Halifax moves ahead with downtown Dartmouth heritage district
CBC
People will soon be able to weigh in on a proposed heritage district for downtown Dartmouth, a move the municipality says will protect a unique area while allowing appropriate development.
Municipal staff have been working toward a downtown Dartmouth heritage conservation district since regional council gave the idea the green light in 2020. These districts include specific planning and land-use rules around building development, alterations or demolition.
On Tuesday, council accepted a background study of the area and agreed to move ahead with the public consultation phase of the project.
Coun. Sam Austin, who represents Dartmouth Centre, said the neighbourhood does have important heritage buildings like the old Dartmouth post office, Quaker House and Christ Church. But he said the area's entire collection of buildings and character is also of value.
"When you walk down Portland Street, you still have this intact, small-town sort of main street that is lovely in terms of vibe and that kind of human-scale feeling," Austin said outside the meeting.
"There's something unique there that doesn't get built today in modern construction. That's something that I think is worth holding on to."
The district would include most of the area bordered by Portland Street and the Dartmouth Common, south of Pine Street.
A staff report said some character-defining elements of the district include the original grid of the Dartmouth town plot laid out in 1750, views of the harbour at the ends of Ochterloney, North and Portland streets, church properties within the original town, and park features in the Dartmouth Common.
The report notes the district is being prioritized because of development pressure ramping up over the past few years. Halifax Regional Municipality issued 109 development permits between 2015 and 2023 in this study area, mostly for mixed-use and commercial projects.
Austin said heritage conservation districts don't freeze development completely but actually allow for flexibility and projects that bring a benefit to the area.
"It's essentially a key part of potentially unlocking additional development in places, while also retaining what is great about the place," he said.
Amanda Furniss, executive director of the Dartmouth Heritage Museum, said the milestone is "certainly a step in the right direction."
The museum runs Quaker House in the proposed conservation district. The restored 1785 building shares the story of the Nantucket Quakers who brought a whaling enterprise to Dartmouth.
They were responsible for successfully lobbying the governor of Nova Scotia to grant common land to the locals for grazing livestock in 1788, the staff report noted. Part of that remains the Dartmouth Common public green space today.













