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Bains Chocolate Emporium
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'No pictures,
no chocolates, no publicity, out, out, out! '
It began as a romantic idea. A walk
up Main Street from Mt.Pleasant to beyond. Savour
the atmosphere of Vancouvers oldest neighbourhoods,
samples the coffees and pastries (of which there is
much to taste) and take a look at the second hand
clothes, antiques and all manner of collectibles that
spread all the way from Fifth avenue and Main to the
40s block.
Its an afternoon adventure, so bring the kids,
but dont, whatever you do, start at 151 East
6th Street and Main.
Here stands the most curious chocolate factory in
the whole of Canada.
The Adams family structure houses Bains Hand Dipped
Candies and Fine Chocolates and looks as though it
was just plain forgotten by time itself. Its
wonderfully inviting and theres an odd picture
window with a painting in it that you almost feel
Uncle Mortimer created himself. You approach sensing
a pleasurable time with chocolate.
Id like to buy some chocolate.' You say.
No Pictures - No chocolate
But
I wailed
No publicity, out, out, out.
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I sincerely believe Mr Bains Hand Dipped Candies
and Fine Chocolate are well fancied citywide. I also believe
the 90 year old man, with a remarkable resemblance to the
actor Peter Cushing, who shooed me out of his tumbledown
palace of chocolate was the legendary Mr. Bains himself.
I wouldnt be at all surprised if he has lived there
since the building was new and been making chocolate since
he was old enough to stir a pot. The display of hand made
chocolates look very tempting and should you feel brave
enough to venture into this curious structure, with the
timbers vaguely held together by time itself, you will want
to savour the colourful wares. (But dont blame me
if they turn out to be a tad bitter). Call first at (604)
876 5833 and perhaps they will deliver. Someone was loading
up with trays and boxes of the stuff as I left- so I know
it must be a thriving business.
Mt Pleasant Clock above- Liberty's Bakery belowFor the book
lover, First Used Books is right opposite at 152 E 6th and
a good place to search for that book you always meant to
read.
Main Street kind of missed out on the urban growth spurt
since Expo in 1986 and theres a small hallelujah for
that. It probably hasnt changed much since the 1930s
and that means its low rise, one or two floors in
the majority, some older apartment blocks, no big box stores,
just rows and rows of small independent businesses, the
kind Wall-Mart are trying to obliterate. Its true
that Main Street is changing rapidly with Chinese, Korean
and other Asian businesses building up between Broadway
and 16th but beyond that, the character is still maintained.
Its individualistic, personal, off beat.
Mr Bains is not the only business that clings on in the
face ofprogress. Just around the corner lies
Johns Jukes. Yes a shop selling JukeBoxes with original
45s. Next door is the Acme barbershop unchanged in
80 years. Skipping right by the Asian 'Fox' Porn theatre
(rest assured the only porn on the street) you can find
the wonderful Mt Pleasant clock.
Long ago neighbourhoods were proud of themselves and they
erected clocks to welcome you. Well Mt Pleasant is proud
again and it stands sentinel over Vancouver and FalseCreek
spread below it.
Diagonally across from here is a great store selling stained
glass windows. Not just any stained glass, but huge frames
with ornate cut glass and scenic views taken from the mansions
that Vancouver so easily tore down in the rush to be new.
(If you want to restore your old home, Main Street is a
great place to look for doors, windows, and authentic fitments.
From 7th all the way up to Rose Antiques around 26th youll
find what you want.)
Your first stop is the vibe filled café Soma. We
know it is cool because there was Peter New (left), the
much loved star of Velocity Zero and up and
coming Vancouver actor/writer rehearsing with a friend.
Main Street is also where all the artists live before they
make it big and buy in Kits.You have to walk Main Street.
Drive and youll miss a a great deal. At 2418 Main
and Broadway youll find Pulpfiction Books who buy
sci-fi books. You can shop for original baby fashions at
Motherland Clothing at 2539 Main. After 16th street blocks
alternate between antique clothing, retro objects and genuine
collector furnishing (although skip anyone selling thirties
varnished oak, it just looks so naff).
Keep moving. Youll find bicycle shops, sofas, designer
jewellery and up on 26th and Main youll find Butchershop
Gallery
This is an artists co-op run by and for final year Emily
Carr students and for fun they kind of buried a car in the
building and covered it with sods. Its conceptual,
vaguely erotic, in a seventies love machine
kind of way.
Youll be needing coffee again or something stronger.
If you need liquor and the company of gregarious folk then
Reef Bar is your place, if you just want coffee and the
best blueberry scones in the city, Liberty at 3699 Main
will do the honours. (No microwaves, they warm them in the
oven here). You can nip next door to Eugene Choo to catch
up on designer fashions at a realistic price whilst you
wait.
There is some development going on Main but it hasnt
reached the kind of frenzy that Robson Street endures, or
Fourth Avenue for that matter. There are still homes surviving
on Main Street, often in need of care, but you can tell
this is a place for people to live and enjoy. The neighbourhoods
behind Main Street on either side are full of older homes
on large lots (some restored or modernised with great style).
It isnt cheap to live here. But the lots are big and
you can tell its a great family place.
Youll need half a million dollars for a half way decent
hut, but you get the best array of cafés and
small bars in town, a genuine lived in neighbourhood and
proximity to the city. Who needs the suburbs? In fact, remind
me again why people left? Everything is here, what exactly
were the suburbs going to offer except long drives and sense
of loss.
I met Bill, who was having difficulty in walking after some
afternoon drinking. Its a community man, got
to keep an eye on it, not let them build over it.
Bill has lived here all his life and likes the idea that
it hasnt changed much. Safer now, he ventured,
before moving off.
ANTIQUES
At the mouth of Main at Mt Pleasant, there are still some
remaining and very solid apartment buildings erected about
90 odd years ago. I love these red brick apartments. Huge
spaces, great roof overhangs and if respected and cared
for, a better option than lofts. It is in fact the original
neighbourhood with spectacular views. Id say an investment.
Were going to miss the views when theyre all
gone. You might want to discover The Whip (209 E.Sixth Street
and Main) as well, a cool urban bistro with a lively menu
and fair wine list.
Its great that somehow Mt Pleasant and Main Street
has survived without the usual city makeover. It now thrives
as people learn to value these kind of places again.
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