 66 1 430 0 6 225 0 22 South Asian 1 840 0 64 955 0 35 795 0 3 455 0 19 225 0 22 Other Multiracial e 1 885 0 66 1 155 0 42 845 0 32 400 0 17 265 0 26 Total responses 285 715 98 17 271 850 98 41 261 665 98 61 239 980 99 11 102 385 99 5 Total population 291 041 100 276 245 100 265 349 100 242 124 100 102 898 100 Note Totals greater than 100 due to multiple origin responsesLanguage edit The following statistics refer to the Quebec portion of the Ottawa Gatineau CMA as it was defined in the 2021 census Counting both single and multiple responses French was a mother tongue for 78 27 of residents in 2021 English for 16 96 Arabic for 2 74 Portuguese for 0 85 and Spanish for 2 0 46 Figures below are for single responses only 47 Mother tongue Population PercentageFrench 204 290 71 1 English 33 825 11 8 Arabic 7 880 2 74 Portuguese 2 465 0 85 Spanish 5 730 2 00 Mandarin 1 715 0 60 Serbo Croatian 1 195 0 42 Romanian 1 040 0 36 German 45 0 02 Berber 780 0 27 Polish 470 0 16 Italian 445 0 2 Haitian Creole 1 200 0 42 Russian 1 815 0 63 Kirundi 915 0 32 Persian 475 0 17 Lao 105 0 04 Bosnian 245 0 09 Dutch 115 0 04 Serbian 705 0 25 Kinyarwanda 735 0 26 Hungarian 120 0 04 Canada Census Mother Tongue Gatineau Quebec 48 Census Total French English French amp English OtherYear Responses Count Trend Pop Count Trend Pop Count Trend Pop Count Trend Pop 2021 287 510 204 290 nbsp 0 50 71 1 33 825 nbsp 10 32 11 8 8 640 nbsp 86 40 3 34 165 nbsp 16 7 11 9 2016 273 265 205 335 nbsp 0 9 75 14 30 660 nbsp 5 5 11 22 4 635 nbsp 4 9 1 69 29 275 nbsp 22 72 10 7 2011 263 255 203 360 nbsp 6 22 77 24 29 060 nbsp 14 56 11 04 4 415 nbsp 65 3 1 6 23 855 nbsp 16 33 9 06 2006 239 980 191 445 nbsp 4 35 79 77 25 365 nbsp 3 57 10 56 2 670 nbsp 20 93 1 11 20 505 nbsp 42 6 8 54 2001 224 755 183 455 nbsp 3 6 81 6 24 115 nbsp 5 18 10 7 2 810 nbsp 4 9 1 25 14 380 nbsp 30 9 6 39 1996 215 995 177 065 n a 81 97 23 995 n a 11 1 3 005 n a 1 39 10 985 n a 5 08 Religion edit According to the 2021 census religious groups in Gatineau included 41 Christianity 178 850 persons or 62 6 Irreligion 88 125 persons or 30 8 Islam 14 840 persons or 5 2 Buddhism 1 165 persons or 0 4 Hinduism 535 persons or 0 2 Judaism 405 persons or 0 1 Indigenous Spirituality 200 persons or 0 1 Sikhism 185 persons or 0 1 Other 1 410 persons or 0 5 About 83 of the population identified as Roman Catholic in 2001 while 7 said they had no religion and 5 identified as Protestant 1 3 Anglican 1 3 United 0 7 Baptist 0 3 Lutheran 0 2 Pentecostal 0 2 Presbyterian About 1 of the population identified as Muslim 0 5 as Jehovah s Witnesses 0 3 as Buddhist and 0 2 as Eastern Orthodox 49 Immigration edit Immigrants by country of birth 2016 Census 50 Rank Country Population1 Haiti 2 5302 Lebanon 2 4503 France 2 0504 Morocco 1 9855 Democratic Republic of the Congo 1 7106 Colombia 1 7107 China 1 5308 Algeria 1 4359 Portugal 1 27510 Philippines 1 095There are a total of 44 180 immigrants by status in Gatineau or 15 5 of the whole population and 5 300 non permanent resident 51 Economy editOriginally Gatineau s economy was based almost entirely on pulp and paper However a number of federal and provincial government offices are located in Gatineau due to its proximity to the national capital and its status as the main town of the Outaouais region of Quebec A policy of the federal government to distribute federal jobs on both sides of the Ottawa River led to the construction of several massive office towers to house federal civil servants in downtown Gatineau citation needed the largest of these are Place du Portage and Terrasses de la Chaudiere occupying part of the downtown core of the city Some government agencies and ministries headquartered in Gatineau are the Public Works and Government Services Canada Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada Environment Canada Transportation Safety Board of Canada 52 The following federal government departments have their main offices in Gatineau Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada Canadian Heritage Employment and Social Development Canada Environment Canada includes offices of Parks Canada Public Works and Government Services CanadaThe following agencies have their main offices in Gatineau Transportation Safety Board of Canada Passport Canada under Citizenship and Immigration Canada Competition Bureau the Canadian Patent Office and the Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission under Innovation Science and Economic Development Canada In addition