NEW APM CENTRE OFFERS
FACILITIES, SPACE FOR WIDE RANGE
OF ACTIVITIES
Sept 9, 2002
Besides hosting many sport and
recreational events, the new
center has full facilities for
preparing banquets and
fundraising dinners, and can
host wedding receptions, trade
shows, conventions and Christmas
parties.
By Doug Gallant – The Guardian
CORNWALL – Five years of
planning and hard work by
officials of more than a dozen
communities paid big dividends
Friday with the official opening
of the new APM Centre.
The opening festivities were
highlighted by the unveiling of
the facility’s cornerstone by
Malpeque MP, Wayne Easter, PEI
Community and Cultural Affairs
Minister, Elmer MacFadyen and
Ron Keefe, president of
Communities 13 Inc.
Cornwall Mayor, Jack Kelly and
Warren MacDonald of Darlington
were also on hand to represent
the largest and smallest
community partners in the new
facility.
A weekend of activities is
planned to mark the opening of
the $3.8 million center, ranging
from a midget hockey game
between the Cornwall Thunder and
Charlottetown Islanders to a
major variety concert and
multiple sports demonstrations.
Keefe, chairman of Communities
13 Inc., the not-for-profit
organization incorporated to
construct, own and operate the
facility, said the official
opening was the culmination of a
process that’s taken countless
hours of work by many people.
But he says it was all worth it.
Keefe noted that when this
process began in 1997, the only
option on the table was how to
keep the North River rink open.
"We originally looked at
acquiring and renovating it,"
Keefe said. "Then some of the
other communities suggested we
look at an other option and that
was a brand new facility.
The primary concern back then
was an ice surface and
communities also wanted a place
for community events.
"We’ve now got everything we
hoped for and a whole lot more,"
Keefe said.
"We’ve got our ice surface,
we’ve got a gymnasium, we’ve got
a 1,200-square foot
multi-purpose room to host all
manner of events, plus a couple
of other rooms."
In addition to Cornwall and
Darlington, the other members of
Communities 13 Inc. include
Afton, Clyde River, Kingston,
Hampshire, Meadow Bank,
Miltonvale Park, New
Haven/Riverdale, North
Wiltshire, Warren Grove, West
River and Winsloe South.
The facility has already seen
some usage.
Following completion of
construction in April, the ice
surface was used for three
weeks. It was then taken out for
mid-summer and was re-installed
for a hockey school in August.
Other elements for the facility
have also been used this summer.
Keefe said the reaction they’ve
received from those who’ve made
use of the facility has been
very positive
"People are very pleased with
it. It’s turned out to be a very
accessible place. We believe
this facility will be very
well-utilized."
The APM Centre will be open
year-round and the facility’s
general manager, Donna Lank,
says there will be a very full
program of activities for people
to take part in.
"We’ve had a lot of activity on
the ice surface already and we
expect to see a whole lot more.
Once minor hockey starts, we’ll
be going from 6 in the morning
to midnight. On the gymnasium
floor there will be basketball,
wheelchair basketball,
volleyball, floor hockey,
badminton, aerobics. We’ve also
been booked for a number of
weddings and other events."
Lank says the fact the facility
is equipped with a full kitchen
enables community groups and
organizations to book the space
and hold banquets and
fundraising dinners without
having to add in the cost of a
catering service.
"Our hope is that communities
will make really good use of the
space," Lank said.
She said while much interest has
already been expressed, she
believes the level of interest
will increase once summer gives
way to fall and people start to
look once more at indoor
activities.
Lank said the facility will be
available for things like
corporate Christmas parties,
trade shows, conventions and
other public events.
And with a seating capacity for
500, or 450 with tables there
are few functions they can’t
accommodate.
The construction of the APM
Centre was financed by several
partners under the Canada-PEI
Infrastructure Program.
The federal government
contributed $1.5 million, while
the province contributed
$500,000. A further $1 million
came from 13 Communities Inc.
Fundraising efforts will account
for a further $786,000 and to
date $525,000 has been raised or
pledged, some $86,000 of that
from the community 50/50
lottery.
Easter said the funding
negotiations for the facility
were complex. The Malpeque MP
said it was with great
satisfaction that he watched the
project develop because so many
communities had played a part in
it.
He said as well that it marked
the end of an era for people of
his generation who spent many
happy hours at the old North
River rink skating and playing
hockey.