Centre sportif panaméricain de Toronto | |
Full name | Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre |
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Address | 875 Morningside Avenue |
Location | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Coordinates | 43°47′25.19″N 79°11′35.88″W / 43.7903306°N 79.1933000°W |
Owner | City of Toronto University of Toronto Scarborough |
Capacity | Aquatics Centre - 6,000 (Pan/Parapan Games), 3,500 (legacy mode) Field House - 2,000 |
Field size | 312,000 sq ft (29,000 m2) Two 10-lane 50 metre pools Dive tank Four-court gymnasium 200 metre track |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 27 September 2012 |
Built | 2012-2014 |
Opened | 2 September 2014 |
Construction cost | $205 million |
Architect | NORR Limited |
General contractor | PCL Construction |
Tenants | |
Toronto Parks, Forestry and Recreation University of Toronto Scarborough Athletics & Recreation Canadian Sports Institute Ontario 2015 Pan American Games 2015 Parapan American Games 2017 North American Indigenous Games 2017 Invictus Games Scarborough Shooting Stars (2022–present) | |
Website | |
tpasc |
The Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre (TPASC; French: Centre sportif panaméricain de Toronto) is a sports complex in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Co-owned by the City of Toronto and the University of Toronto Scarborough,[1] it is operated by TPASC Inc., with programming offered by both the university and Toronto Parks, Forestry & Recreation.[2] It is located on the northern grounds of the university's campus near the intersection of Highway 401 and Morningside Avenue.
Opened to the public on September 2, 2014, the complex consists of a 3,500-seat aquatics arena (6,000 during the Pan Am and Parapan Am Games) with two Olympic-size swimming pools and a diving well; and a 2,000-seat field house that includes four full-sized gymnasiums, a fitness centre, a climbing wall, and a 200-metre track. The centre hosted diving, fencing, swimming, synchronized swimming and modern pentathlon competitions during the 2015 Pan American Games.[3] Funding for the Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre is the largest single investment in amateur sports in the history of Canada.
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