to housing a significant portion of federal government offices the city is also an important regional centre for the Outaouais region The city serves as the location for the Superior Court of the District of Gatineau which encompasses all neighboring municipalities It also houses two of the region s major hospitals as well as numerous provincial colleges Other important economic sectors are health care tourism education small business and the provincial public service The health care and education sectors are particularly important because they represent the region s largest sources of permanent employment outside the federal government The provincial public service also has a strong presence in the city due to its status as the region s principal city There are two hospitals in the city one in the Hull sector and the other in the Gatineau sector as well as numerous other clinics and health centers There are also numerous primary and secondary schools scattered throughout the city They are managed by four school boards three of which are French speaking and one English speaking The city is also a major tourist region with over a million tourists a year visiting the city s museums parks lakes and other outdoor attractions The Gatineau Ottawa metropolitan region has over 1 900 technology companies employing close to 80 000 workers There are also over 65 research centers and six universities with over 160 000 students 20 of whom are enrolled in science engineering and technology programs 53 Gatineau s economy relies on a few important sectors A majority of jobs are accounted for between the federal government construction and service industries There is however a large effort to modernize the economy in the region through recent initiatives in the entrepreneurial and innovation ecosystem The Innovation Gatineau Institute is a regional innovation centre that boasts co working space as well as startup incubation and acceleration programs to spur innovative business creation In 2020 The Honourable Melanie Joly Minister of Economic Development and Official Languages visited the Outaouais region to announce a total of 1 553 448 in financial assistance This funding will help expand the entrepreneurial ecosystem 54 Arts and Culture edit nbsp Filling the balloons in the parkGatineau is home to many attractions and cultural events It is home to national museums such as the Canadian Museum of History and the Canadian Children s Museum Nightlife within the city of Gatineau is mostly centered in the Vieux Hull sector behind the Federal office complexes of downtown The area features many bars and restaurants within walking distance from Ottawa It is a popular spot for young Ontarians as the legal drinking age in Quebec is 18 as opposed to Ontario s 19 Retail edit Main article Les Promenades Gatineau Gatineau is home to Les Promenades It is a major shopping centre located in Canada s National Capital Region in the city of Gatineau Quebec The mall is the intersection of Greber and Maloney Boulevards one of the city s busiest intersections and is just off Autoroute 50 It is the city s largest shopping mall by retail space and by shoppers Arenas and Performing arts edit La maison de la culture is a multidisciplinary complex housing the Salle Odyssee This 830 seat auditorium is the city s main performance venue The complex also houses the Art Image exhibition center the municipal library and many other cultural activities such as dance and the Gatineau archives 55 The newest in multidisciplinary complex is called the Centre Slush Puppy A 4 000 seat arena including three community ice rinks managed by the non profit organization Vision Multisports Outaouais the management model is based on the signing of a 45 year emphyteutic lease The building will be transferred to the City at the end of the lease This arena not only hold the QMJHL hockey team Les Olympiques but also host larger artists such as Flo Rida 56 Festivals edit The Casino du Lac Leamy is also one of the largest tourist attraction in the city In August the Casino hosts an international fireworks competition which opposes four different countries with the winner being awarded a Prix Zeus prize for the best overall show based on several criteria 57 and can return in the following year At the beginning of September on Labour Day weekend Gatineau hosts an annual hot air balloon festival which fills the skies with colourful gas fired passenger balloons One of Gatineau s urban parks Jacques Cartier