Mary Telfer, Museum of the Cariboo Chilcotin board vice-president, on behalf of the museum has been working with the City on a proposal to install a wooden storage shed on the edge of the parking lot of the Tourism Discovery Centre where the museum has been located since the summer of 2017. Monica Lamb-Yorski photo

Mary Telfer, Museum of the Cariboo Chilcotin board vice-president, on behalf of the museum has been working with the City on a proposal to install a wooden storage shed on the edge of the parking lot of the Tourism Discovery Centre where the museum has been located since the summer of 2017. Monica Lamb-Yorski photo

Update: Museum to install wooden storage shed in parking lot of TDC

Presently the items are stored off-site at the public works yard and the airport

Update:

City council unanimously approved the Museum of the Cariboo Chilcotin’s request to erect a wooden storage shed on the edge of the parking lot a the Tourism Discovery Centre.

Original:

Hoping to bring some of the items that are in storage off-site, the Museum of the Cariboo Chilcotin is requesting to erect a wooden storage shed on the edge of the Tourism Discovery Centre parking lot.

City council will consider the request at the Tuesday, Aug. 13, regular meeting.

When the museum was relocated to the TDC in the summer of 2017, some of its artifacts went to public works and some to the Williams Lake Airport.

Mary Telfer, the vice-president of the museum board, said items stored in a shipping container at the public works yard include the museum’s display equipment and seasonal decorations.

“We have to run down there all the time to get it, and they are only open certain hours, and we don’t have it on hand,” Telfer said Monday.

With the storage shed on site it would make it easier and the staff and volunteers could bring some off-site items back into the museum.

Read more: Museum revisits difficult past with new exhibit

Originally Telfer made a request, during a committee of the whole meeting July 9, on behalf of the museum to install a shipping container at the site.

The majority of council was hesitant about such a move and instructed staff to meet with Telfer to come up with another solutions such as a trailer or prefabricated storage shed.

Milo MacDonald, the city’s CAO, said in a report to council the proposed shed will be 8 feet by 20 feet and will be a little over 8 feet tall with a peaked roof, asphalt shingles, siding and a steel 36 inch man door at each end.

“This will provide security and be aesthetically pleasing,” MacDonald noted. “Mary Telfer indicated that the structure will be constructed on a skid so that it could be unloaded and loaded easily and support its intended temporary location.

MacDonald said it will be located at the southeast end of the parking lot as specified by the originally proposed location for the shipping container.

Telfer said she was happy with the compromise.

Read more: Museum of the Cariboo Chilcotin sees 500 per cent increase in visitors


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