Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre
| Centre sportif panaméricain de Toronto | |
| Full name | Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre |
|---|---|
| Address | 875 Morningside Avenue |
| Location | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
| Coordinates | 43°47′25.19″N 79°11′35.88″W / 43.7903306°N 79.1933000°W |
| Owner | City of Toronto University of Toronto Scarborough |
| Capacity | Aquatics Centre - 6,000 (Pan/Parapan Games), 3,500 (legacy mode) Field House - 2,000 |
| Field size | 312,000 sq ft (29,000 m2) Two 10-lane 50 metre pools Dive tank Four-court gymnasium 200 metre track |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | 27 September 2012 |
| Built | 2012-2014 |
| Opened | 2 September 2014 |
| Construction cost | $205 million |
| Architect | NORR Limited |
| General contractor | PCL Construction |
| Tenants | |
| Toronto Parks, Forestry and Recreation University of Toronto Scarborough Athletics & Recreation Canadian Sports Institute Ontario 2015 Pan American Games 2015 Parapan American Games 2017 North American Indigenous Games 2017 Invictus Games Scarborough Shooting Stars (2022–present) | |
| Website | |
| tpasc | |
The Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre (TPASC; French: Centre sportif panaméricain de Toronto) is a sports complex in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Co-owned by the City of Toronto and the University of Toronto Scarborough, it is operated by TPASC Inc., with programming offered by both the university and Toronto Parks, Forestry & Recreation. It is located on the northern grounds of the university's campus near the intersection of Highway 401 and Morningside Avenue.
Opened to the public on September 2, 2014, the complex consists of a 3,500-seat aquatics arena (6,000 during the Pan Am and Parapan Am Games) with two Olympic-size swimming pools and a diving well; and a 2,000-seat field house that includes four full-sized gymnasiums, a fitness centre, a climbing wall, and a 200-metre track. The centre hosted diving, fencing, swimming, synchronized swimming and modern pentathlon competitions during the 2015 Pan American Games. Funding for the Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre is the largest single investment in amateur sports in the history of Canada.