PDA
You are viewing a trimmed-down version of the SkyscraperPage.com discussion forum.  For the full version, click the link below.

View Full Version : [Orleans] Shenkman Arts Centre | 20m | 3.5 fl | U/C


waterloowarrior
10-27-2007, 03:38 PM
Shenkman Arts Center - U/C
Part of the Orleans Town Center concept, this facillity will house a 500-seat concert hall, among other things
Developer: Orleans Town Center Partnership
Location: Centrum Blvd. in Orleans
Web: http://www.orleansonline.ca/pages/A2006091301.htm
http://www.articipate.ca/en/The_Shenkman_Arts_Centre_21.html
Rendering:
http://www.orleansonline.ca/images/arts_centre_1.jpg

http://www.orleansonline.ca/images/arts_centre_interior.jpg



Ground broken on new arts centre

http://www.eastottawa.ca/article-151040-Ground-broken-on-new-arts-centre.html
by Jim Donnelly (jim.donnelly@transcontinental.ca)
View all articles from Jim Donnelly (http://www.eastottawa.ca/journaliste-536-Jim-Donnelly.html)
Article online since October 24th 2007, 15:30
http://www.eastottawa.ca/imgs/dynamique/articles/gros/arts_centre_construction01.jpg (http://www.eastottawa.ca/imgs/dynamique/articles/gros/arts_centre_construction01.jpg)

Bulldozers started clearing room for the new arts centre building this week. Photo by Darren Brown

Ground broken on new arts centre
Bulldozers have finally broken ground at the site of the future Shenkman Arts Centre, with builders saying a current spate of unseasonably warm weather is helping progress.
“Right now, we’re doing tree removal and picking up some of the overburden, and getting ready to start doing some of the excavation work for the building,” said Toronto-based Aecon Buildings’ Lonny Howard, site supervisor of the project, adding the initial stage will take at least two weeks.

Though he wouldn’t comment on overall project timelines, Howard said the company just moved onto the site late last week. “We’re set up here on-site,” he said from his cell phone. “We have a site office on the north side of the City of Ottawa building (on Centrum Boulevard), and we’ve just moved in ourselves and we’re getting settled in.

“The initial stages are underway, and hopefully this good weather can hold on and we can make some progress.”

Organizers involved with the $37 million public-private partnership between the City of Ottawa and the Orléans Town Centre Partnership, a group of private interests, said they were elated at the news. “Because it’s been such a long time coming, people are still almost incredulous that it’s actually happening,” said Sandra MacInnis, campaign manager of Arts Ottawa East’s “Articipate” fundraising drive.

“It’s very exciting,” she continued. The Articipate campaign has now raised around 70 per cent of its goal of $5 million, with a $1 million donation from the Shenkman Family Foundation, as well as $2.5 million in provincial funding.

“For us out here, this is huge.”

The east-end facility slated for a spring 2009 opening was christened the Shenkman Arts Centre after the the Shenkman Family Foundation’s donation.

some more info
http://www.ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/citycouncil/occ/2006/10-11/csedc/ACS2006-PGM-ECO-0017.htm

movebyleap
11-11-2007, 04:55 AM
Has anyone noticed how we always only get to see the facade of this building in all renderings? (This includes the Shenkman website). Is the rest of it so unsightly that it must be kept from us until the building is a done deal?

Stanzmastertron3000
11-27-2007, 09:45 AM
As if something like this is being built in Orleans.

Beatrix
11-27-2007, 10:04 AM
As if something like this is being built in Orleans.

Well it's about time we get something substantial from the city.

O-Town Hockey
11-27-2007, 02:36 PM
Has anyone noticed how we always only get to see the facade of this building in all renderings? (This includes the Shenkman website). Is the rest of it so unsightly that it must be kept from us until the building is a done deal?

That is because the theatre is actually being built into a complex which includes a Super Walmart, Best Buy, and a Loblaws. ;)

Jamaican-Phoenix
11-27-2007, 03:32 PM
That is because the theatre is actually being built into a complex which includes a Super Walmart, Best Buy, and a Loblaws. ;)

Are you @#$%ing kidding me?!

O-Town Hockey
11-27-2007, 04:42 PM
Are you @#$%ing kidding me?!

