London

Trees chopped down in downtown's Ivey Park to make way for sewer work

Londoners who frequent Ivey Park at the Forks of the Thames were surprised when they came for their daily walks to find more and 60 trees had been chopped down by the city.

The sewer is 90 years old and needs to be replaced

More than 100 trees were removed in Ivy Park at the Fork of the Thames to make way for the update of a 90-year-old sewer line.
Trees were removed in Ivy Park at the Fork of the Thames last week to make way for the update of a 90-year-old sewer line. (Travis Dolynny/CBC)

Londoners who frequent Ivey Park at the Forks of the Thames were surprised when they came for their daily walks to find more than 100 trees had been chopped down by the city.

The city had to chop down 66 trees in total, 39 small trees and a hedge, and 27 large-sized trees, said Ashley Rammeloo, London's director of sewers.

"We never like to take down trees, but we'll be replacing them," Rammeloo said. "We're bringing in seven large-caliper trees that are the largest ones we can actually plant, so that's something that's above and beyond what we normally do for construction projects."

A bunch of tree stumps surrounded by snow.
Trees removed or marked for removal in Ivey Park and near the Thames River in London, Ont., on March 6, 2025. (Matthew Trevithick/CBC)

The trees were cut down because the sewer that runs underneath the Thames River and provides sanitary service for downtown has to be replaced. It was constructed in 1935 and has come to the end of its useful life, Rammalloo said.

"It's critical that we replace it before we have failure. On top of that, with all the growth we're seeing in the downtown, we also need more capacity, so we're making it bigger as well," she said.

Londoner Teresa Westwood walks through Ivey Park nearly every day. She said it was an "unpleasant surprise" to see so many trees gone.

man in a puffy jacket on a bridge overlooking a river.
Retired Londoner John Hassan loves to walk through downtown's Ivey Park and says the city takes great care to not chop down trees it doesn't need to. (Matthew Trevithick/CBC)

"It's tough because the city is growing and if you don't do the development you suffer later," she said. "I understand why they had to do it but that doesn't mean it wasn't a shock. The impact was unbelievable."

John Hassan is a retired Londoner who also walks through the park daily.

"London goes above and beyond to save as many trees as possible," he said. "It's not like these were super old-growth trees. Trees always come back, and if it wasn't necessary, the city wouldn't do it."

Londoners should do themselves a favour and walk through the downtown and along the river, Hassan said.

"Leave your car at home and walk down here. It's not as appealing this time of year, but it's something everyone should do."

The downtown sewer capacity expansion project includes the replacement of the existing sanitary sewer siphon at the forks of the Thames.