The Province

Major reno planned at Victoria’s Royal B.C. Museum

- KATHERINE DEDYNA VICTORIA TIMES COLONIST

The Royal B.C. Museum is revving up for a $10-million renovation to showcase some of 1,100 Emily Carr works now in storage, refurbish its 1970s-era First Peoples Gallery, and create a new Pacific Worlds Gallery and learning centre.

Twelve architects toured the museum last week before applying to be architect of record for the undertakin­g, with a deadline of Jan. 13 for their proposals. Funding for the work has not been secured.

The renovation­s will be done within the existing building. The site was rezoned in 2011, and plans were unveiled that called for demolition of the 14-storey museum and archives building, and constructi­on of two towers of 12 and 14 storeys.

No such buildings or demolition­s are currently under discussion, said chief operating officer Angela Williams.

The renovation in the works will offer more amenities and more First Nations perspectiv­es, she said.

The top priority is a gallery devoted to the world’s largest collection of Carr works, much of it in storage since the artist’s death in 1945. Those include sculptures, sketches, notebooks and textiles as well as paintings obtained when the museum merged with the B.C. Archives in 2003.

“It’s about time,” Williams said. The Carr gallery will take over 2,152 square feet in what is now the gift shop area.

A new 4,400-square-foot Pacific Worlds Gallery will address First Nations cultural treasures, with an emphasis on B.C.’s connection­s to the Pacific, its peoples, landscape and natural history.

On the third floor, upgrading of the First Peoples dioramas and displays is essential because they date from the 1970s and tell their stories from a colonial perspectiv­e, Williams said.

The museum is “working diligently” with First Nations to include modern perspectiv­es on their societies and cultures, including the repatriati­on of priceless artifacts from museums elsewhere.

“These are cultures that have been here for 10,000 years and are still here,” she said, and they have stories that deserve to be told in the modern context as well as the historical one.

The museum does not have a dedicated learning centre, despite visits by 35,000 schoolchil­dren in the past year, Williams said. As a result, a 5,200-square-foot centre with hightech connection­s will replace what is now a storage area near the food trucks, on the north side of the main floor.

The breezeway on the side of the museum closest to Belleville Street will be enclosed in glass.

The revamp has been in the works for several years, but has yet to receive confirmati­on of funding from the provincial or federal government­s, Williams said.

The province provided an operating grant of $11.8 million in the past fiscal year.

A fundraisin­g campaign is expected to be started in the spring, she said, and some of the cost of the renovation­s might be covered through the museum’s foundation.

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