Manitoba

$17M technical-vocational wing to be built at Pembina Trails Collegiate as part of rec campus

Pembina Trails Collegiate is getting a major addition that will specialize in hands-on training for students in a variety of skills.

Addition will be home to culinary, machining, welding, human ecology and woodworking programs

A architectural rendering shows a large building with a field in front of it.
An artist's rendering shows the planned South Winnipeg Recreation Campus. A new addition at Pembina Trails Collegiate will be part of the campus. (City of Winnipeg)

Pembina Trails Collegiate is getting a major addition that will specialize in hands-on training for students in a variety of skills.

The provincial government on Tuesday announced $17 million for a new, 19,000-square-foot technical-vocational wing that will be built onto the school in the city's Waverley West neighbourhood.

"It will be home to programs including culinary arts, baking and pastry arts, machining technology, welding technology, human ecology and woodworking technology," Government Services Minister Lisa Naylor said at an outdoor announcement.

The province said construction is expected to begin at the end of this summer and be complete by September 2026 for the new addition, which will be part of the long-planned and growing-in-cost South Winnipeg Recreation Campus.

The estimated cost of the campus has jumped by $23 million since city council first approved the budget five years ago. The original estimate in 2019 pegged it at $71 million, but a report released earlier this year found that costs had risen to $94 million.

"This investment doesn't just impact the families in south Winnipeg. Manitobans across the province will benefit from the increase in education and training opportunities, the increase in skilled workers and the growth in our economy," Naylor said.

The technical-vocational wing will be part of the larger recreation campus, which will include three gyms, multipurpose rooms, an indoor track and fitness area, a child-care centre and an outdoor spray pad in its first phase, said Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham.

Construction on that phase of the campus is set to begin next year, he said.

"South Winnipeg is one of the fastest-growing parts of the city. In fact, it's one of the fastest-growing parts in all the province," Gillingham added. "This investment will help to meet the needs of the neighbourhood."

The campus facility will serve a catchment area of 120,000 people. Currently, that area of the city has no community centre, no arena and no pool, Gillingham said.

"Together, we are working to change all of that. I look forward to seeing the continued progress and celebrating the completion of the facilities, phases by phase, over the next years."