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  #41  
Old Posted Nov 26, 2025, 12:42 AM
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“We’ve been operating here for almost 50 years, since the early ‘80s,” said Maddox

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  #42  
Old Posted Nov 29, 2025, 8:04 PM
Marcus CLS Marcus CLS is offline
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Shopify CEO has a interesting take on this project. I agree.

"While great for Nokia’s bottom line, these subsidies are “toxic” to our tech economy because they allow foreign companies to operate within Canada at a lower cost than their Canadian competitors and all the “fruits of the subsidized labour will accrue to the wealth of other countries and not Canada,” argues Lutke.
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  #43  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2026, 8:25 PM
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Nokia Campus, Phase 1 [570 March Rd] | 32+46m | 5+8f | U/C

Just dropping this all in here, including the latest plans as of Feb 2025, so we don't lose it when it disappears from DevApps.


Nokia is proposing to construct a new mixed use campus at 570 March Road, comprising 4.49 ha of land between March Road and Legget Drive. It was previously ccupied by a large surface parking that was being used by the old Nokia office building to the north at 600 March Road.

A mixed use campus with a gross floor area (GFA) of 55,110m2 is proposed, comprising interconnected components as follows:
  • An eight storey tower providing 21,042m2 of office space for Nokia;
  • A five storey section of the building providing 31,948m2 of research and development (R&D) space for Nokia;
  • A ‘work yard’ to house the large batteries used to power the building;
  • A ‘social café’ on the ground level of the building opening onto;
  • An outdoor amenity area;
  • A three storey section of the building for car parking spaces, and:
  • Single storey retail totalling 2,120m2 facing the lifestyle street.
  • A private ‘lifestyle street’ connecting March Road and Legget Drive.

The building is for the exclusive use of Nokia employees and their visitors except for the retail which is open to the general public. Access is restricted for corporate security reasons. Access to the parking garage is via two separate right-in right-out accesses on March Road and a full movement access on Legget Drive. The northern access on March Road also provides access to an at-grade visitor parking and drop-off area and fire truck access. The southern access on March Road crosses Part 8 on 4R-35453 which is not part of the Subject Site, so an access easement will be required to accommodate the driveway. Pedestrian access is available at all the above points, in addition to the pedestrian access from the lifestyle street. There is a loading dock below ground accessed separately from Legget Drive that will service both the office and the retail.

Gensler Architects have designed a contemporary campus with large glazed areas in the office tower and social café and articulated cladding for the parking garage and research and development section where glazing is not suited to these building functions. The office tower appears to hover on tall pilotis above the ground level retail and foyer which also provides a weather-protected main entry.

The lifestyle street was proposed in the Concept Plan for the greater 570 March Road site as part of its rezoning in 2021. The lifestyle street falls on the Site Plan Subject Site and so is part of this application. The intention of the lifestyle street is to improve connectivity and permeability and provide a low-speed pedestrian friendly street to access the campus, particularly the retail. It will also provide future access to 600 March Road to the north. The street has two lanes shared by vehicles and cyclists, with large paved pedestrian areas between it and the proposed retail.


Architect: Gensler Architects


Development application:
https://devapps.ottawa.ca/en/applications/D07-12-24-0149/details


Location:




Siteplan:








Renderings:













































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  #44  
Old Posted Feb 4, 2026, 4:59 PM
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The shorter building looks more like a sports stadium than anything else.

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  #45  
Old Posted May 14, 2026, 9:42 PM
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Nokia Canada could double local workforce ‘if we’re really successful,’ president says

By David Sali, OBJ
May 14, 2026


Nokia Canada could eventually double its workforce in the National Capital Region as the tech giant expands its research and development capacity in Kanata, the company’s president said Thursday. During a conversation with Mayor Mark Sutcliffe at City Hall, Jeffrey Maddox said Kanata is already one of Nokia’s top-five global R&D centres. But the Finnish telecom giant’s presence in the capital is poised to grow dramatically with a new 750,000-square-foot campus on March Road, which Maddox said is expected to open by the end of 2028. Construction of the project, which is projected to pump more than a billion dollars into the local economy, will ramp up next week, he added. “We couldn’t be more excited to get started,” Maddox told the audience of local business leaders during a Q&A session with Sutcliffe at the Mayor’s Breakfast event. The biggest project in Nokia’s global expansion pipeline, the new Kanata campus will feature a “world-class data centre” where local engineers will help create the next generation of hardware and software to power emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence and quantum computing, Maddox said. “It’s a great place to build this,” the Toronto-based executive, who spent four years as an optical engineer at Nortel’s Kanata campus in the 1990s, said of the Kanata North tech park.

