The Sheahan Estates neighbourhood is located west of Greenbank Road, beside the Trend Village neighbourhood (see the plans for that area here: Assaly Trend Homes), and north of Arlington Woods. Begun around 1973, the area has large homes on generous lot sizes. The original builder and the neighbourhood had the same name - Sheahan Estates.
This post also includes the adjacent areas built north and west of the area, but under the names of Banner Creek and Guildwood West. The homes on the northwest corner of Banner Road and Greenbank Road were built by Assaly Homes as Greenbank Village and the plans can be found on this post: Assaly Homes. The southwest portion of the neighbourhood has the Assaly Villas plans, shown on this post: Assaly Villas
The Ottawa Journal. April 21, 1973. The map on this ad is interesting as the Sheahan Estates neighbourhood is actually on the south side of Banner Road.
The Ottawa Journal. September 8, 1973.
The Ottawa Citizen. March 2, 1974.
The Ottawa Journal. February 26, 1977. This ad shows that Sheahan Estates also constructed the homes in the Gentry Lane condominium in Manordale.
In 1975, Edstan Homes built a small pocket of homes in Sheahan Estates:
The Ottawa Journal. October 11, 1975.
The Ottawa Citizen. September 30, 1977.
I am missing the Silverwood and Beechwood plans. If you have them, I would love to share!
In the late 1970s the builder J.Perez constructed a handful of homes in a development called Banner Creek. The only floor plan that I have is the one shown in the ad below. After this project, Perez constructed another similar series of homes in Barrhaven on Henfield Avenue. I do have those plans and they were variations on the Banner Creek plans.
The Ottawa Citizen. November 15, 1978.
The Ottawa Citizen. July 7, 1979.
Here are the plans for the Barrhaven sister development to Banner Creek. The plans are similar, but not exactly the same:
In the mid-1980s, Garand Homes constructed homes north and west of the original Sheahan Estates. Garand previously built homes in the Guildwood Estates area in east end, so this was clearly a nod to that established development.
The Ottawa Citizen. March 26, 1988.
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