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Project Niagara DEAD (Niagara-On-The-Lake)

Missing NOTLers? Not so.

We aren't missing.
Several of the post-ers above are my calmer neighbours.
We have formed a local citizens group called Harmony Residents Group.
We are working to influence the outcome in a way that benefits our community as a whole.
We intend to be, and are being, proactive now that we know about this issue.
We want to make sure that this project is revenue neutral for NOTL and that we are not expected to pay for all the roadwork, sewer re-direction, future maintenace, etc. to benefit a private entity, in the short- and long- term.
We want to ensure that the endangered species (flora and fauna) in the carolinian forest on this site are protected (remember, its been closed to the public for a century).
And we want to ensure that the process is open and transparent for all stakeholders, something that it hasn't been for the last few years.
 
Closed to the public - not virgin forest!

We want to ensure that the endangered species (flora and fauna) in the carolinian forest on this site are protected (remember, its been closed to the public for a century).

Closed??!!
Do you mean closed as in, except for military use. It was a rifle range, tank range, etc, until very recently. Military, police forces, and others were firing live and practice ammo in there for over eighty years.
Not to mention the armed forces using it as a bivouac and practice area - the whole property, including the Carolinian forest, was basically a big campground and hiking area for the army.
Speaking of which - what effects on wildlife and flowers do you think a music festival will have that are greater than guns, grenades and tanks?

Who is in this "Harmony residents Group" anyway. How many of your neighbours exactly? 5? 10?
 
you have walked thru our neighbourhood... wow, good for you.... you must be so knowledgeable and smart...
why don't you come down here and show us how to live? appparently you are the only one who knows anything about anything...
why did you leave? if it's so nice?
you have no idea what's about to happen here...
how very condescending, superior and trite you can be...
nimby eh?

this project will not inconvience us, not annoy us, not upset us...
this project is to seat 12,500 people at peak not 2000 in a small village of 3,500 people.
it will DESTROY our small neighbourhood and town...
but, oh yeah, you live in the big Toronto,
and you obivously don't give a shit about anyone but yourself...
why don't you go down to Starbucks and get another Latte?
apparently you think that that is the height of culture...

haha, my god man. You have the nerve to call forum members here ignorant? Did you even read what you just wrote? Attacking an entire city's worth of citizens with false and idiotic stereotypes. I normally wouldn't bother pursuing this so late in the thread, but you really make it hard for myself or anyone to give two shits (pardon the language) about you and your viewpoint.

Why not address the matter civilly, instead of scapegoating not only Toronto but Toronto forumers for the apparent 'ravaging destruction' of your quaint little town. Also, if you could read, you'd have realized the person in question that you've attacked not only walks through "your" town but used live there as well. I use your loosely, because other than owning your property, I don't imagine you contribute much to the town or society in general. Apart from, of course, yelling angrily from your porch or at your computer anytime something ruffles your feathers. And the rest of Ontario calls us condescending and big-headed. :rolleyes:
 
Time for Civility

Thanks for your comments--well said!! Your point re community involvement is right on the money. People who just live within their own four walls and don't seem to be aware of the contributions others are making for the good of the whole, are always the first out the door -- talking before they listen!

I took the time to get the facts.....anyone who listens will hear all the information that is available from the project consultant. And if you hear the facts, you'll see that the professionals working on this are really tuned into the special historic and natural qualities of the site and the town--that's why it's the NUMBER ONE choice of location.
 
some local press

local press on issue



including some comments from the angry poster - now somewhat mellowed and thinking the idea is cool!!?? mixed messages or what!

article follows​


Just imagine ...; Translating big dreams into reality would be music to the ears of boosters of a world-class festival and amphitheatre in Niagara
Posted By MATTHEW VAN DONGEN Standard Staff
Updated 6 hours ago

It's all about imagination, right now. Imagine orchestral overtures of Beethoven wafting over the lakeshore just outside Niagara-on-the-Lake.

