Terry Fox statue moved to Sparks Street on Monday

Article content

Ottawa’s iconic statue of Terry Fox has moved.

It had stood across from Parliament Hill at 90 Wellington St., but the statue was relocated to Sparks Street on Monday.

“The new location will be along the original route that Terry Fox took during his Marathon of Hope in 1980,” Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC) said in a social media post on Monday morning.

Article content

The memorial sculpture was created by John Hooper in 1983.

Fox was 18 years old when he was diagnosed with bone cancer and had to have his right leg amputated six inches above the knee in 1977.

He began his Marathon of Hope at 21 years old to raise money for cancer research.

Crews removed the Terry Fox statue from Wellington Street and installed it on Sparks Street on Monday.
Crews removed the Terry Fox statue from Wellington Street and installed it onSparks Street on Monday. Photo by Tony Caldwell /Postmedia

Starting in St. John’s, Nfld., he ran for 143 days, but was forced to stop on the outskirts of Thunder Bay.

Terry Fox died on June 28, 1981, one month shy of his 23rd birthday.

It was reported in 2022 that the statue would have to be moved to make space for a new building complex with offices for senators and members of Parliament. It said the runner’s family would be consulted about “an appropriate position” for his statue.

According to PSPC, the Block 2 redevelopment project, aimed to transform the city block across from Parliament into “an innovative complex that will meet the needs of Parliament and the public,” should be completed in the early 2030s.

An architectural and engineering contract was awarded to Zeidler Architecture Inc., in association with David Chipperfield Architects in May 2023.

With files from the Canadian Press.

Recommended from Editorial

  1. Much of the delay in response times can be attributed to the excessive amount of time spent in offload delay at Ottawa hospitals, a report states.

    Paramedics miss city council’s targets for responding to the most critically ill patients

  2. It was business as usual at the Canadian Border Services Agency's Cornwall Port of Entry on Friday afternoon.

    Canadian border workers’ strike ‘on hold’ until at least next week | What you need to know

Share this article in your social network

Source