Toronto

Black Lives Matter set to open 10,000-square-foot art and activism centre in Toronto

The Wildseed Centre for Art and Activism will be a place for Black community members of all ages to create and meet freely. It's set to open in early 2022 and will also serve as a home base for Black Lives Matter chapters across Canada.

Wildseed Centre will receive $250K from the city, councillor says

Black Lives Matter Canada is opening the Wildseed Centre for Art and Activism at 24 Cecil St. by early 2022. (Sandy Hudson/Supplied)

A 10,000-square-foot hub to promote Black activism and art is opening in the heart of downtown Toronto early next year. 

Black Lives Matter (BLM) Canada is launching the Wildseed Centre for Art and Activism at 24 Cecil St. near Spadina Avenue and College Street. It will be a space where Black community members of all ages can create and meet freely, Sandy Hudson, the group's co-founder, told CBC News.

"Having a space like this that has a level of permanence, that is large, that allows for different types of organizations to come together and create community. It's going to be a really, really big shift for Black Canada and Black Toronto," she said. 

The three-storey building recently purchased by BLM is large enough for a lounge, dance floor, sound recording booth, event space and garden for "explicit political creation," Hudson said. Black interior designs and architects will lead the renovations. 

Centre has city's support

The city is providing the Wildseed Centre with  $250,000 for capital upgrades, said Coun. Mike Layton, who represents Ward 11, University-Rosedale. When council meets next week, he will be requesting ongoing funding for the centre's operations.

"This was our opportunity to demonstrate through a financial commitment that we would like to see Black Lives Matter and Wildseed excel and thrive in this space," Layton said in an interview Wednesday. 

"And in a neighbourhood that's becoming increasingly unaffordable, to be able to protect a building like this and insert the type of energy that will be brought by Wildseed, it's very exciting." 

WATCH: CBC News Network's Ginella Massa speaks with Wildseed Centre's Jessica Kirk:

BLM-Canada is buying a mansion

3 years ago
Duration 5:00
Since 2014, Black Lives Matter - Canada has discussed the importance of space for Black activists and artists to think big. Now, the organization says it will close a deal on a Victorian mansion in the heart of Toronto on July 22. Ginella Massa spoke with Wildseed Centre executive director Jessica Kirk, in front of what will be their new Black-owned site.

In the past, BLM struggled to find space to plan demonstrations and hold community meetings — a problem faced by many Black organizations in Toronto, Hudson said. 

"We were always beholden to somebody else's idea of what we could do or restricted the amount of space that we could get," said Hudson. "The amount of space that Black people have in the city is limited." 

The Wildseed Centre's official launch was set to take place in March 2020 in a smaller rented space, Hudson said. Then the pandemic hit along with the lockdowns. For the past year and a half, BLM has been planning something more ambitious.

Now the fully Black-owned and operated building is almost complete.

A pre-pandemic event at the first version of the Wildseed Centre, in a rented space, on March 7, 2020. It will now be in a much larger building owned by Black Lives Matter Canada in downtown Toronto. (Sandy Hudson/Supplied)

"Community members can just come by and not think they need to edit who they are," said Hudson. "They will have access to all sorts of space, lots and lots of space. It's going to be a unique culture to this particular space."


For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians — from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community — check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)