A wide, green lawn hidden by blankets and about 9,000 music lovers.

Another 2,400 folks seated in a covered pavilion built to accentuate the sound of a professional orchestra.

Encircle the whole scene with Carolinian forest and throw in a breathtaking view of Lake Ontario.

Kari Cullen sees it all, where others see only lonely lands fenced off along Lakeshore Road.

"Imagine a beautiful summer evening. Imagine the sky painted with stars and the air filled with brilliant music," said Cullen, a consultant hired to pitch the idea of a massive music festival dubbed Project Niagara to local residents and politicians.

"Imagine people from across Ontario ... from around the world, sitting rapt, poised to break into thunderous applause as the conductor lowers his baton."

It's a vision of a world-class music festival and amphitheatre, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors to Niagara every summer.

It takes plenty of imagining.

The only thing wafting over that section of lakeshore today is the odour of two municipal sewage lagoons. The 300-acre property once served as a tank training area and a pistol, rifle and artillery range.

The prospect of unexploded shells underfoot has kept the lonely lakefront off-limits for decades, unless you're a coyote.



Just reclaiming the land is a big undertaking. The musical vision is even bigger.

Project Niagara would include an open-air amphitheatre for 2,400 people and enough lawn space to seat 9,000 more. Cullen said 260,000 visitors each summer is a conservative estimate.

The facility would be the summer home for the Toronto Symphony Orchestra and the National Arts Centre Orchestra for seven weeks of a 12-week performance schedule.

It would host up to 60 concerts a summer - mostly "classical extravaganzas," but with some jazz, pop and world music in the mix.

"Of course it's ambitious. It has to be big," Cullen said. "We can't go ahead with half-measures and hope it succeeds. We have to knock people's socks off."

The project is nowhere close to being a done deal.

Project boosters, including the two orchestras, are working on a detailed feasibility study, due in the next month or two.

Cullen expects to know by the summer whether imagination can translate into reality. But she likes the project's prospects, for several reasons.

"To have two of the countries leading orchestras on board, that's a huge advantage, huge for our credibility," she said. "So is locating in Niagara. People, a lot of people, are coming here to visit anyway."

The group already has the blessing of the federal government. Parks Canada, the owner of the property, has agreed to work with the group. Canada's military has also started cleaning up the decades of ballistic contamination on the old artillery and rifle range.

Tim Callighen, who lives nearby in the neighbourhood of Chautauqua, is thankful for the rifle range cleanup.

He thinks the music festival dream is pretty cool, too, but he doesn't want it to turn into a nightmare for local residents.

"In theory, it sounds fantastic," he said of the festival. "But local people have a lot of questions that need to be answered." Close to 300 residents asked those questions at an information session held in Niagara-on-the-Lake late last month.

"Noise is a big, big thing. So is traffic," said Callighen, who attended the meeting.

Preliminary plans call for 2,000 parking spaces on site, plus accommodations to shuttle in thousands of people from lots on the outskirts of town.

"I don't know if Lakeshore (Road) can handle that extra traffic," he said. "And we don't want people trying to cheat by parking on local side streets."

The potential cost to residents also worries him.

"If you're going to upgrade the roads, pay for policing or parking enforcement, local residents don't want to be nailed for it," he said.

Money is an awfully big question mark for the project.

Cullen said consultants are studying capital costs and fundraising potential as part of the project feasibility study.

Similar festival sites built in recent years - like Bethel Woods Center for the Arts in New York - cost $75 million upfront.

That doesn't necessarily include the cost of upgrading roads, either, or draining and replacing sewage lagoons.

The job is doable, say Niagara regional officials.

But doing it in time for a hoped-for opening date of 2012 (to coincide with the War of 1812 bicentennial) may stretch imagination a little too far.

"That would be very optimistic," said regional transportation director Joe Cousins.