Park is used by the National Capital Commission during the popular festival Winterlude In December the Gatineau Playground Festival takes place at Complex Branchaud Briere in Gatineau This one of a kind event provides children and adults with 67 000 square feet of gaming sports go karts trampolines and other activities 58 Music edit As Gatineau is the smaller of the two cities in its CMA most major artist perform in Ottawa However since the construction of the Centre Slush Puppy there has been a demand for more events The first of which was Flo Rida who was able to sell out the arena with a 3 500 capacity Parks edit There are many parks Some of them are well gardened playgrounds or resting spaces while others like Lac Beauchamp Park are relatively wild green areas which often merge with the woods and fields of the surrounding municipalities Streams of all sizes run through these natural expanses Most of the city is on level ground but the Northern and Eastern parts lie on the beginnings of the foothills of the massive Canadian Shield or Laurentian Mountains These are the Gatineau Hills and are visible in the background of the companion picture Gatineau is also the home of the second largest urban park in the world Sports editGatineau Olympiques of the QMJHL Quebec Major Junior Hockey League Gatineau Jr Olympiques also known as Gatineau Junior Express are a Canadian Junior ice hockey team based in Gatineau Quebec They play in the National Capital Junior Hockey League NCJHL since 2006 Gatineau Vikings Canadian football team Tyran de Gatineau a junior elite baseball team of the Ligue de Baseball Junior Elite du Quebec L Intrepides de Gatineau are a Midget AAA hockey team La Machine de l Outaouais a Kin Ball team of the Ligue Senior elite de Kin Ball du Quebec Evenements Nordiques Gatineau Nordic Events ENGNE representing the regions cross country ski communityGovernment edit nbsp GatineauThe Gatineau City Council French Conseil municipal de Gatineau is the city s main governing body It is composed of 19 city councillors and a mayor The city serves as the seat of the judicial district of Gatineau which encompasses the entirety of the city of Gatineau as well as several outlying municipalities such as Chelsea Cantley and Pontiac The superior court serving the Outaouais region is located in Gatineau across from City Hall on the corner of Laurier and Hotel de Ville Most of the law firms that represent local businesses throughout the region are also based in Gatineau Gatineau federal election results 59 Year Liberal Conservative Bloc Quebecois New Democratic Green2021 51 69 519 11 15 772 20 27 674 11 14 521 2 2 6872019 53 76 367 10 14 324 18 26 401 12 17 330 5 7 874Gatineau provincial election results 60 Year CAQ Liberal QC solidaire Parti Quebecois2018 35 39 861 34 39 242 16 18 277 10 11 4732014 13 16 126 59 71 916 8 9 695 18 22 352Police and law enforcement edit With more than 250 officers the Service de police de la Ville de Gatineau SPVG provides day to day policing for the city in collaboration with other agencies such as the Surete du Quebec and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police assisting as necessary They are also responsible for patrolling sections of the highways located within the city limits including Autoroute 50 and Autoroute 5 The SPVG is equipped with a CID unit marine unit drugs unit gang suppression unit and a tactical unit Groupe d intervention or GI Patrol officers are armed with Smith amp Wesson M amp P 40 calibre pistols The SPVG uses the same vehicles as similar police forces throughout North America Crime edit Ottawa and Gatineau have some of the lowest crime rates in Canada In 2022 the national crime rate in Canada increased by 5 to 5 668 crimes per 100 000 people With a crime rate of 4 019 crimes per 100 000 people Ottawa ranks 27th out of 35 cities in Canada Gatineau is the 28th most dangerous city in Canada with a crime rate of 3 737 crimes per 100 000 people 61 Infrastructure editThis section is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Gatineau Ottawa Executive Airport is Gatineau s municipal airport capable of handling small jets There are Canada customs facilities for aircraft coming from outside Canada a car rental counter and a restaurant The airport has a few regularly scheduled flights to points within Quebec but most residents of Gatineau use the nearby Ottawa Macdonald Cartier International Airport or travel to Montreal Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport