Library being planned around power substation

ORILLIA, ONTARIO - City councillor Maurice McMillan is not an undertaker.

But there are a few things heÂ’d like to deep six.

The retired power company employee thinks the city should start burying power lines and substations in the downtown to improve its appearance.

“If we’re going to have a modern city these things should be underground.”

The current design for a new library calls for the building to bend in a L-shape around a power substation beside the Market Square, north of the opera house on West Street.

“We’ve worked with the idea we can’t move that (substation) — that it’s a fixture,” says library employee Gail Ward, a member of the building steering committee.

“The designs I’ve seen work around it. They actually hide the substation.”

This makes no sense, says McMillan, who thinks the city should at least inquire about the cost of moving the substation or putting it underground.

The city should also consider burying power lines when existing streets, such as West Street, are widened, McMillan says.

“In Oakville, they’ve put all their wiring underground.”

Without overhead power lines, the streetscape is more appealing and trees can grow without needing to be severely trimmed by the power company, McMillan said.

“It’s an environmental additive to have trees growing.”

In new subdivisions, it is standard practice to run electrical services underground.

But burying or moving major electrical infrastructure after the fact can be very costly.

During the last council term, the Orillia Power Corporation (OPC) estimated it would cost $850,000 to conceal the substation on West Street South beside the site of the multi-use recreation facility.

The council of the day decided the expense was prohibitive.

McMillan thinks that decision should be reconsidered, saying that power substation will clash with the new recreation complex.

“It kind of weakens the dream visually.”

Related News

oeb

Ontario Energy Board prohibiting electricity shutoffs during latest stay-at-home order

TORONTO - With Ontario now into the third province-wide lockdown, the Ontario Energy Board (OEB) has promised residents won't have to worry about their power being shut off.

On April 8, the Province issued the third stay-at-home order in the last 13 months which is scheduled to last for 28 days until at least May 6.

On April 30, the annual winter disconnection ban is set to expire, meaning electricity distributors would normally be permitted to issue disconnection notices for non-payment as early as 14 days before the end of the ban.

However, the OEB has announced it is prohibiting electricity distributors from…

READ MORE

Energy crisis: EU outlines possible gas price cap strategies

READ MORE

solar panels

Saskatchewan to credit solar panel owners, but not as much as old program did

READ MORE

melting globe

Climate change poses high credit risks for nuclear power plants: Moody's

READ MORE

wind turbines in scotland

Scottish Wind Delivers Equivalent Of 98% Of Country’s October Electricity Demand

READ MORE