The Region already has plans to upgrade area roads such as Concession 6, Line 3 and Concession 3, he said, and an environmental assessment for upgrades to Lakeshore Road is underway.

But normally, any changes would have been scheduled for the next six to 12 years, he noted.

"We'd have to accelerate some of those works substantially. That's our challenge," he said.

The time crunch is even worse for the sewage lagoons.

The festival plans call for an amphitheatre and lawn seating to be dropped exactly in the footprint of the lagoons, which cover about 50 acres.

The Region is in the midst of an environmental assessment looking at ways to replace the lagoons, which will fill up within six years.

Even if the Region decides to decommission and drain the lagoons, however, doing it in time for 2012 "would be a challenge," said water and wastewater director Betty Matthews-Malone.

Cullen acknowledges the challenges.

Organizers must keep residents "in the loop" and to try and address their concerns, she said.

Fundraising won't be easy, either.

But Cullen noted skeptics should consider the economic and cultural value of the project alongside its costs.

And she's confident the project has developed a "positive momentum" that is already overcoming seemingly insurmountable hurdles.

Cullen pointed to the military cleanup, which started just last month.

"People have wanted that property cleaned up for 50 years," she said.

"Now, it's happening."

mvandongen@ stcatharinesstandard.ca

Festival by the numbers:

Up to 60 concerts over 12 weeks.

260,000 visitors a summer.

Between 2,000 and 10,000 visitors expected per concert.

Seating for 2,400 in an open-air amphitheatre.

Lawn seating for 7,000-9,000.

Looking to compare festivals? Project supporters offer these examples:

Tanglewood

Located in Massachusetts.

Home of the annual summer Tanglewood Music Festival and the Tanglewood Jazz Festival.

Summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra since 1937.

Annually attracts 350,000 for concerts.

Ravinia

Located in Illinois.

Oldest outdoor music festival in North America.

Summer home of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

3,200-seat open-air, covered pavilion, two recital halls with 850 and 450 seats, respectively.

Annually attracts 600,000 for summer concerts.

Blossom

Located in Ohio.

Summer home of The Cleveland Orchestra.

Covered outdoor pavilion seats 5,700.

Annually attracts 400,000 for summer concerts.
 
Personally, I wouldn't mind seeing the Island Airport closed and this ampitheatre and event located on that site, re-landscaped with a stunning view of Toronto Harbour. If Niagara on the Lake doesn't want it, I'd be glad to see it moved here.
 
Great idea!!

Or, I'm sure there are lots of other 'quaint' yet struggling small Ontario towns that would welcome such a project if they could accommodate it....Paris perhaps, on a site along the Grand River? Picton, in the Bay of Quinte area? Elora/Fergus? The options are endless...
 
Ottawa, Toronto orchestras push plan for Niagara summer festival

CBC News

A $76-million plan for a major summer music festival in Niagara-on-the-Lake took one more step forward with the release of a major feasibility study into the project.

Ottawa's National Arts Centre Orchestra and the Toronto Symphony Orchestra have been working on "Project Niagara" for the last four years and presented the study Monday to the Niagara-on-the-Lake council.

The idea is for a 12-week classical music festival, similar to the Tanglewood Festival in the U.S.

Both the NACO and TSO would have a "summer home" at the festival and a series of concerts would help attract tourists.

"What we'd like to to is create a festival with about 50 concerts throughout the summer," consultant Kari Cullen, who worked on the feasibility study, told CBC News.

"It would be a combination of Toronto Symphony Orchestra and National Arts Centre Orchestra concerts, and also other international orchestras and other musical genres."

The study suggests such a festival could generate millions of dollars in economic activity, and become a major cultural tourism attraction.

The plan is to build an amphitheatre on former Department of National Defence lands in the town, which is also home to the Shaw Festival.

Project Niagara aims to open by 2012 in time to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the War of 1812, much of which was fought in the Niagara area.

Niagara-on-the-Lake approved the project in principle on Monday, but there were concerns about parking and amenities for the approximately 250,000 people that could be drawn to the festival annually.

