Frances Bula header image 2

It’s not all angst over bike lanes, affordable housing, transit: We have some fun in the city too

July 16th, 2013 · 15 Comments

Cheer up. You can’t afford to buy a place here, but we have some darn good street parties. And other stuff that makes city living all worthwhile.

 

 

Sometimes it’s the small changes that make the biggest differences in how people enjoy their cities – the food cart can provide as much pleasure as the expensive new art gallery. Vancouver isn’t immune to the experimental trends popping up in this 21st-century urban age. Here are some of the latest:

 

As urban agriculture takes off, community gardens are proliferating in Vancouver parks, with waiting lists for more. And the city has an aggressive plan to plant more trees with edible produce in future years. But Vancouver also has small farms operating on top of downtown parking acreages, in empty lots in the Downtown Eastside, on rooftops. And, most recently, the city announced North America’s largest urban orchard – at a former gas station. The social enterprise Sole Food Street Farms will have apples, pears, plums and persimmons in its orchard, planted in moveable boxes at Main and Terminal.

Playing, napping, eating on the street

Street pavement is a valuable resource that can be used for more than just cars, as many cities are discovering. Vancouver has shut down Robson Street between the art gallery and the courthouse two summers in a row. Last summer, it was filled with giant beanbag-like chairs. This summer, it’s wooden tables and benches set out on the road, which has been covered with planking to create a “corduroy road” – the way streets were built in the muddy Pacific Northwest 100 years ago. Streets are doing double-duty elsewhere as well: residents are encouraged to shut them down for block parties; laneways occasionally turn into markets; and the city is creating “parklets” (little decks built over a couple of street parking spaces) here and there. In Surrey, one road in the city centre is shut down regularly to provide space for markets and concerts.

Inventive new places to drink

Vancouver was notorious in its earlier years for its grim drinking destinations: large, dimly lit, barn-like establishments filled with terry cloth-covered tables, the better to soak up the gallons of spilled beer. The prevailing ethos implied that drinkers were animals best kept penned up. Very slowly, the city edged toward allowing alcohol on sidewalk terraces (although insisting they must be railed off in a way that mystifies people from other cities). Earlier this month, council approved zoning changes that will allow the city’s proliferating micro-breweries to serve their products in small bars and tasting lounges attached to their operations. Again, not just a Vancouver thing. Surrey will not only allow Central City Brewing, its biggest micro-brewery, to open a tasting lounge at a new facility near the Pattullo Bridge, it actually built the facility and leased it to Central City long-term.

Parties, parties, parties

European cities know that to keep the citizens happy, there must be circuses, not just bread. Go into any city with any pretensions to urbanity during the summer months and you’ll find a steady diet of free music performances in the parks and churches, along with festivals in the public squares. Surrey, under Mayor Dianne Watts’s ambitious plan to turn it from a suburb into a city, puts on massive free concerts in public parks. The annual Fusion Festival July 20 and 21 features the typical eclectic mix of artists in this wildly multicultural suburb: Delhi to Dublin, Hawksley Workman, Los Lobos and much, much more. In Vancouver, streets are shut down for the annual VIVA program and Granville Street – ground zero for hockey riots and beer-drinking – is being slowly transformed into the main location for festivals, markets, dance parties, and street hockey. Now there’s something you’ll never see at a Paris summer festival.

 

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  • Bill Lee

    Does it hurt to put your tongue so firmly in cheek, Mme Bula?

    Hmm, and L’actualité (A french Macleans) this week (for Août 2013) has an above-the-title story on “18 villes qui innovent” (page 23) and the only thing Vancouver is noted for is …. : “protection des perspectives visuelles”
    Uhm, uh. That’s it.

    They haven’t seen the plans for towers outside the “View Cones”

    That big earthquake can’t come some enough.

  • tedeastside

    Vancouver’s not exactly know for being friendly.
    any social events in Vancouver are awkward to the point of being comical for visitors, Vancouverites seem to be solitary folks

  • Lewis N. Villegas

    The argument was made back in ’61—that glorious year of publications by Jacobs, Rossi, Venturi, and so many more before the dark clouds set in—its NOT Either Or, it is Both And

    We want BOTH street fairs AND affordable housing.

    Why not? Now for the nub of it….

    The argument goes that we can’t do TOD on VCC because that would RE-zone industrial land into (money grabbing) residential.

    Land values would go ballistic and no industrial would ever build again! But, why doesn’t the same argument hold the other way around?