Yes

Jamaican-Phoenix
11-27-2007, 04:44 PM
Yes

Oh, thank God. With this city and the suburbs, ya never know. ;)

Phew, that's a relief...

Cre47
11-27-2007, 05:33 PM
That means two Wal-Marts in Orleans, unless they are moving the one on Innes Road, but it's been there for like only two years or something. The invasion of Wal-Mart continues.

jeremy_haak
11-27-2007, 05:35 PM
That is because the theatre is actually being built into a complex which includes a Super Walmart, Best Buy, and a Loblaws. ;)

Man, you really have to be careful with what you say. :haha:

AylmerOptimist
11-28-2007, 12:12 AM
reminds me of the NAC/CNA

c_speed3108
12-03-2007, 04:50 PM
Tower Crane is up....:tup:

c_speed3108
12-11-2007, 04:48 PM
http://www.articipate.ca/vm/newvisual/attachments/769/documents/Orleans%20Town%20Centre%20Concept%20Plan-web.pdf


Many additional buildings added including a 3 story hotel

two 5 story office buildings

a 12 story seniors condo
a 14 story lux condo

two 8 story affordable apartment buildings

an expansion on the YMCA

and check out building I:

first floor retail
second floor office
thrid floor residental

a number of townhouses and other things...

c_speed3108
12-11-2007, 04:52 PM
Floorplans are also up

http://www.articipate.ca/en/More_information_on_the_project_56/Floor_plans_156.html

c_speed3108
03-14-2008, 01:18 PM
These pictures happen to suck since I only had a cell phone camera on me...plus they were taken through glass and it was snowing. :slob: But it was a neat shot with the cement boom in the air.

The building sticking up above the Zellers sign is the movie theatres.

The building way in the back right smack in the middle of the picture is a fairly new apartment building. Right behind the constuction is the old Cumberland City Hall. You can see a bit of it's roof.

The peaky looking roof at the left of the shot is a Condo from back in the Cumberland days: Russell Condo #21 (there's a history lesson)


http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2413/2332257559_fb4c8f23fb_o.jpg

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3167/2333082684_d555d63a40_o.jpg

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3036/2333082664_09b14c2380_o.jpg

c_speed3108
05-16-2008, 04:22 AM
Update here:

Tower Crane is now down.

Road ans sewer constuction behind the Arts Centre, Client Service Centre and the YMCA is underway.

:)

c_speed3108
07-13-2008, 06:23 PM
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3129/2664700062_17b19c778e_o.jpg

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3119/2664702368_7aeb923b11_o.jpg

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3150/2664704846_4c1ff61c08_o.jpg

movebyleap
07-17-2008, 03:44 AM
This theatre was originally going to be an 800 seat venue. A smaller theatre was also to be included in the complex. The city and the company building the project apparently kept cutting the budget for this project until it became a 500 seat theatre. The smaller theatre in this project will now have 100 seats. The problem? Five hundred seats is actually TOO SMALL to attract world class big selling acts. (Note that the very succesful Centrepointe Theatre in Nepean is regularly sold out and has about 750 seats).
At the same time, 500 seats is TOO BIG for community groups who want to stage smaller scale performances.
Meanwhile, the smaller 100 seat theatre is really useless. I'm a music teacher in the east end and with only about 24 students performing I need a theatre that will seat about 150-180 (performers, families, and friends).
There have been some complaints. Ideally they should have stuck with the 800 seat big theatre and a 200 seat smaller venue. But hey, this is Ottawa = NO VISION!!!

movebyleap
07-17-2008, 03:45 AM
This theatre was originally going to be an 800 seat venue. A smaller theatre was also to be included in the complex. The city and the company building the project apparently kept cutting the budget for this project until it became a 500 seat theatre. The smaller theatre in this project will now have 100 seats. The problem? Five hundred seats is actually TOO SMALL to attract world class big selling acts. (Note that the very succesful Centrepointe Theatre in Nepean is regularly sold out and has about 750 seats).
At the same time, 500 seats is TOO BIG for community groups who want to stage smaller scale performances.
Meanwhile, the smaller 100 seat theatre is really useless. I'm a music teacher in the east end and with only about 24 students performing I need a theatre that will seat about 150-180 (performers, families, and friends).
There have been some complaints. Ideally they should have stuck with the 800 seat big theatre and a 200 seat smaller venue. But hey, this is Ottawa = NO VISION!!!