in Montreal Public transport edit See also Societe de transport de l Outaouais Ottawa and Gatineau have two distinct bus based public transit systems with different fare structures OC Transpo and the Societe de transport de l Outaouais Tickets are not interchangeable between the two however passes and transfers from one system to the other do not require payment of a surcharge on any routes There is a proposed LRT system that would connect Gatineau to Bayview and Rideau Centre Stations in Ottawa 62 Roads edit See also List of Gatineau roads Many Gatineau highways and major arteries feed directly into the bridges crossing over to Ottawa but once there the roads lead into the dense downtown grid or into residential areas with no direct connection to The Queensway This difficulty is further magnified by the lack of a major highway on the Quebec side of the Ottawa River connecting Gatineau to Montreal the metropolis of the province most travellers from Gatineau to Montreal first cross over to Ottawa and use Ontario highways to access Montreal However it is expected that since Autoroute 50 has been completed 63 the new link between Gatineau and the Laurentides popular tourist area may serve as part of a Montreal by pass by the north shore for Outaouais residents Education editThe education system in Quebec is different from other systems in Canada Between high school which ends at grade 11 and university students must go through an additional school called CEGEP or College d enseignement general et professionnel CEGEPs offer both pre university 2 years and technical 3 years programs With 28 3 of its population over 20 years of age having completed university studies Gatineau is well ahead of the rest of the Canada Gatineau also has one of the highest bilingualism rates with 63 5 of its population fluent in both English and French 64 The city of Gatineau within its Hull neighborhood houses the main campus of the Universite du Quebec en Outaouais UQO part of the Universite du Quebec network The UQO counts over 5 500 students mostly within its multiple social science programs It is world renowned weasel words for its cyber psychology laboratory Faced with a limited number of domains of study many Quebec students attend other universities either in Ottawa or Montreal Every year the UQO hosts the Bar of Quebec course for certification of new lawyers Gatineau is also the home of two CEGEPs including the francophone Cegep de l Outaouais with three campuses across the city and the anglophone Heritage College The main French language school boards in Gatineau are the Commission scolaire des Portages de l Outaouais the Commission scolaire au Coeur des Vallees and the Commission scolaire des Draveurs There are also four private high schools the all girl College Saint Joseph the College Saint Alexandre and Ecole secondaire Nouvelles Frontieres and le Centre academique de l Outaouais CADO Elementary and secondary education in English is held under the supervision of the Western Quebec School Board Since 1995 the National Autonomous University of Mexico UNAM has a campus in Gatineau 65 66 A military training centre Defence Public Affairs Learning Centre is also located in Gatineau Campus medical Outaouais edit In 2019 McGill University announced the construction of a new campus for its Faculty of Medicine in the Outaouais region which will run the undergraduate medical education program in French and allow students to complete their undergraduate medical training entirely in the Outaouais 67 Official communication with politicians has been ongoing since 2016 68 The new facility will be erected above the emergency room at the Gatineau Hospital part of the Centre integre de sante et de services sociaux de l Outaouais in addition to new offices for the associated Family Medicine Unit for residency training 67 needs update Although the preparatory year for students entering the undergraduate medical education program from CEGEP was initially planned to be offered solely at the McGill downtown campus in Montreal 67 69 collaboration with the Universite du Quebec en Outaouais finally made it possible to offer the program entirely in Gatineau 70 Key roads edit Main article List of Gatineau roadsMedia editMain article Media in Ottawa Gatineau Gatineau is the city of licence for several television and radio stations serving the National Capital Region which is a single media market Many of the Ottawa Gatineau region s TV and FM broadcast stations