Humber College is probably the largest landholder in the Lake Shore Blvd. W. and Kipling Ave. area.
Now work is underway at the college’s Lakeshore Campus to construct two student residences, two performing arts venues and other learning spaces on the historic grounds.
Construction has begun on a new Humber Cultural Hub, which will be completed in 2024. It is designed by Diamond Schmitt Architects and being built by Ellis Don. It is one of a number of expansion and renovation projects that the college is undertaking.
The student residences will be eight and nine storeys tall, and will add rooms for up to 300 students. It will add 124,000 square feet of new living space, according to the plans.
The residences will rise up out of a two-storey podium that will have a new cafeteria and a new gym.
The Hub will also have two music and performing arts venues, one with 600 seats and another that can hold 150 people.
The venues can act as a potential destination for arts programs and even festivals in west Toronto, college officials say.
The Hub will be home to studios for recording, 3D animation, multimedia production, computer labs and an Indigenous classroom.
When it’s done, the project will connect to an existing library and a student residence..
College officials say the Hub will spark exciting possibilities for students, local cultural and creative industries and the community.
It will provide access to talent development, entrepreneurial supports and applied research, according to college information. It will also benefit culturally underserved local communities, build new appreciation and opportunities for the creative arts, attract new jobs and industries to the area and enrich the local economy.
Humber says his facility will enhance the training and career-readiness of students while allowing the college to solve business challenges for industry in the creative and performing arts.
“The Humber Cultural Hub will be a nexus for immersive, interdisciplinary performances, unique audience engagement and future focused pedagogical delivery that will enhance the Humber experience for students, faculty, alumni, industry and the community,” says Guillermo Acosta, a Senior Dean, of Faculty of Media and Creative Arts.