Acajack
07-17-2008, 01:37 PM
I am really, really glad that Orleans is getting an arts centre. But driving by the site the other day on the 174 I couldn’t help thinking that the big cement block reminded me of the sarcophagus in which the melted-down nuclear reactor at Chernobyl is entombed.

Maybe I’ve got too vivid an imagination…

c_speed3108
07-17-2008, 05:02 PM
I am really, really glad that Orleans is getting an arts centre. But driving by the site the other day on the 174 I couldn’t help thinking that the big cement block reminded me of the sarcophagus in which the melted-down nuclear reactor at Chernobyl is entombed.

Maybe I’ve got too vivid an imagination…

It is being built to contain the radioactive fallout from the council of the former City of Cumberland. :haha:

movebyleap
07-18-2008, 03:30 AM
That's why I was concerned that we were only being shown the FRONT of this building in all the architectural renderings!!

c_speed3108
07-24-2008, 02:58 PM
Bronze piano set to adorn Shenkman Arts Centre plaza
City announces winner of public art contest
Patricia Lonergan by Patricia Lonergan

Article online since July 23rd 2008, 14:23

The outdoor plaza at the Shenkman Arts Centre will feature a bronze piano on a stage by artist Maskull Lasserre.

The piece will rest in the 1,300-square-metre plaza facing Centrum Boulevard, which is the heart of the new Orléans Town Centre.

Lasserre’s sculpture consists of an upright piano made from hammered bronze and stainless steel accompanied by a partially-carved piano stool in a limestone boulder. Both the piano and the boulder will rest on a concrete pad in the shape of a stage.

According to the artist, the stage will encourage patrons to “participate in the work as a site of material meditation, or as a permanent prop in an outdoor performance.”

In an earlier interview Lasserre noted that the stool carved into the rock allows people to take a seat at the instrument as if participating in a performance.

“(It’s) inviting in some way,” he explained. “It’s not building jewellery.”

A bronze and stainless steel reproduction of the original boulder will also rest on the plaza surface just off to the side.

“This sculpture is going to be a central feature of what I know is going to become a gathering place in Orléans,” said Coun. Bob Monette in a press release.

The two-stage competition for a public art installation at the Shenkman Arts Centre Plaza included such selection criteria as artistic excellence, experience, site integration, reflection of the community and sustainability.

The Orléans community was given a preview of the submissions from the finalists including Karl Ciesluk, Maskull Lasserre, Jennifer Macklem, and Jean-Yves Vigneau. The public was asked to record comments about the four artists’ proposals. The art selection committee took these comments into consideration when selecting the winner.


http://www.eastottawa.ca/imgs/dynamique/articles/gros/p03_Maskull_Lasserre02.jpg.

bradnixon
07-24-2008, 04:55 PM
http://www.eastottawa.ca/imgs/dynamique/articles/gros/p03_Maskull_Lasserre02.jpg.

Here's a better picture, and it shows how this will be placed in the forecourt of the building:

http://www.ottawa.ca/residents/arts/public_art/commissions/upcoming_commissions/shenkman_en.html

c_speed3108
08-11-2008, 09:51 PM
http://www.eastottawa.ca/imgs/dynamique/articles/gros/p05_Orleans_Theatre.jpg

http://www.eastottawa.ca/article-217509-Chamber-cash-to-support-arts-centre.html

Chamber cash to support arts centre
by Laura Cummings
View all articles from Laura Cummings
Article online since May 29th 2008, 13:38


The east end's upcoming arts facility got a financial boost from its business neighbours last week, in a bid to further establish a link between arts and economics in the area.

The Orléans Chamber of Commerce has committed to donating $10,000 over five years to the Shenkman Arts Centre, becoming the first 'corporate community builder' in the facility's fundraising campaign, Arts Ottawa East announced Friday, May 16.

The ARTicipate! campaign, which was launched in September with a goal of $5 million, directs all money raised into an endowment fund meant to maintain sustainable arts and culture programming in the community, in addition to supporting the Shenkman Arts Centre's partners and other local initiatives.