transmit from Camp Fortune just north of Gatineau All of the stations licensed directly to Gatineau broadcast in French Weekly newspapers published in Gatineau include Le Bulletin d Aylmer bilingual and The West Quebec Post Although Gatineau does not have its own daily newspaper it is served by daily newspapers published in Ottawa including the French Le Droit and the English Ottawa Citizen and Ottawa Sun The Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission the Canadian regulatory agency for broadcasting is based in Gatineau at Terrasses de la Chaudiere Notable people editPhillippe Aumont Dave Leduc Eva Avila Daniel Briere Daniel Lanois Andrew Leamy 1816 1868 a pioneer industrialist and community leader in Lower Canada Champlain Marcil 1920 2010 photojournalist Stephane Richer Denis Savard Maxim Tissot Evil Uno Philemon Wright 1760 1839 founder of HullSee also edit nbsp Ontario portal nbsp Canada portalChemin de fer de l Outaouais Hull Chelsea Wakefield Railway List of anglophone communities in Quebec List of cities in Quebec List of crossings of the Ottawa River List of mayors of Gatineau List of regional county municipalities and equivalent territories in Quebec Municipal reorganization in Quebec Twin citiesNotes edit Statistic includes all persons that did not make up part of a visible minority or an indigenous identity Statistic includes total responses of West Asian and Arab under visible minority section on census Statistic includes total responses of Chinese Korean and Japanese under visible minority section on census Statistic includes total responses of Filipino and Southeast Asian under visible minority section on census Statistic includes total responses of Visible minority n i e and Multiple visible minorities under visible minority section on census References edit Ville de Gatineau 1933 1974 Armoiries Archived from the original on 8 August 2014 Retrieved 19 June 2013 Banque de noms de lieux du Quebec Reference number 24715 toponymie gouv qc ca in French Commission de toponymie du Quebec a b Repertoire des municipalites Geographic code 81017 www mamh gouv qc ca in French Ministere des Affaires municipales et de l Habitation Gatineau Code 2481017 Census Profile 2011 census Government of Canada Statistics Canada Ottawa Gatineau Quebec part Census metropolitan area 2011 Census profile Archived 6 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine The census metropolitan area Quebec part consists of Gatineau Bowman Cantley Chelsea Denholm L Ange Gardien La Peche Mayo Notre Dame de la Salette Pontiac Val des Bois Val des Monts In the 2006 census the census metropolitan area had not included Bowman Mayo Notre Dame de la Salette Val des Bois a b Gatineau Code 2466023 Census Profile 2016 census Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2021 Census Statistics Canada Government of Canada 9 February 2022 Archived from the original on 25 August 2022 Retrieved 25 August 2022 Canada Government of Canada Statistics 8 February 2017 Census Profile 2016 Census Ottawa Gatineau Quebec part Census metropolitan area Quebec and Quebec Province www12 statcan gc ca Archived from the original on 7 August 2020 Retrieved 2 June 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Canada Government of Canada Statistics 8 February 2017 Census Profile 2016 Census Ottawa Gatineau Census metropolitan area Ontario Quebec and Ontario Province www12 statcan gc ca Archived from the original on 24 September 2019 Retrieved 22 June 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 2021 CMA Census Statistics Canada Government of Canada 9 February 2022 Archived from the original on 25 August 2022 Retrieved 25 August 2022 Territorial Division Act Archived 26 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine Revised Statutes of Quebec D 11 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 21 June 2023 English French bilingualism in Canada Recent trends after five decades of official bilingualism www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 17 November 2023 a b L origine incertaine du toponyme Gatineau French L info de la vallee Retrieved 17 November 2023 Rick Henderson https www capitalchronicles ca post gatineau paddling through the history of a river s name Archived 27 March 2023 at the Wayback Machine www capitalchronicles ca 13 novembre 2021 Benjamin Sulte Gatineau L Echo de la Gatineau 6 juillet 1889 http data2 collectionscanada ca 001094 pdf 18890706 echo de la gatineau pointegatineau pdf pg 1 and 2 