Rally held as community angered by Ontario Science Centre closure - Action News
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Toronto

Rally held as community angered by Ontario Science Centre closure

Dozens of community members, advocates and politicians attendeda rally in Toronto Sunday to protest the Ford government's decision toabruptly close the Ontario Science Centre.

Ford government shut down centre without warning Friday citing safety concerns with buildings roof

Two children are among a group of people at a rally in a park.
People hold signs at a rally on Sunday protesting the Ford government's decision to close the Ontario Science Centre. (Spencer Gallichan-Lowe/CBC)

Dozens of peopleattendeda rally in Toronto Sunday urging PremierDoug Ford's government to reverse its decisiontoabruptly close the Ontario Science Centre.

The crowd atWellsHillPark in the St. Clair West neighbourhood includedchildren, educators, advocates and politicians. Children blew whistles and hoisted homemade signs declaring their love for the facility as the crowd chanted "Save our science centre."

"We are joining all of these folks in saying to the Ford government: reopen the science centre," Ontario NDP Leader Marit Stiles said in an interview at the rally.

"This is not your science centre. It is Ontario's science centre. It is the kids' science centre. It belongs to them and they deserve a say."

The province announced Friday it was closing the popular landmark and attraction in Toronto's Don Mills neighbourhood that day, citing safety concerns with the building's roof contained in an engineering report it had commissioned.

The report from engineering firmRimkus Consulting Group found structuralissues with some roof panels, some of which require replacement or reinforcementby Oct. 31, 2024,to avoid a potential collapse undera significant buildup of snow, but it stopped short of recommending a closure of the building.

While the issuescould be fixed at a cost of between $22 million and $40 million, the province said it choseto shutter the location indefinitely to protect the health and safety of visitors and staff.

WATCH | Ontario Science Centre shutting down due to roof collapse risk:

Ontario Science Centre shutting down due to roof collapse risk

3 months ago
Duration 2:45
The province is shutting down the Ontario Science Centre immediately due to the risk that the 55-year-old building's roof could collapse. As CBC's Lorenda Reddekopp reports, the emergency closure comes after the Ford government's controversial announcement to move the centre to Ontario Place.

The Ford government already planned to move thescience centre from its current location to a redeveloped Ontario Place site, next to a planned spa being built by Austrian company Therme, an expanded Live Nation concert venue, as well as new public space and beaches. Under those plans, the science centre building won't open up until 2028.

Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie, who also attended the rally, said urged the government to reverse its decision to close the science centre. She said the roof couldbe fixed at a fraction of the cost of the government'srecent decision to allow beer and wine sales in convenience stores.

"This is being done to justify the $600 million parking lot that's going into Ontario Place ... to help Therme, a foreign multinational company that has been given a 95 year lease on public land," Crombie said. "That, for me, is shocking."

Closure an attack on education, parent says

Workers erectedfencing around the science centre on Friday, blocking access to the building and itsparking lots. Private security guards patrolled the site.

Katarina Gligorijevic and Colin Geddes had planned to take their son Sasha to the centre that day but had an unexpected scheduling conflict, meaning the eight-year-old wasn't able to visit one last time before it closed.

The science centre was "one of the important cornerstones of our schedule" for Sasha, who is homeschooled and loved to spend hours looking at the frog section, his parents said at the rally.

"The abruptness of the closure felt extremely unnecessary and cruel," Gligorijevic said.

"To not give the thousands of kids in the city who love the science centre a chance to go one last time ... it was just totally unnecessary and totally unreasonable," she said.

Workers erect a chain-link fence on a road, with an Ontario Science Centre sign in the background.
Workers began erecting fencing around the Ontario Science Centre on Friday, as the province announced the building will be immediately closing because of the risk of a roof collapse. The Ontario Science Centre opened in 1969 and the Ford government plans to relocate it to Ontario Place. (Cristian Gomes/CBC)

Arushi Nath, a Grade 9 student in Toronto who wonthe top prize at the Canada-Wide Science Fair in both 2022 and 2023, credits the centre with fuelling her curiosity.

"It's where I learned it's OK for women and everyone to be passionate about science," she said.

Closingitamounts to "robbing children of their scientific curiosity and childhood dreams," Nath said.

Neighbours, parents outraged

The decision to close the centrehas prompted anger among neighbours and parents.

Sameer Sayed and his three school-aged children, who live across the street from the centre, said his family visits three to four times a month.

"It's really disappointing that the peak time, the boom time for the kids and the parents to come during summer vacation, has been snatched away," Sayed said in an interview outside the centre on Saturday.

children outside the science centre
Would-be Science Centre patrons are pictured outside after the attraction was closed due to a risk of roof failure on June 21, 2024. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Elsa Lam, editor of Canadian Architect magazine, said her six-year-old son was upset when she told him the news that the centre was being shut down. She said she believes the government is using the report to justify its Ontario Place redevelopment plan.

"The report doesn't say anything about having to close the Science Centre immediately," Lam said. "This is all aboutwhat they're doing on Ontario Place. They want to close the science centre and move it to a facility that's half the size."

Lack of government funding key cause of building's deterioration: AG

The facility, which was designed by prominent architect Raymond Moriyama, was the world's first interactive science centre when it opened in 1969.But years of limited capital investments have left it with several deficiencies.

A business case released last year by the government found that the current building is facing $369 million in deferred and critical maintenance needs over the next 20 years.

A lack of government funding is a key cause of that, Ontario's auditor general said in a report last year. Thatreport also found the government made its decision to move the centreto Toronto's waterfront with "preliminary and incomplete cost information" and failed to consult key stakeholders.

The business case said that moving the science centre instead of renovating the existing facility could save the government about $250 million over 50 years. A considerable amount of those savings come from the new planned facility coming in at about half the size of the current one, though officials say there will be more exhibit space.

Summer camps had been set to start at the science centre in a little over two weeks and the government said it has identified a nearby school that can be used as an alternative location, but all participants will get full refunds. Science centre members will also be reimbursed.

Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow said the city will do what it can to help.

"The City of Toronto will do everything we can to assist so that kids will have a chance to be wondered by science," Chow said at an unrelated event Saturday.

"The City of Toronto will look for spaces. We'll cooperate with the workers, the board and the Ontario government to see what we can do to assist."

Infrastructure Ontario is issuing a request for proposals on Monday to try to find a temporary science centre location until the new one at Ontario Place opens. The science centre is also looking at providing mobile, virtual and pop-up offerings.

With files from The Canadian Press and Spencer Gallichan-Lowe