The chamber will divert $2,000 a year to the facility over a five-year period, explains executive director Peter Stewart, with money for the initiative raised via a new partnership with the Ottawa Senators.

Chamber members now have access to seats at Senators games at season ticket prices, he continues, accompanied by a slight surcharge that will comprise the $10,000 donation.

With the business organization looking to extend more opportunities to its members and the Senators aiming to "get a foothold in the community," Stewart says the timing was perfect for the collaboration.

Feedback from membership has been "excellent" so far, he adds, with over half of this year's tickets sold in the two weeks since the initiative's announcement.

Though the upcoming arts centre is viewed as "an economic development tool" by the chamber – another feature to attract business and generate revenue in the east end – many of the smaller members cannot make a corporate-sized donation themselves, Stewart explains.

Beyond acting as an opportunity to support east-end arts, the ticket initiative also offers a chance for member businesses to reward employees, give something to customers or network amongst themselves, he says.

"It's the sort of tool small business would like to tap into," Stewart continues.

Arts Ottawa East was "thrilled" to hear about the chamber's donation, adds Sandra MacInnis, campaign manager for the ARTicipate! campaign.

"Everyone is aware of the economic impact of the arts centre, and for our own chamber of commerce to be the first to give on that level … is really pretty telling," she explains, adding that the endowment fund is already well over 70 per cent of its total goal.

The chamber has shown leadership in recognizing the important connection between economics and the arts in the east end, MacInnis continues, and how the new facility could prove to be an economic generator for the area.

"It all goes to creating a climate of confidence around the arts centre," she says.
.

waterloowarrior
11-08-2008, 07:29 PM
http://wwuploads.googlepages.com/orleanstowncentre_shenkman.jpg

waterloowarrior
11-25-2008, 11:25 PM
New east-end arts centre hits home stretch amid proposed city funding cuts
Last Updated: Tuesday, November 25, 2008 | 2:51 PM ET Comments0Recommend2
CBC News
Construction of the Shenkman Arts Centre is mostly complete and the building is set to open in May.
The opening of a new arts centre in Ottawa's east end is in sight even as some arts groups worry that there will be a shortage of equipment and programs to fill it due to proposed city funding cuts.

The Shenkman Arts Centre announced Monday that it had reached 82 per cent of its $5- million endowment fundraising goal, thanks to four major donors, and is on track to open in May.

The fund will support arts activities at the centre.

Construction of the new facility just east of Place d'Orléans shopping centre is mostly complete. Inside will be a 500-seat theatre, two art galleries, a dance studio, a music rehearsal room, woodworking and pottery studios, a dark room and walls lined with art.

But Rosemary Swan, director of the Gloucester Pottery School, said she's concerned her group won't be able to properly use the space it's assigned, which includes room for extra pottery rules and another kiln.

Under cuts proposed in the city's draft budget, her school would lose $20,000 in annual funding, meaning there will be no new equipment to accommodate more potters, she said.

She said it's not prudent for the city to cut funding to arts programs at a time when there is a "wonderful facility" to arts programs and people willing to do the programming.

"No, that does not make sense and it won't make many people happy," she said.

Existing funding will likely continue: councillor

Innes ward Coun. Rainer Bloess suggested Monday that arts groups shouldn't lose hope.

He said he met with some groups a few days ago and had some good discussions about what kind of compromises need to be made.

"I think in the end you're going to see the funding that's in place will continue," he said. "But we'll defer the increases they were looking for."

The Shenkman centre's endowment fund now sits at $4.1 million, including $2.5 million from the Ontario government and $1 million from the Shenkman family. The fund announced Monday that it had recently received $250,000 from Minto, $250,000 from Trinity Development Foundation, $25,000 from MBNA Bank of America and $25,000 from Bel-Air Toyota.

The centre is being built as a public-private partnership between the city and the Orléans Town Centre Partnership consortium.

http://www.cbc.ca/gfx/images/news/photos/2008/11/25/ot-081125-shenkman-arts-top.jpg

Beatrix
12-05-2008, 10:17 PM
It's nice, but I wish they had done something with the back ( which faces the 417). It looks like a giant brick wall.

Forums Directory