"We're talking about parking for 2,000 cars, we're talking about a large amphitheatre, so it is still an invasive enterprise," said Randy Busbridge, representative of a town residents' group.

Project Niagara is backed by the boards of the NAC and TSO. The Ministries of Culture and Tourism, the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp. and Falls Management Co. are prepared to back the project financially.

However, at least $25 million would have to be raised from private donations, according to the study.
 
New since the last posts...

Roll The Drums for Project Niagara

by Martin Knelman, Toronto Star, Published July 1, 2009

If you think it takes music on a grand scale to celebrate Canada Day properly, then Niagara-on-the-Lake may be the place to mark this patriotic occasion in years to come.

That's because Project Niagara, a.k.a. Tanglewood North, is quickly morphing from a whimsical notion into Ontario's next major arts festival and tourist attraction.

The concept: A summer music festival with a covered amphitheatre and lawn seating on a large, choice piece of land – once used for military training but in recent years a kind of no man's land – controlled by Parks Canada.

Estimated cost of the facility: $76.5 million.

Estimated annual budget: Around $20 million.

Time frame: The opening to coincide with the 200th anniversary of that legendary Canadian triumph, the War of 1812-14. (One of the key battles was fought on this site.)

Upshot: About 50 concerts a year drawing hundreds of thousands of music lovers and providing a major boost to the economy and culture of the Niagara region, which already offers the Shaw Festival, many wineries, golf, natural beauty, casinos, sophisticated hotels and restaurants, and proximity to the U.S. border.

As I reported in 2007, the National Arts Centre and the Toronto Symphony Orchestra were floating a joint venture that would give their two orchestras a summer home like the one the Boston Symphony enjoys in Massachusetts.

At that point, there was hardly any money, no agreement, no design and a lot of obstacles. But now the project is gaining momentum at a pace you could call dizzying.

"Lately we have witnessed an outpouring of support that is very exciting,"says Kari Cullen, the consultant chosen by the NAC and TSO to move the project from flashing amber to green light. She has been working closely with the two arts executives driving this project, Peter Herrndorf of the NAC and Andrew Shaw of the TSO.

From the start, there has been controversy about the proposal, led by a group called Harmony Niagara, which has many worries about noise, traffic and the environment. But over the past month, according to Cullen, there has been a surge of positive energy. The local town council commissioned a report that called the festival a great opportunity. Local newspaper coverage has been favourable. A classical quartet performed at a meeting to express support. And just this week, 400 people turned out at a winery to express enthusiasm.

Other steps forward:

A feasibility study is filled with positive conclusions (including the fact that the site is in a day's drive for more than 100 million people).

A rough plan has been done by Toronto architecture firm KPMB.

Talks are under way with federal and provincial governments, with the hope of getting a commitment that each provide one-third of the $75 million capital cost.

Prominent community leaders are already getting the message they will be expected to come up with $25 million of private money.

An interim board of directors has been established, including TV icon Valerie Pringle, who is now a Niagara homeowner.

Ideally the music festival would occupy about one-third of the 108 hectares of Parks Canada land, flanked on one side by an attraction telling the story of Niagara's history and on the other by a wonderful Carolinian forest.

Clearly what is needed to make it work is a viable business plan, the enthusiasm of all three levels of government, local businesses, especially wineries, the Shaw Festival (which stands to benefit), environmental experts, community leaders with influence and deep pockets, the media, Niagara casino operators and other major players in the Canadian arts world.

Miraculously, all that seems to be falling into place.

The result could be added lustre securing Ontario's place as a paradise of summer arts festivals, including Luminato, the Shaw Festival, the Stratford Shakespeare Festival and the Toronto International Film Festival.

Trumpets and drums: prepare for the opening.
 
