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Museum Reconstruction - Part 6

By: Graham Iddon


March 7, 2017
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Summer 2017

Ottawa’s own 2017 logo is seen all over the city.

For anybody living in Ottawa, to be unaware that Canada will turn 150 years old on 1 July is like being unaware that the sun is up. Like a proud homeowner with company coming for dinner, the city is in a frenzy of construction to put its major infrastructure in ship‑shape before the celebrations begin. It seems the entire downtown is under construction. Serious traffic delays, closed thoroughfares and historic buildings covered in scaffolding are a given but we’re pretty confident it will all pay off in time—touch wood.


Drivers weren’t the only people making detours in Ottawa this past fall.



It might be simpler if everybody downtown wore hard hats and safety boots these days.


Also “under construction,” to various degrees, are four major museums in Ottawa: the Canadian Museum of History, the Canada Science and Technology Museum, the Canadian Museum of Nature and our very own Bank of Canada Museum. OK, we’re not sure that we bat in the same league as the other three institutions but we do have “national” aspirations. One thing is for sure, though: all four of us have every intention of opening our new galleries (or whole new museums!) to the public this year. The Museum of History is the only one audacious enough to have an online clock counting down to its new gallery opening, but I can honestly say that we are trying our very best to also open our doors to the public during the summer of 2017.


When Parliament Hill’s West Block is ready for business later this year, it will have been in renovation for 10 years.



Staying open during renovations is a challenge for many of us, like the National Arts Centre, working towards a 2017 opening.


Aligning our schedule with the sesquicentennial is a great opportunity to jump onto a very noisy bandwagon of public events. Ottawa will be inundated with a tsunami of tourists next summer. When better to open our new museum then when we have a ready‑made audience of enthusiastic tourists visiting the immediate vicinity of our door step?

And we’re not the only ones at the Bank of Canada getting into the spirit of 2017. By the early spring, the Bank will have unveiled the design of our newest commemorative bank note. Slated to be in circulation in time for the Canada 150 events, it will, of course, be celebrating Confederation. The Museum will partner with the Bank’s Currency Department in a number of ways to promote this new note. Look to our blog pages for more information.


The Museum’s impressive entrance pyramid is at Bank and Wellington. Construction is on time.



It’s a good address with impressive neighbours.


So how’s the Bank of Canada Museum progressing? Everything seems to be ticking along just fine, thanks. The Collections team has been working flat out to pull together a magnificent permanent exhibition from their vaults and drawers. This includes a series of collection “startifacts”—showpieces that act as ambassadors for each subject zone in the Museum, tying the artifacts to the exhibitions on the main floor. The team found something substantial to say about more than 100 of those artifacts, along with a few technical points about all 1,400 of them. The rest of the exhibition content is reaching the final stages of approval, and much of the final text has already been through its rigorous editing process. Also approved and well launched on the drawing boards are most of the exhibition designs, the interactive content and all the colours, materials, surfaces and lighting that make up the interior infrastructure.

And we now even have an address. “Wait, you didn’t have an address?!” Yes, that seems ridiculous but the Museum’s new entrance, though clearly part of the Bank of Canada’s head office complex, is half a city block from the Bank’s official address. If we published our address as 234 Wellington Street, we’d have some very annoyed visitors on our hands, if they ever arrived at all. So we went to Ottawa City Hall and got an address for our own doorway at Bank and Wellington Streets.

So where are you going to be this summer? Visiting Ottawa—at 30 Bank Street, of course.

We want to hear from you! Do you have an idea for a blog post you’d like to see?
Content type(s): Blog posts

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The Museum Blog

February 26, 2025

New acquisitions—2024 edition

By: David Bergeron, Krista Broeckx


Bank of Canada Museum’s acquisitions in 2024 highlight the relationships that shape the National Currency Collection.
Content type(s): Blog posts
February 11, 2025

Money’s metaphors

By: Phillipe Audet-Cayer, Graham Iddon, Patricia Marando


Buck, broke, greenback, loonie, toonie, dough, flush, gravy train, born with a silver spoon in your mouth… No matter how common the expression for money, many of us haven’t the faintest idea where these terms come from.
Content type(s): Blog posts
August 6, 2024

Treaties, money and art

By: Krista Broeckx, Frank Shebageget


Photo, collage, a photograph and a drawing of an elderly White man in a high collar and old-fashioned suit.
The Bank of Canada Museum’s collection has a new addition: an artwork called Free Ride by Frank Shebageget. But why would a museum about the economy buy art?
Content type(s): Blog posts Subject(s): Arts, History
July 16, 2024

Rai: big money

By: Graham Iddon


An item is said to have cultural value when it can be directly associated with the history, people, beliefs or rituals important to a society. It’s the same with a rai—its value can be greater depending upon who authorized it, who carved it and who subsequently owned it.
Content type(s): Blog posts Subject(s): Economy, Geography, History Grade level(s): Grades 11 and 12 / Secondary 5 and CEGEP
April 18, 2024

Lessons from the Great Depression

By: Graham Iddon


A welfare coupon and piece of stock ticker tape over a 1930s black and white photo of unemployed men gathering to protest.
What the stock market crash of 1929 did was starkly reveal the weaknesses of economic systems that had evolved from the unregulated capitalism of the late 19th century.
Content type(s): Blog posts Subject(s): Financial literacy, History Grade level(s): Grade 09 / Secondary 3, Grade 10 / Secondary 4, Grades 11 and 12 / Secondary 5 and CEGEP
March 25, 2024

Welcoming Newfoundland to Canada

By: David Bergeron


Newfoundland’s entry into Confederation marked the end of an era when Canadian provinces issued their own coins and paper money.
Content type(s): Blog posts
December 19, 2023

New Acquisitions—2023 Edition

By: David Bergeron, Krista Broeckx


It’s that time of the year again—the wrap-up of the Bank of Canada Museum’s annual acquisition program. Here are a few highlights of the latest additions to the National Currency Collection.
Content type(s): Blog posts
November 27, 2023

Mo’ money, mo’ questions

By: Heather Montgomery


But what do you do with money once you have it? That’s for you to decide. A budget can really help. It will allow you to keep track of what you earn (income) and what you spend (expenses).
Content type(s): Blog posts Subject(s): Financial literacy Grade level(s): Grade 04, Grade 05, Grade 06, Grade 07 / Secondary 1, Grade 08 / Secondary 2, Grade 09 / Secondary 3, Grade 10 / Secondary 4, Grades 11 and 12 / Secondary 5 and CEGEP
November 16, 2023

Understanding cryptocurrencies

By: Graham Iddon


Un circuit imprimé d’un ordinateur avec des dizaines de circuits et un ventilateur.
Most of us are aware of them, but how much do we really understand about cryptocurrencies?
Content type(s): Blog posts Subject(s): Economy, Financial literacy Grade level(s): Grade 08 / Secondary 2, Grade 09 / Secondary 3, Grade 10 / Secondary 4, Grades 11 and 12 / Secondary 5 and CEGEP

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