The 11-acre site of Nokia’s new campus is situated between March Road and Legget Drive, just south of Terry Fox Drive and Nokia’s existing facility at 600 March Rd. Nokia’s plans call for an eight-storey “R&D engineering hub” with 225,000 square feet of office space on the northwest portion of the property. The engineering hub – which will focus on cybersecurity, 5G networks, cloud computing and artificial intelligence – will be connected to a five-storey, 345,000-square-foot R&D laboratory that will front along Legget Drive to the east. The buildings are also expected to include about 23,000 square feet of ground-floor retail space that will face a new private street connecting March Road and Legget Drive on the north side of the property. Once the first phase of the project is complete, Nokia plans to tear down its current office tower at 600 March Rd. and replace it with an apartment complex targeted at employees who want to live close to the office. Nokia is already one of the largest tech firms in the city, with about 1,800 local employees. In an interview with OBJ after Thursday’s event, Maddox said that number will rise as the global telecom powerhouse gains momentum under new CEO Justin Hotard, a former top executive at Intel who joined Nokia in April 2025.

“Will we grow over time? Without question,” he said. “I think that the best years are ahead of us. I think over time (the firm’s head count) could eventually double if we’re really successful. There’s tons of potential.” Fibre-optic networks developed largely in Kanata already form the backbone of much of Canada’s high-speed communications infrastructure, Maddox said.

Research at the new March Road facility will pave the way for systems that connect AI data centres that build large-language models like ChatGPT and Claude, and power quantum computing technologies, he added. In addition, the federal government’s push to boost military spending over the next decade could open the door for Nokia and other telecom giants to develop “digital defence” technologies such as drone-detection systems and next-generation cybersecurity software, he said. Canada’s tech ecosystem has “the opportunity to play a global role and connect all of these dots,” he told OBJ. “(Whether) we play that role remains to be seen. There’s no reason why (Ottawa) would not be at the core of whatever happens.” Earlier in the morning, Maddox – who was raised in Northern Ontario and earned an electrical engineering degree at McMaster University in Hamilton – won over the crowd by noting he met his wife in Ottawa and became a "staunch" Senators supporter during his stint in the capital three decades ago. Growing up surrounded by Toronto Maple Leaf fans, Maddox found himself “from a young age cheering for whoever the Leafs happened to be playing. I know I’m not alone. I’m amongst friends here,” he said to rousing applause. Ottawa, he said, “was a great place to be as an early-career engineer” and remains a hotbed of telecom innovation, he added. “I don’t think Ottawa's ever stopped being one of the pre-eminent centres for telecommunications technology,” Maddox said. “This is the home of telecommunications in many ways.” In response to a question from Sutcliffe about the potential impact of AI, Maddox said the technology will “continue to alter almost everything we do.”

While some people may perceive AI as “scary” and worry it will render many jobs obsolete, Maddox said he believes it can also be a force for good in areas such as revolutionizing medical treatments and solving complex issues like global supply-chain bottlenecks. “Instead of using AI to replace a software developer, we talk about how to use AI technology to help a software developer be far more productive and to test their code while they’re writing it and to look for vulnerabilities while they’re writing it so it’s prepared for a world where bad actors can do things differently,” he added.

“So in my mind, there is enormous potential (for AI). It’ll make things happen faster, it'll make things happen bigger. I think the opportunity is to identify where and how it can help you.” Maddox said he thinks the National Capital Region can be a leader in pioneering technologies of the future, as long as private-sector firms are willing to collaborate and governments create a favourable climate for companies to invest. “I’m unequivocal that I think this can happen from Ottawa, but I think it’s going to take a village,” he said. “Together, I think we can be very successful. I’m super-optimistic.”

– With files from Mia Jensen

https://obj.ca/nokia-canada-could-double-local-workforce/
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  #46  
Old Posted May 15, 2026, 1:38 PM
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I hope they design the campus with expansion in mind, a way to add floors while keeping the building open.
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  #47  
Old Posted May 17, 2026, 1:06 AM
CastlesintheSky CastlesintheSky is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
I hope they design the campus with expansion in mind, a way to add floors while keeping the building open.
There is so much space in the area, they could easily have a second campus just a few blocks away.
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