885 Décoeur Dr (2380 Tenth Line Road) | 24m | 6f | Proposed
Riverstone Retirement [Tenth Line] Inc. (Claridge Homes) is proposing to redevelop the site at 2380 Tenth Line Road with a mid-rise retirement home. The 6-storey development will include of 141 dwelling units consisting of seventy-three (73) studio units, sixty-two (62) 1-bedroom units, and six (6) two-bedroom units. The proposed development will include 36 bicycle parking spaces, 10 surface parking spaces, and 37 below grade parking spaces for a total of 47 parking spaces. Access to the development is proposed via an inbound only access on Décoeur Drive and an outbound only access on David Lewis Private to facilitate drop-offs to the main entrance and the surface parking lot. Access to the underground parking lot will be provided through an all movement access to David Lewis Private.
Concrete pathways will be provided connecting the main building entrances to the Décoeur Drive sidewalk and to the Tenth Line Road asphalt multi-use pathway. A landscaped amenity space will be located at the rear of the property featuring walking paths, trees, and outdoor seating.
Claridge proposes seniors residence in Orleans, Sienna buys retirement property in Rockland
By Mia Jensen, OBJ
May 4, 2026
Local developer Claridge Homes is proposing a 141-unit retirement residence in Orleans at 885 Decoeur Dr. A planning document for the project said Claridge and Ottawa company Riverstone Retirement are looking to construct a six-storey building featuring 73 studios, 62 one-bedroom units and six two-bedroom units on a 0.62-hectare parcel of land at the northwest corner of Tenth Line Road and Decoeur Drive. The site is located in a low-rise residential neighbourhood, with the Notre-Place Catholic Elementary School to the west and a park across the street. To the north is a commercial plaza that includes restaurants, a gas station, an auto shop, a fitness centre and a Sobeys grocery store. Directly adjacent to the site is vacant land slated for future residential development. The application proposes a small surface parking lot, as well as 37 underground parking spaces and 47 bicycle spots. Concrete pathways would connect the building’s entrances to sidewalks and the Tenth Line Road asphalt multi-use pathway, the document added. A landscaped amenity space to the rear of the property would feature walking paths and outdoor seating.
Well Claridge is responsible for the creation and naming of corner of Mulder Avenue and Scully Way so they are pretty imbedded in the local folklore out that way.