Ontario Place redevelopment won't be finished by 2017 - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 03:36 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Ontario Place redevelopment won't be finished by 2017

It's the fifth straight summer that the province's iconic park on the Toronto waterfront, Ontario Place, remains closed. And the promised revitalization of the park is occurring slower than originally promised.

When province shut down park in 2012, it set Canada's 150th birthday as target for reopening

Tourism Minister Eleanor McMahon says: "Bear with us a little while longer. What we're trying to do is take the iconic place that you loved and keep some of that iconic nature but change it, make it a more urban park space that will allow you to access it." (CBC)

Ontario Place, the province's iconic park on the Toronto waterfront,remains closed forthe fifth straight summerand its promised revitalization is occurringmore slowly than originally promised.

When the provincial government announced inFebruary2012 that it wasshuttingdown the park, it setCanada's 150th birthday, July 1, 2017, as the target date for reopening

Tourism Minister Eleanor McMahon now saysthat onlythe first phase of theOntario Placeredevelopment will be completed by next summer.

"It's an enormous construction project," McMahon said Wednesday in an interview with CBC News. "When you have a project of that scope, when you have something that large and that extensive, it has to happen in phases."

Anew park and trail,covering one-quarter of the Ontario Place landson the eastern edge of the site, is scheduled to be created in the first phase.It's currently under construction, and McMahon said it will be readythis fall.She is not committing to any timeline for theremaining phases of the redevelopment.

"I hope that people will understand that we want totake the time to get it right, rather than rush to get something there that's imperfect," said McMahon.

She promises that when the revitalization iscomplete,it will not be like the Ontario Place of old.

"Gone are the days where it's a child's amusement park, said McMahon. "When the entire project is open and revitalized, you're going tosee re-purposed smaller intimate spaces for concerts and things like that,arts festivals, large scale music festivals with multiple venues, that can occur right across the site."

One such festival that will take over the West Island of Ontario Place in September is called in/future.It will feature installation art, in the mannerof the annual Nuit Blanche festival, but also film and music, spread out over an 11-day period.

"We've been really inspired by Ontario Place as a venue," said Layne Hinton, co-artistic director of in/future and the group Art Spin."A lot of people have a lot of nostalgia for this space. It's always had a lot of magic, so we're excited to create some new magic in September with all the art projects that will be happening."

Still, the lack of access to the Ontario Place waterfront these past five summershas left some Toronto families frustrated.

"I feel that there's something missing in the city because it's been closed," said Deborah Knight. She fondly recalls going to Ontario Place as a child and started taking her son Evan there soon after he was born.

"We used to go there a lot when I was younger," said nine-year-old Evan. "I loved all the rides and stuff."

He said he feels sad that it's been closed, and wishes it would reopen.

For families like the Knights,McMahon has a message: "Bear with us a little while longer. What we're trying to do is take the iconic place that you loved and keep some of that iconic nature but change it, make it a more urban park space that will allow you to access it."