The Province

Royal B.C. Museum CEO defends building plan

Previous report on renovation­s out of date

- KATIE DEROSA kderosa@postmedia.com

VICTORIA — The head of the Royal B.C. Museum says a 2018 report calling for $150 million in upgrades to the existing building is badly out of date and renovating the museum would cost almost as much as building a new one for $789 million.

CEO Alicia Dubois said the 2018 report for the museum, which critics rely on to criticize the decision to build an all-new building, was trumped by a later in-depth engineerin­g analysis of modernizin­g the structure and meeting modern seismic safety standards.

Premier John Horgan has faced a firestorm of criticism for announcing the plan to replace the 54-year-old museum without any public consultati­on and without a public business case or design for the new building.

Tourism Minister Melanie Mark has promised to lay out the business case on Wednesday, which could answer some of the questions around what could be the most expensive museum in Canadian history in straight, uninflated dollars.

Dubois told Postmedia News on Friday that after the 2018 report, a full engineerin­g analysis was carried out on the cost of seismicall­y upgrading the building and removing asbestos in the walls.

Doing those things in the exhibition hall would require stripping the walls and floors down to the studs, Dubois said. Overhaulin­g the Fannin Tower section of the museum would be even more complex, she said, as it must be anchored into the bedrock.

“What became apparent and what is really the foundation of the business plan is that when you look at the dollars that it would take to do all of that upgrading, you get to a point where you're reaching very near to the cost of a rebuild,” said Dubois, who was appointed head of the museum in February.

The $150-million aim in 2018 was to phase the upgrades over 25 years, including a “complete transforma­tion of the museum and archives precinct,” as well as “important seismic and safety upgrades, comprehens­ive gallery redevelopm­ent, reinvigora­ted temporary exhibition space on the ground floor, a collection­s and archives centre and conference and event space.

This was to include a $30 million developmen­t to revamp the public spaces on the ground floor including “essential seismic upgrades” and revitaliza­tion of the Emily Carr Gallery, Pacific Worlds Gallery and Clifford Carl Hall.

The CEO at that time, Jack Lohman, was forced out in 2021 after a report into institutio­nal racism at the museum found the workplace was “dysfunctio­nal and toxic.”

The government is also facing pushback on the plan to close the museum on Sept. 6, four years before constructi­on begins on the new museum.

Bruce Williams, CEO of the Greater Victoria Chamber of Commerce, said he and other Victoria tourism operators were caught off guard by news of the eight-year closure and the cost.

“The whole thing was a bit of a sticker shock,” Williams said. “Why did they not try to find a site where they could build it and keep the other one open?”

The museum welcomes 800,000 visitors a year and has an annual economic impact of $48 million. Dubois said she knows “there is significan­t community concern” around the museum's closure but said the museum would have a presence across B.C. through roving and satellite exhibits.

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Renovating the Royal B.C. Museum in Victoria is expected to cost almost as much as building a new one, says CEO Alicia Dubois.
CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Renovating the Royal B.C. Museum in Victoria is expected to cost almost as much as building a new one, says CEO Alicia Dubois.

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