Toronto Star

MUSEUM MAKEOVER

ROM to renovate Bloor St. W. entrance, adding outdoor performanc­e space and greenery by early 2019,

- JULIEN GIGNAC STAFF REPORTER

The Royal Ontario Museum wants visitors to relish being outside the Toronto institutio­n as much as being in it. The museum announced this week it’s giving its Bloor St. W. entrancewa­y a facelift, complete with greenery and an outdoor performanc­e venue, slated to be finished in early 2019.

The aim is to create a beautified, civic-centred hub in the heart of the city, “a space that says we at the ROM want you here, engaged and invited,” said Josh Basseches, the ROM’s director and CEO, on Tuesday, adding constructi­on hoarding for the $5-million project is already up.

He said the area around the unmissable Michael Lee-Chin Crystal, while “handsome,” is underutili­zed.

“It’s a lot of hardscape and there’s not a lot for people to do,” he said.

The plan for the roughly 5,500-square-foot area is twofold: a landscaped area with benches called the Reed Family Plaza; and an event space, which will be used for lectures and performanc­es, Basseches said. The latter has been deemed the Helga and Mike Schmidt Performanc­e Terrace.

“We want to make it a space that harmonizes as meaningful­ly as possible with its surroundin­gs and connects the crystal and what’s inside the building with what’s outside,” he said.

Briar de Lange, executive director of the Bloor-Yorkville BIA, welcomed the initiative, noting green spaces are few and far between for the area’s high foot traffic. The square nearby, the Village of Yorkville Park, is overwhelme­d, she said.

She added the crystal became a major focal point when it was built, but what was left was a lack of purposeful exterior space for people “to sit on a bench and chill.”

“Their streetscap­e was a little bit bleak, so I think this adds a whole new life to the outside courtyard area. Overall, I think it’s a really positive thing. It will keep the streetfron­t animated,” she said.

The developmen­t is part of the museum’s Welcome Project, an initiative establishe­d to up the ante of the community engagement file. Its first phase, pegged at $3.5 million and completed last December, revamped the Weston Entrance on Queen’s Park.

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 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ONS PROVIDED BY HARIRI PONTARINI ARCHITECTS ?? The ROM plans to make its Bloor St. W. entrance into a civic-centred hub in the heart of the city.
ILLUSTRATI­ONS PROVIDED BY HARIRI PONTARINI ARCHITECTS The ROM plans to make its Bloor St. W. entrance into a civic-centred hub in the heart of the city.

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