Rick Henderson https www capitalchronicles ca post gatineau paddling through the history of a river s name Archived 27 March 2023 at the Wayback Machine 31 novembre 2021 Commission de toponymie du Quebec ville de Gatineau archive https toponymie gouv qc ca ct ToposWeb fiche aspx no seq 24715 Archived 28 August 2023 at the Wayback Machine Gatineau the Canadian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 7 January 2023 Retrieved 7 January 2023 Leaders and Associates the unique land grant system of early Lower Canada 19 November 2020 Archived from the original on 27 March 2023 Retrieved 27 March 2023 http www biographi ca en bio wright philemon 7E html Archived 27 March 2023 at the Wayback Machine 3rd amp 4th paragraphs John H Taylor Ottawa An Illustrated History James Lorimer amp Company Publishers Toronto 1986 p 11 Martin Michael Working Class Culture and the Development of Hull QC Archived 11 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine p 48 2006 a b c d e Tremblay Robert Bibliotheque et Archives Canada et al Histoires oubliees Interprogrammes Des prisonniers speciaux Interlude Aired 20 July 2008 14h47 to 15h00 Note See also List of POW camps in Canada Harold Kalman and John Roaf Exploring Ottawa An Architectural Guide to the Nation s Capital Toronto University of Toronto Press 1983 p 88 War Never Again memorial National Defence Canada 16 April 2008 Archived from the original on 23 May 2014 Retrieved 22 May 2014 Carte topographique Gatineau altitude relief Cartes topographiques in French Retrieved 17 November 2023 Urban Geology of the National Capital Area Bedrock topography Gsc nrcan gc ca 14 April 2009 Archived from the original on 18 May 2011 Retrieved 20 August 2010 a b George 14 March 2015 Historique de la ville de Gatineau Histoire du Quebec in Canadian French Archived from the original on 27 February 2023 Retrieved 27 February 2023 Why Gatineau Why Gatineau Retrieved 17 November 2023 Climatic Regions Koppen Atlas of Canada Natural Resources Canada June 2005 Archived from the original on 3 April 2012 Retrieved 25 December 2012 phz1981 2010 Canada s Plant Hardiness Site Natural Resources Canada Archived from the original on 7 August 2018 Retrieved 14 December 2018 a b c Gatineau climate Weather Gatineau amp temperature by month en climate data org Retrieved 17 November 2023 a b Gatineau Climate Weather By Month Average Temperature Canada Weather Spark weatherspark com Retrieved 17 November 2023 Referendums of June 20 2004 Directeur General des Elections Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 19 February 2017 Population and dwelling counts Canada provinces and territories and census subdivisions municipalities Quebec Statistics Canada 9 February 2022 Archived from the original on 13 February 2023 Retrieved 29 August 2022 Ottawa Gatineau Que part Partie Qc Census Metropolitan Area of Residence 5 Years Ago 37 Mother Tongue 8 Immigrant Status and Period of Immigration 9 Age Groups 16 and Sex 3 for the Inter Census Metropolitan Area Migrants Aged 5 Years and Over of Census Metropolitan Areas 2006 Census 20 Sample Data Statistics Canada 1 March 2007 Archived from the original on 31 July 2020 Retrieved 6 February 2008 Ottawa Hull Que part Partie Qc Visible Minority Groups 15 and Immigrant Status and Period of Immigration 11 for Population for Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas 1 and Census Agglomerations 2001 Census 20 Sample Data Statistics Canada 1 March 2007 Retrieved 6 February 2008 Ottawa Gatineau Que part Partie Qc Aboriginal Identity 8 Sex 3 and Age Groups 12 for the Population of Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2006 Census 20 Sample Data Statistics Canada 15 January 2008 Retrieved 6 February 2008 Ottawa Gatineau Que part Partie Qc Immigrant Status and Period of Immigration 8 and Place of Birth 261 for the Immigrants and Non permanent Residents of Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2006 Census 20 Sample Data Statistics Canada 4 December 2007 Retrieved 6 February 2008 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada 26 October 2022 Census Profile 2021 Census of Population www12 statcan gc ca Archived from the original on 11 November 2022 Retrieved 9 November 2022 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 27 October 2021 Census Profile 2016 Census www12 statcan gc ca Archived from the original on 28 August 2023 Retrieved 12 January 2023 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 27 November 2015 NHS Profile