Banging in downtown Sydney to go on, and on - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Banging in downtown Sydney to go on, and on

People in downtown Sydney may be wondering about the source of a rhythmic banging this week. The noise is connected to the construction of the new NSCC Marconi campus, and it will be a fixture in the downtown soundscape for some time to come.

Pounding 800 steel piles into the new NSCC Marconi site will take months

A crane positions a steel pile on the construction site of the new NSCC Marconi campus in downtown Sydney. (Holly Conners/CBC)

A rhythmic bangingthat's been echoing throughout downtown Sydney recently will be a fixture in the downtown soundscape for some time to come.

It's coming from the construction site of the new Nova Scotia Community College Marconi campus.

"It was identified that the waterfront site was absolutely the best site for the new facility. However, not the best site for building," NSCC Marconi principal Fred Tilley told CBC Cape Breton's Information Morning.

"The area is in-filled," he said. "And bedrock, which we need for a foundation, is about 30 to 60 feet below the surface, depending on where you are. So the banging that you're hearing is the steel piles being driven down into the bedrock."

Some 800 piles will have to be pounded into the site to create the foundation for the new buildings. That work and the banging will continue for another fourto fivemonths.

"I guess we could call it some short-term pain hopefully for some future long-term gain," said Tilley.

Rosanne MacLean and her group of preschoolers from the YMCA Early Learning Centre are always interested in noises. (Holly Conners/CBC)

That's Phil Dubinsky's outlook. He owns the Old Triangle Irish Alehouse across the street from the construction site.

"It's a little loud, but it's good noise," said Dubinsky."Just to see some progress and a bit of a glimmer of hope in the downtown Sydney area."

The new Marconi campus, which is scheduled to open in September 2024, will include four buildings, covering about 300,000 square feet, and will house about 1,400 students and 200 staff.

Early childhood educator Rosanne MacLean and her group of preschoolers from the nearby YMCA Early Learning Centre walk down to the construction site every day to check out the progress.

They've been counting the bangs, and wondering what's causing them.

"We don't mind it because we're not business owners," she said. "We're just the preschoolers, and we enjoy technology and science. So we're always interested in noises."

Information Morning Cape Breton