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B.C. Government Makes Case To Redevelop The Royal B.C. Museum

Thursday, May 26, 2022 at 6:37 AM

By Meg Polson

The B.C. government has released its business case to redevelop the Royal B.C. Museum, after the province faced criticism for its $789-million cost estimate.

The B.C. government has released its business case to redevelop the Royal B.C. Museum, after the province faced criticism for its $789-million cost estimate.

The NDP government says the funds are required because the current museum, about 55 years old, is not seismically safe or accessible, and because many of its facilities, like the loading bay, elevator, and entrance, are too small for some exhibits.

Project leads noted that for several exhibits, museum staff had to remove walls and windows in order to transport large items into the museum.

Project leads also note that every time windows or walls need to be removed, staff have to monitor for hazardous materials that were part of the building's initial construction, like asbestos or mercury.

Much of the project funding will go towards design and construction contracts for the new Royal B.C. Museum.

Out of the estimated $789.5 million price tag, some $550 million is for construction, while the remaining $239.5 million will go towards things like project management, abatement and demolition, gallery fit out and contingency funds.

Project leads note that full hazmat gear will be required to safely demolish some portions of the building.

It's expected to take about two and a half years for deconstruction and the safe removal of hazardous materials from the property, which will start after the museum has been emptied of its more than seven million artifacts.

Project leads say that it would have been more costly and more time consuming to renovate the space while also keeping the museum open, rather than demolishing the buildings and constructing a new museum on the same site in downtown Victoria.

The province notes that during the development of the business case it did not review the costs or time required to close down the museum to complete renovations.

The current RBCM is set to close in September, with the new museum opening to guests in 2030.

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The word "éy7á7juuthem" means “Language of our People” and is the ancestral tongue of the Homalco, Tla’amin, Klahoose and K’ómoks First Nations, with dialectic differences in each community.

It is pronounced "eye-ya-jooth-hem."