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Toronto

Province to release 'business case' for moving science centre to Ontario Place

The provincial governmentis set to release its long-promised "business case" Wednesday for moving the Ontario Science Centre from its current east Toronto location to Ontario Place, on the city's waterfront.

Government has refused media requests earlier this year to publicly release analysis

An aerial drone image shows a science centre.
Minister Kinga Surma said the science centre's current building is 'in disrepair,' adding that it would be less costly to move the science centre downtown rather than rebuild it where it currently stands. (Patrick Morrell/CBC)
  • UPDATE |The provincial government has released a long-awaited business case for its decision to move the Ontario Science Centre to Ontario Place, saying moving the attraction to Toronto's western waterfront would save more than $250 million. You can find more information about that here.

The provincial governmentis set to release its long-promised "business case" Wednesday for moving the Ontario Science Centre from its current east Toronto location to Ontario Place, on the city's waterfront.

When Premier Doug Ford announced updates in April to his government's plans to redevelop Ontario Place, it included moving the science centre and Infrastructure Minister Kinga Surma cited a "business case analysis" as justification.

She said the science centre's current building is "in disrepair" and the analysis showed it would be less expensive to move the science centre downtown rather than rebuild it at the current location.

The new science centre at Ontario Place with a planned opening in 2028 is set to be half the size of the current one, though the government says there will be more exhibition space despite a smaller overall footprint.

The government refused requests from The Canadian Press and other media outlets in April to publicly release the business case and has given itself three time extensions to fulfill a request for it under freedom-of-information legislation, with the last deadline of Sept. 20 coming and going unacknowledged.

Surma said Tuesday that the head of Infrastructure Ontario, Michael Lindsay, will release the business case and take reporters' questions Wednesday.

Earlier this week, Ford and Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow announced that as part of a deal that will see the province take on the operations and costs of the Gardiner Expressway and Don Valley Parkway highways, the two levels of government will discuss keeping some sort of science programming at the existing science centre location.

An aerial view of Ontario place as the sun sets.
The province's plans for Ontario Place have proven controversial, with one advocacy group now seeking a court injunction in an effort to pause the project. The new science centre at Ontario Place is set to be half the size of the current one, though the government says there will be more exhibition space despite a smaller overall footprint. (Patrick Morrell/CBC News)

The city owns the land at that site, and the province has a long-term lease to operate the science centre there.

Infrastructure Ontario ordered the science centre in June 2022 to close a pedestrian bridge connecting the main entrance to the exhibition halls after the bridge was deemed unsafe. The science centre put a shuttle service in place taking visitors from the parking lot to its rear entrance, but it says in its latest business plan that attendance figures and revenues have been negatively affected by the bridge closure.

The science centre is working with Infrastructure Ontario to evaluate options for repair and maintenance of the bridge, the business plan said.