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Nice neighbourhoods are consumed
quite rapidly. But it's no use getting nostalgic for a place
that never really existed.
You go away from Vancouver for a while and come back to
find they basically grew another city over Yaletown. Somewhere
down there under the skyscrapers is a charming place with
nice lofts and some cute shops and restaurants. Thats
the problem with cute, people like it so much around here
they just want to eat it. Nice neighbourhoods are consumed
quite rapidly. But it's no use getting nostalgic for a place
that never really existed.
I happened to have a latte in the Roundhouse Community Centre
(where once the trains were turned around); on the wall
was a clear aerial shot of Yaletown and Vancouver as it
was in the fifties and what it wasnt was cute. Yaletown
and False Creek was basically your average railway wasteland
bordering some fairly nondescript brick buildings and a
lot of scruffy wooden ones. From the air, the whole city
looked squat and unambitous. (Curiously I am reminded of
Tampere in Finland which was a logging and textile town
a hundred years before Nokia made it rich.)
False Creek was where they built the factories that attracted
the immigrants from all over the world. It was also a huge
Candaian Pacific Railroad marshalling yard. No one post-1920
ever thought it remotely attractive or worth putting a scenic
walk around it. Yet back at the turn of the last century
False Creek was once considered so pretty they built and
sold lots overlooking it and called it Fairview. Years of
neglect and industrial indifference meant it became polluted
and something of an eyesore. They even considered filling
it in at one time or worse deeping it with a 'small ' atomic
device. I'm sure that would have put Vancouver on the map.
Luckily common sense prevailed.
The railroad tracks were lifted in 1986 to make way for
Expo '86 and it was this five month long event that attracted
people from all over the world and it came to shape Vancouver's
new future. After the very successful Expo ended they sold
the land to a Hong Kong consortium and ever since then they
have been building the largest private residential project
in the world. False
Creek is now transformed and Fairview would be one way to
describe it.
Its always tempting to think that in obliterating
the past we destroy all that was good and beautiful, but
aside from shock, anyone who came back to visit from Vancouvers
past would find a city that is actually a lot more attractive
than it used to be. Of course this is heresy (I hear a lynch
mob forming a line outside) and a lot of people will point
at the rich old wooden homes across Granville Bridge and
mutter something about grandeur in Shaughnessy Heights.
(First developed by CPR in 1909.) Yes the rich did build
themselves grand homes, but everyone else had to make do
with pretty unspectacular homes. You can still marvel at
how small some of these wooden homes actually were. When
you travel by Skytrain toward New Westminster in the suburbs
and see the few survivor dwellings looking lost in their
big lots, you wonder at how people raised families of ten
or more without the benefit of a monster home and wash &
go shampoo. OK some of the good old stone and brick city
buildings such as the Sun Tower and the art-deco Marine
Building (1929) (once the tallest buildings in the Empire)
have been preserved, and Gastown with it's (old) brick buildings
and restaurants attracts vistitors from all over, but much
has been left to languish and is being eaten up by the worm
virus of poverty that grows along Hastings.
In building up Yaletown (invisibly insulated from the great
unwashed that gather close to Tinseltown movie theatre and
Chinatown), they have created something new and pretty damn
ambitious. Its a little bit high-rise for my liking
but at least it connects with the water and theres
a gesture of parkland there. Concord Pacific are building
a mini city of their own. Contrast that with the people
who used to run the city and youll find little time
or consideration was given to leisure or walking or making
the harbours attractive. They did preserve Stanley Park
of course and that alone makes the city father visionaries,
as it is certainly one of the most attractive city
parks in the world.
Essentially though, in the past these were hard working
cities on the West Coast. Seattle and Vancouver only belatedly
rediscovered their past sometime in the sixties
and placed a value on it. After all, Vancouver burned down
to the ground in the last century (1886) so it must have
been a bit discouraging. San Francisco of course was blessed
with people who thought about posterity all the time. When
they had quakes and fires, they just grew more determined
to make it last.
Nevertheless Vancouver has always been a place for opportunity.
It is worth recording that there were just 50 real estate
agents in the city in 1900 and 650 by 1910. According to
a neat little book Vancouver - A history in Photographs
(authors Vogel & Wyse) Vancouver has been the scene
of many real estate booms - often promoted by the CPR looking
to pull investors in to use their railroads and events such
as the Yukon Gold Rush in 1897. The Population grew from
10,000 souls in 1890 to 100,000 in 1910. (Which by my calculations
gave them one realtor per 153 people!)
Vancouver present day is a changed city, the population
mix is changing, the cultural diversity has been transformed
and the immigrants probably outnumber the native born, certainly
in the city itself. I hestitate to guess how many real estate
agents there are now, but I expect the ratio hasn©–t
changed one jot. This is still a city where you get rich
flipping lots and property. The sophistication of Urbanfare
off Pacific Boulevard, a grocery store to equal Harrods
Food Hall right in the middle of this new apartment building
frenzy is an interesting new development and testimony to
the new types of city dwellers living here. Every exotic
food group is catered for and whatever you might think you
miss from your old country; theyll probably have it.
Of course theres a few hundred Starbucks and Blenz
and whatevers, so theres never more than one hundred
feet between lattes, muffins and blueberry scones and lots
of places to rest your feet. I do wonder what all these
people do for a living who are out jogging or walking or
drinking coffee all day
but they are probably thinking
that about me. One nice curiosity was strolling past a 'boutique'
car showroom selling just the new BMW made Mini Coopers.
If ever there was a fashion icon in the making. They fit
nicely between the high fashion and shops that sell 'children's
furniture'.
This is Vancouver now. But it is a town to be
savoured, especially now that the warm weather has arrived.
From Kits Beach to Jericho the people look so fit and tanned.
Hell rent a bike or blades, you can look good too.
If you are thinking of taking a city break and you have
never been, Vancouver is a special place and a great jumping
off point to visit mountains, forests or just taking the
train south to points beyond Seattle. Its also a good
walking city with lots of places to eat and friendly people
to talk to.
I remember the first time I arrived here in 1980 coming
up all the way by train from LA. It was special then and
is probably more so now. It is no use lamenting the growth
and new urban sophistication of this city. This is a city
with a future and when did you last visit one of those?
If you want to buy a place here in Concord Pacific or elsewhere
in the city well here's a friendly real estate agent to
help you.
Tony Towe email: tony@prompton.bc.ca
or phone 604 219-9191
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