www12 statcan gc ca Archived from the original on 28 August 2023 Retrieved 12 January 2023 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 20 August 2019 2006 Community Profiles www12 statcan gc ca Archived from the original on 1 February 2023 Retrieved 12 January 2023 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2 July 2019 2001 Community Profiles www12 statcan gc ca Archived from the original on 13 January 2023 Retrieved 12 January 2023 Gouvernement du Canada Statistique Canada 9 February 2022 Tableau de profil Profil du recensement Recensement de la population de 2021 www12 statcan gc ca Archived from the original on 15 February 2023 Retrieved 27 February 2023 Ottawa Gatineau Que part Partie Qc Detailed Mother Tongue 186 Knowledge of Official Languages 5 Age Groups 17A and Sex 3 for the Population of Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2001 and 2006 Censuses 20 Sample Data Statistics Canada 20 November 2007 Retrieved 6 February 2008 Statistics Canada 1996 2001 2006 2011 2016census 2021census Archived 27 February 2023 at the Wayback Machine Ottawa Hull Que part Partie Qc Religion 95A Age Groups 7A and Sex 3 for Population for Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 1991 and 2001 Censuses 20 Sample Data Statistics Canada 1 March 2007 Retrieved 6 February 2008 https www12 statcan gc ca Archived 27 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine dp pd 2016 Census of Population Data products Statistics Canada Gouvernement du Canada Statistique Canada 9 February 2022 Tableau de profil Profil du recensement Recensement de la population de 2021 www12 statcan gc ca Archived from the original on 15 February 2023 Retrieved 27 February 2023 Contact Us Transportation Safety Board of Canada Retrieved 31 May 2009 Why Gatineau Why Gatineau Retrieved 17 November 2023 Regions Canada Economic Development for Quebec 27 August 2020 Gatineau a key player in Quebec s economy canada ca Retrieved 17 November 2023 Gatineau La Maison de la culture de Maison de la culture de Gatineau maisondelaculture ca in French Retrieved 17 November 2023 A propos Centre Slush Puppie Arena multidisciplinaire Centre Slush Puppie in French Retrieved 17 November 2023 History and Recognitions Casino Lac Leamy Sound of Light Retrieved 19 July 2018 Gatineau Playground Festival quebecgetaways com Retrieved 17 November 2023 Official Voting Results Raw Data poll by poll results in Gatineau Elections Canada 7 April 2022 Archived from the original on 5 March 2023 Retrieved 28 February 2023 Official Voting Results by polling station poll by poll results in Gatineau Elections Quebec Archived from the original on 28 August 2023 Retrieved 28 February 2023 Ottawa and Gatineau see spike in crimes in 2022 StatsCan reports Ottawa 27 July 2023 Retrieved 17 November 2023 Gatineau reveals 2 1B LRT plan eyes 2028 launch Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 20 June 2018 Archived from the original on 14 November 2018 Retrieved 20 December 2018 Crews will work through winter to have Highway 50 open in 2012 The Review Archived 10 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Thereview ca 21 October 2010 Retrieved 12 July 2013 Why Gatineau Why Gatineau Retrieved 17 November 2023 The UNAM in the United States Permanent Extension School Escuela Permanente de Extension EPE San Antonio Texas 100 unam mx Archived from the original on 22 August 2014 UNAM Canada Gatineau Quebec Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Archived from the original on 28 August 2023 Retrieved 27 April 2020 a b c Preliminary work under way on construction of the McGill University Faculty of Medicine s new campus in Outaouais Med e News Retrieved 11 February 2019 Eidelman David Brousseau Gilles 17 September 2016 Campus medical l Outaouais a assez attendu Le Devoir Retrieved 27 April 2020 L UQO decue de ne pas accueillir la future faculte de medecine CBC Radio Canada 7 September 2016 Archived from the original on 20 September 2020 Retrieved 27 April 2020 McGill est l UQO vont offrir l annee preparatoire en medecine a Gatineau Universite du Quebec Universite du Quebec en Outaouais 13 February 2020 Retrieved 27 April 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gatineau Official website nbsp nbsp Gatineau travel guide from Wikivoyage nbsp Geographic data related to Gatineau at OpenStreetMap Gatineau at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gatineau amp oldid 1205262112, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.