    If we RE-zone “anything” to money-grabbing hi-rise condo, then Land values will go ballistic and no [fee simple] residential will ever build again!

    The CAC choo-choo has left the station. All our values of community and values of place are being taken away with it.

    Time to stand up, Vancouver. Stand up and fight for your rights!

  • Threadkiller

    1) One would have to be crazy to eat fruit grown on trees situated at one of the busiest, most car-choked intersections in the city. This will be an “urban” orchard, all right, with the emphasis heavily on “urban”. By the time they’re ripe those apples, pears, plums and persimmons will have absorbed enough hydrocarbons and God knows how many other toxic substances that they’ll probably have to be seized by the Health Department in the interests of public safety, lest anybody be foolhardy enough to eat one.

    2) The complete absence of street hockey at Parisian summer festivals is just one more example (among hundreds) of the immeasurable superiority of that city to this one.

  • Jay

    It’s as if a perpetual dark cloud hangs over some of you. Was it really tongue in cheek? I guess I’m naive.

    Why in the world would Parisians be playing street hockey?

    I like reading the comments section here because this is where I can find this cities best and brightest…

  • rph

    Seems like other cities, like Surrey are often leading the way.

  • spartikus

    No street hockey in Paris? Not true!

    Apparently Parisians not as superior as some think!

  • Threadkiller

    Thanks ever so, Spartikus. Evidently the rumours of accelerating social decline in France are true.Of course, the country began to hit the skids when they let Starbucks in… I’ve just been trying to ignore the trend.
    I wonder if it’s possible to escape from hockey culture (note world-class oxymoron) in Pyongyang…?

  • spartikus

    The North Korean national men’s team is currently ranked 43rd in IIHF rankings.

    Your best bet seems to be South America – though I note Argentina recently made its international debut in a 5-1 loss to Mexico.

  • Threadkiller

    Why stop at South America? Perhaps I’ll just keep going until I arrive at Antarctica. Of course, I hear everything there is covered in ice— bad sign. Can penguins be taught to skate?

  • Lewis N. Villegas

    Preliminary report on a Better Mount Pleasant here
    http://wp.me/p2FnNe-8f

    Now start grabbing at the low-hanging fruit. Good urbanism is not as hard as it seems.

  • Bill Lee

    Ref: spartikus // Jul 17, 2013 at 8:53 am #7

    That video was 7 years ago.
    Here is last year at the Gare du Lyon
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=18XJzHZri2M
    And other multiple videos of the same plays.

    And Paris has “true hockey” that can be played year around, not just in freezing weather
    hockey-sur-gazon.com/
    ( cfparis.com/ )
    And mulitple “ligues”
    hockey-iledefrance.org/

    Hockey Sticks! Yoik! Yoik!

  • Silly Season

    Do they play with ‘un puque’, in a fit of pique?

    Now, THAT would be French hockey…

  • TC

    Nice article Frances. I find all of this street hockey talk amusing, when truly the #1 sport in this city is self-loathing, as evidenced by the eternal Debbie Downers in this crowd. I especially enjoy all of the Paris comments. If there was a more arrogant viewpoint, I’m sure these commenters would have it.

  • Bill Lee

    And how did those 4 items fit in with your Folk Festival attendance, Mme Bula?

    No trees or gardens in Jericho anymore (maybe in the Army times when it was PMQs which after demobbing extended as Veterans Apartments for many kilometres along Fourth and Broadway, with central gardens/play areas in the open courtyards of each.
    (Ooh, too expensive to have such liveable places these days.)
    Though in those days, leaded fuel meant heavy washing of any foods grown along those strips, as with anything touching that “urban orchard” on Main and Terminal with toxic hydrocarbons n the soils and in the air from mass commuter traffic.
    It was better there when the old Main Market existed.

    Certainly the Folk Fest is a party, and has ‘beer gardens’ fenced off and watched.
    But did you come out of the sun with your SPF 30 splashed on and try one of the pubs at 4th and Alma? They don’t have that magic limit of 40 seats (no public washroom needed) for “Tasting Rooms”

    Hope it was a fun weekend, you were exposed to more worldMusic and are intrigued to find much more music from around the world.

    Did you notice that the great André Verchuren died the other week while you were in Paris?
    A loss for Paris, a loss for France and a large gap in the bal-musette. Thelocal.fr had a nice obit in English with a link to an old film segment (Youtube) of Les fiancés d’Auvergne (1960)