After much ado, work has begun to renovate and expand the Irvine Animal Care Center on Oak Canyon.

For years, residents and city officials sought upgrades for the decades-old shelter, but planning took far longer than expected and construction delayed.

On Monday, city officials broke ground on the new project. They expect upgrades to be completed by the summer of 2026. The shelter will remain open throughout construction.

The upgraded facility will offer a modern clinic, fewer but larger kennels, air-conditioning in dog buildings, yards for animal care and support and expanded administration and multi-purpose areas.

In 2018, city leaders decided on a plan to demolish the shelter and replace it with a new $25.9 million facility, saying at the time the cost difference between upgrading the existing center and putting in new construction was negligible while building offered more flexibility.

But a year later they changed direction and decided to pursue renovations. The project is still budgeted at $25 million, a figure approved by the City Council last summer.

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