Wutai Shan Buddhist Garden (, "Wutaishan Canada") is a Chinese Buddhist temple complex located in the township of Cavan Monaghan in Peterborough County, Ontario, between the communities of Omemee and Bethany. It is named after Mount Wutai, one of China's four Sacred Mountains of Buddhism. It is managed by the Buddhist Association of Canada and houses the Buddhist College of Canada.
In 1990, the Buddhist Association of Canada headquartered at the Cham Shan Temple in Thornhill, Ontario, purchased four plots of land totalling in Victoria and Peterborough Counties in Central Ontario, with the intention of building four pilgrimage sites mirroring the four Sacred Mountains of Buddhism in China. Wutai Shan Buddhist Garden was the first site to be developed, with its groundbreaking ceremony held on May 28, 2011. The complete project is estimated to cost ; as of 2016, $37 million had been invested into the project. The statue of the bodhisattva Maitreya at the entrance to the complex was consecrated on June 19, 2017, and the Main Hall was consecrated on October 5, 2019.
Wutai Shan Buddhist Garden was closed to the public during the COVID-19 pandemic from 2020 to 2024. On July 24, 2022, a fire at the Hall of Dizang that was under construction caused over $1.8 million in damage. The Hall of Guanyin was consecrated on October 6, 2022, and the rebuilt Hall of Dizang was consecrated on November 20, 2024.
Wutai Shan Buddhist Garden covers an area of , making it the largest Chinese Buddhist site in Canada. The entrance gate is located on the west side, where a stone sculpture of Maitreya measuring tall and weighing over 700 tonnes is placed. An ensemble of wooden temples built in Tang Chinese style sits on a gentle slope in the middle of the property, overlooking the rest of the complex. Like most Chinese temples, they are oriented on a northâÂÂsouth axis. East of the temples is Wisdom Lake, a spring-fed pond measuring , surrounded by stupas and sculptures. There are also five gilt bronze sculptures of different forms of Manjushri placed on platforms around the property, reflecting the complex's namesake (Wutai means "five terraces" in Chinese) and its traditional identification as the daochang of Manjushri.
The wooden temples at Wutai Shan are built in the style of the Tang dynasty using the traditional techniques of Chinese architecture, including the use of nail-free dougong mortise-and-tenon joinery. So far, three temples have been built: the Main Hall, the Hall of Guanyin, and the Hall of Dizang.
The wooden Main Hall sits on the top level of a three-storey concrete building. The first and second levels contain memorial and exhibition halls, administrative areas, living quarters, and reception areas. A plaza is located outside the first floor, and currently serves as a parking lot. A staircase of 108 steps connects the Main Hall to the plaza.
The Main Hall occupies over and is modelled after the Great East Hall of Foguang Temple at Mount Wutai in China. The main wood used in its construction is rosewood from Laos. The roof is covered with 24,220 bronze shingles that weigh approximately 61 tonnes. The shingles are inscribed with blessings from the patrons who sponsored them. The total weight of the entire structure of the roof is about 600 tonnes. Three Buddha sculptures sit on a in the middle of the hall: the Medicine Buddha in the east, Shakyamuni Buddha in the centre, and Amitabha Buddha in the west. Flanking these Buddhas are sculptures of the bodhisattvas Manjushri and Samantabhadra.
Located on the south side of the Main Hall are the Hall of Guanyin and Hall of Dizang. They each occupy , and enshrine their eponymous bodhisattvas Guanyin and Dizang. Additional structures, including the shanmen entrance gate, the Hall of Four Heavenly Kings and the Hall of Manjushri, will be built in the future further down the slope south of the current temples.
Wutai Shan Buddhist Garden is open to visitors five days a week from mid-April to mid-November. The Buddhist College of Canada located at Wutai Shan offers continuing education programs in partnership with Emmanuel College at the University of Toronto.