Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Centre Block restoration to cost up to $5B

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2021 11:47 AM
  • Centre Block restoration to cost up to $5B

Federal officials say the massive restoration project of Parliament's Centre Block will cost up to $5 billion and continue at least until 2030.

Public Services and Procurement Canada says construction on the traditional seat of the House of Commons is expected to wrap before 2032, with a cost of between $4.5 billion and $5 billion.

Officials say MPs, who have been legislating out of West Block since 2019 when work on Centre Block ramped up, won't return to their usual Victorian Gothic digs until testing on chambers and committee rooms is complete post-construction.

The government projects the decade-long overhaul will create 70,000 jobs across the country, including the 1,500-plus construction workers expected onsite daily in the coming years.

Centre Block, which includes the iconic Peace Tower, is now cloaked in scaffolding and bracketed by a pair of cranes as work continues on what officials describe as "the largest and most complex heritage rehabilitation" in Canadian history.

Restoration of the 94-year-old building will include demolition work, abatement of hazardous materials and efforts to modernize the building to 21st-century standards of energy-efficiency, accessibility and security.

MORE National ARTICLES

11 COVID19 deaths over 3 days

11 COVID19 deaths over 3 days
There have been 144,289 new cases in total in BC. The rolling 7 day average is now 277 new cases per day, the lowest it has been since October 31.

11 COVID19 deaths over 3 days

12 youth given wrong COVID-19 vaccine in Vancouver

12 youth given wrong COVID-19 vaccine in Vancouver
The health authority says the errors happened Friday and Saturday during the first full week that kids aged 12 to 17 could get their first dose.

12 youth given wrong COVID-19 vaccine in Vancouver

UBC reviews awarding of honorary degree to bishop

UBC reviews awarding of honorary degree to bishop
The university says it's aware of "community concerns" related to the degree conferred in 1986 to John O'Grady after specialists using ground-penetrating radar found grave shafts at the site of the former residential school in Kamloops.

UBC reviews awarding of honorary degree to bishop

Vaccine expiry change based on science: experts

Vaccine expiry change based on science: experts
Dr. Allison McGeer, an infectious disease consultant at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, says expiry dates on vaccines are usually very conservative at first until the product has been around long enough to know when it will start to degrade.

Vaccine expiry change based on science: experts

Liberals pushing through climate law: Greens

Liberals pushing through climate law: Greens
Paul accuses the two sides of striking a deal to ensure the passage of Bill C-12, which promises more accountability around Canada's goals to reduce its carbon-related emissions.

Liberals pushing through climate law: Greens

Back to Normal? A Post-vaccination Canada

Back to Normal? A Post-vaccination Canada
As governments put a stop to social activities we previously took for granted, the question of finally returning back to the delicacies of ‘normal’ life lingers.

Back to Normal? A Post-vaccination Canada