Sudbury

'We need a fair shake'—Rainbow Centre continue lobby for downtown library, art gallery

The owners of the downtown Sudbury mall are still hoping to convince city council to partner with them on a new library and art gallery.

City council set to pick location for downtown cultural complex in January

Vista Hospitality CEO Amin Visram (right) and property manager Robert Green show off empty office space in Elm Place (formerly the Rainbow Centre) in downtown Sudbury. (Erik White/CBC )

The owners of the downtown Sudbury mall are still hoping to convince city council to partner with them on a new library and art gallery.

Council was to pick a site for a $110 million cultural complex— including a library, art gallery, as well as a convention and performance centre—last month, but put off a vote until January.

City staff are recommending the current site of the Sudbury Arena, which would become available once a new arena is built as part of the planned Kingsway Entertainment District.

But Vista Hospitality Group, which owns the Rainbow Centre, says it could the library and art gallery at a fraction of the cost, between $12 and 15 million.

It's also offering the city half price rent on the space.

An artist's rendering of what the Greater Sudbury Public Library could look like inside the Rainbow Centre off Elm Street. (Vista Hospitality Group )

CEO Amin Visram says this will be good for his business, but also downtown Sudbury as a whole. 

"It will make those businesses flourish more. Hence, those businesses will pay more taxes to the city. Hence, you'll have a boom that will take place between Elm, Notre Dame and the School of Architecture. Hence, more businesses will come in," he says.

The Rainbow Centre was ranked fourth out of four possible sites for the downtown cultural complex, partly because it doesn't have room for the convention centre, formerly known as the Synergy Centre.

Visram believes that a ranking of potential downtown sites was unfairly skewed against his property by using incorrect information such as underreporting the number of available parking spaces at the mall. 

"We need a fair shake," he says.

"We pay $1.2 million in taxes. All we're saying is if that system was fair and the points were objectively looked at that we would be the target and we would be the site."