And more recently:

Is Niagara-on-the-Lake ready for a major music festival?
Summer home for orchestras appeals to many, but government funding is key


by Martin Knelman, Toronto Star, Published April 08, 2010

Passionate and vociferous opponents of Project Niagara like to believe the economic downturn will save them from the perceived horrors of a major annual summer music festival.

In other words, their hopes of killing the proposed new outdoor tourist attraction could be enhanced by the new vows of government frugality recently heard both in Ottawa and at Queen’s Park.

The visionaries who developed the project are seeking $25 million from each of the two senior governments. Within the past couple of months, however, both the Harper Tories and the McGuinty Liberals have made it clear their top priority is to slash spending and wipe out their deficits.

Yet Kari Cullen, the consultant leading the charge for the creation of a 17-week festival on old army land in the historic town of Niagara-on-the-Lake, still sounds like a cockeyed optimist.

“A growing number of people are recognizing that the future health of the whole region could very well depend on the success of this project,” says Cullen. “And the potential return on a relatively small investment is so great that we still optimistic both the Ontario government and the federal government will want to go forward with it.”

Janice Thompson, executive director of Niagara-on-the-Lake’s Chamber of Commerce, feels confident both governments will sign on.

“I’m still quite optimistic about this project,” she says. “There has been a lot of attention paid to those who have raised concerns about traffic and parking. But we have also been seeing a tremendous level of enthusiasm and support.”

For the benefit of latecomers, let us rewind the tape.

For the past several years, the National Arts Centre and the Toronto Symphony Orchestra have been floating a joint venture that would give their two orchestras a summer home like the Boston Symphony’s Tanglewood in western Massachusetts and Ravinia, the summer music festival near Chicago.

The vision: a summer music festival with a covered amphitheatre and lawn seating on a large, choice piece of lakefront land once used for military training, but in recent years a kind of no man’s land controlled by Parks Canada. It’s a historic site associated with the War of 1812-14.

Estimated cost of creating the facility: $76.5 million. Annual budget: about $20 million.

Ideal time frame: Opening to coincide with 200th anniversary of that legendary war in which Canada fought off American imperialists.

The program: About 50 concerts a year drawing hundreds of thousands of music lovers and providing a major boost to the economy and culture of the Niagara region — a needed new attraction to complement the Shaw festival, local wineries, golf, natural beauty and the casinos at Niagara Falls.

Co-drivers behind the scheme are Peter Herrndorf, CEO of the National Arts Centre, and Andrew Shaw of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. They have developed a strong board, raised enough seed money to hire consultants, and recruited KPMB, the prestigious Toronto architectural firm, to draw up rough plans.

The festival would operate from mid-May to late September, with the NAC Orchestra and the TSO making this their summer home for several weeks each.

But right from the start, local residents have been divided. For awhile an opposition lobby group, the Harmony Residents Group, grabbed the spotlight. Then there arose a group of supporters that called itself Community Builders.

According to the opposition, Niagara is a lovely peaceful place whose idyllic lifestyle would be wrecked by the traffic and parking nightmares they claim would inevitably go along with the launch of such a festival.

Cullen stresses the commitment of project organizers to give a serious hearing to the concerns of local residents who fear that a Tanglewood North, as the project is sometimes called, would do more harm than good to their community.

“We’ve learned from Tanglewood and Ravinia how important it is to develop a positive relationship with people who live in the areas near our site,’’ says Cullen. ``We have been very actively involved in making sure that those people have a way of voicing their complaints and that we have a way of resolving problems. We have every intention of being a good neighbour.”

Last year, to underline that point, a consulting firm was hired to undertake a major traffic study. But skeptics rejected the consultant’s reassuring conclusions, and the consensus seemed to be that further research was needed.

My prediction: Even if it does not get fast-tracked in time to mark Canada’s triumph in its only war with its powerful neighbour, eventually Project Niagara will be a go. The fusion of culture, tourism, economic growth and a gorgeous site in the ideal location, begging to be redeveloped, is just too tempting to reject.
 

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