R. C. Harris Filtration Plant
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The R.C. Harris Water Treatment Plant in Toronto is both a crucial piece of infrastructure and an architecturally acclaimed historic building.
The treatment plant is located in the east of the city at the eastern end of Queen Street and at the foot of Victoria Park Avenue along the shore of Lake Ontario. It is located in the Beaches neighbourhood of Toronto.
The plant was built between 1937 and 1941 and is named after the long time commissioner of Toronto's public works Rowland Caldwell Harris. The building, unlike most modern engineering structures, was also created to be a vivid architectural structure. Created in the Art Deco style the cathedral-like structure remains one of Toronto's most admired buildings. It is, however, little known to outsiders. The interiors are just as opulent with marble entryways and vast halls filled with pools of water and filtration equipment. The plant has thus earned the nickname The Palace of Purification.
The facility's grounds have been made available to the public. Despite some concerns of vulnerability to an attack on the water supply since the September 11, 2001 attacks, the grounds have remained open to the public, but security has been increased.
Despite its age, the plant is still fully functional, providing approximately 45% of Toronto and the Region of York's water supply. The intakes are located over 2.6 kilometres from shore in 15 metres of water, running through two pipes under the bed of the lake. The plant also chlorinates and then pumps water to various reservoirs throughout the City of Toronto and the Region of York.
At present (summer 2006), the grounds are under heavy construction and are not publicly accessible. It is expected that the grounds will reopen in the summer of 2007.
[edit] Appearance in popular culture
The The R.C. Harris Water Treatment Plant has been used in dozens of films and television series as a prison, clinic, or headquarters. Examples include:
- The building of the plant is vividly recounted in Michael Ondaatje's In the Skin of a Lion.
- In Undercover Brother it was the headquarters of "The Man".
- In Half Baked it served as a prison.
- In the television series The Pretender, the building represented the base of the mysterious organization "The Centre."
- In Mutant X (TV series), the antagonist corporation Genomex's base of operations.
[edit] External links
- R.C. Harris Residual Management Facility Public Outreach Homepage
- City of Toronto page
- Virtual tour by Michael Hainsworth
- Location of the filtration plant with photos and web pages related to the area
- Pictures of the plant
- More pictures of the plant
- A few more pictures of the plant
Art Gallery of Ontario · Canada's Walk of Fame · Canadian Broadcasting Centre · Casa Loma · CHUM-City Building · CN Tower · Dundas Square · Exhibition Place · Fairmont Royal York · Fort York · Gibson House · Harbourfront Centre · Hockey Hall of Fame · Kensington Market · Montgomery's Inn · Nathan Phillips Square · Old City Hall · Ontario Place · Ontario Science Centre · Osgoode Hall · PATH Underground · Queen's Park · R.C. Harris Filtration Plant · Robarts Library · Royal Ontario Museum · St. James' Cathedral · St. Lawrence Hall · St. Lawrence Market · St. Michael's Cathedral · Todmorden Mills · Toronto City Hall · Toronto Eaton Centre · Toronto Islands · Toronto Pearson International Airport · Toronto Zoo · Union Station · Waterfront Trail · WindShare Wind Turbine
Sports: Air Canada Centre · BMO Field · Maple Leaf Gardens · Ricoh Coliseum · Rogers Centre · Varsity Arena
Performing arts: Bathurst Street Theatre · Canon Theatre · Elgin and Winter Garden Theatres · Four Seasons Centre · Hummingbird Centre · Massey Hall · Molson Amphitheatre · Princess of Wales Theatre · Royal Alexandra Theatre · Roy Thomson Hall