[2] The Jamieson family, from the Six Nations of the Grand River Reserve, also offered their home as a local meeting place for the Indigenous community.
[2][3] Thanks to the Ladies Auxiliary, formed in 1963, the organization was sustaining itself and the centre purchased a three-story home at 210 Beverley Street, previously an Army, Navy, and Air Force Club, and relocated to it in 1966.
With a growing community that now reached 25,000 people, the Centre conducted a three-year search for new facilities.
[3] By 1975, the Centre moved to its current location at 16 Spadina Road, the former Toronto Bible College, and celebrated its opening officially in 1977, with a ribbon-cutting ceremony led by Ontario Premier Bill Davis.
[2][3][5] In 2020 the Ukrainian Museum of Canada, Toronto jointly curated an exhibition on beadwork with the centre.