Sask. Polytech moving to U of S campus
Saskatchewan Polytechnic is moving its main Saskatoon campus to Innovation Place at the University of Saskatchewan campus.
The post-secondary school made an announcement alongside the U of S, the province and Innovation Saskatchewan Wednesday at the site where the new campus will be built, centralizing 13 existing buildings across the city.
"The new Saskatchewan Polytechnic campus in Saskatoon is a once in a generation opportunity to create a 21st century learning environment that supplies the expert workforce … for existing, as well as emerging industries," Sask. Polytech President and CEO Larry Rosia said.
The provincial government said it will contribute up to $200 million for the project. Other details are unknown. There's no timeline on when the project will start, when the campus will open, how much it will cost or its size.
Rosia said more a timeline for construction will be released next year, with an expectation it will take three years to build once they break ground. Rosia says a search for donors and a capital campaign will be part of the journey to construction.
All the speakers Tuesday described the campus as a final piece of an "Innovation Corridor," with all three partners coming together in one place to become the first centre of its kind anywhere in the continent.
"We are creating a centre of excellence," Rosia said. "This is a forward-thinking investment in education."
The new corridor is expected to bring together businesses, entrepreneurs, students and other learning institutions to be a centre for applied learning and research.
U of S President Peter Stoicheff said there isn't a place in the United States or Canada that is combining all of those areas to this extent.
"(It's) going to make the whole greater than the sum of its parts," he said.
Premier Scott Moe called Tuesday a day to "look back at" years from now, and the benefits to the province will be immense as he hopes it will spur decades of economic activity, create new jobs and lead to world-changing research.
Rosia agreed with Moe, touting the school's 95 per cent graduate employment rate, with 91 per cent of graduates staying in the province.
"Partnering with the university, we can round out that ecosystem," Rosia said. "University discovers things, and we take that discovery and apply it."
Aaron Genest, the president of SaskTech, an advocacy group that represents Saskatchewan's tech sector, said the new corridor will enhance the province's ability to recruiting people to Saskatchewan.
"Every industry in our province is digitizing," said Genest.
"A modern worker needs to understand more about technology every day, and beyond workers, a successful economy is driven by innovation, and innovation is driven by our post-secondary institutions,” he said.
"There's nothing which will match this," Rosia said. "Critical to the future and the economics of the province."
Even though much of Tuesday's ceremony was about a look to the future and the technology sector, Rosia said the new campus will house its existing trade and technology programs.
Sask. Polytechnic's Idylwyld campus was built in 1941, and has grown to become a school that sees roughly 5,000 students graduate every year.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Monster storm in North Atlantic stretches cloud from Atlantic Canada to Portugal
A large low-pressure system centred about 750 kilometres to the northeast of Newfoundland is causing clouds to stretch all the way to Portugal.
Canadian alleges discrimination, sues federal government in effort to get grandchildren out of Gaza
A Palestinian-Canadian is suing the federal government in an effort to get his four grandchildren out of Gaza. Mohammed Nofal, 74, is alleging Global Affairs Canada and immigration officials created a discriminatory policy that denied his family help in evacuating a war zone in the days following the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel.
B.C. jury resumes deliberations in Ibrahim Ali's murder trial
A jury has resumed deliberations in the case of Ibrahim Ali, whose marathon first-degree murder trial in B.C. Supreme Court wrapped up yesterday.
'We're inside the patient, looking directly at the tumour': Gaming experience aids surgery
An Ontario teen is among the first patients in the country to have a rare type of cancer surgically removed by doctors who trained using a virtual reality system that allows them to 'walk' inside a patient's body.
'Trudeau can end it all': Conservative carbon tax filibuster stretches into second day
With no signs either side is ready to retreat, the marathon voting session in the House of Commons has stretched into its second day, seeing MPs stay up all night rejecting Conservative attempts to defeat government spending plans over the Liberals' refusal to scrap the carbon tax.
1 in 9 Canadian adults have had long-term symptoms from COVID infection: StatCan
About one in nine Canadian adults have had long-term symptoms from COVID-19 infection, according to a Statistics Canada report issued Friday.
More wintry weather is on its way to Canada, with a big storm system closing in
Canadians should expect snow, freezing rain and more winter conditions this weekend as storms travel across the country.
2 Ontario men charged after allegedly producing recruitment videos for listed terrorist entity
Two men from Ontario have been arrested on charges of terrorism after allegedly producing recruitment videos for a listed terrorist organization and circulating far-right manifestos online, police say.
Pompeii archaeologists uncover bakery that doubled as a prison
An ancient bakery operated by slaves has been discovered in the ruins of Pompeii, the Pompeii Archaeological Park said in a statement released Friday.