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Chinatown, Vancouver

Chinatown is a neighbourhood in Vancouver, British Columbia, and is Canada's largest Chinatown. Centred around Pender Street, it is surrounded by Gastown to the north, the Downtown financial and central business districts to the west, the Georgia Viaduct and the False Creek inlet to the south, the Downtown Eastside and the remnant of old Japantown to the northeast, and the residential neighbourhood of Strathcona to the southeast.

Chinatown
Millennium Gate on Pender Street in Chinatown
Coordinates: 49°16′48″N 123°5′58″W / 49.28000°N 123.09944°W / 49.28000; -123.09944
Country Canada
Province British Columbia
CityVancouver
Time zoneUTC−8 (Pacific)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−7 (PDT)
Area Codes604, 778, 236
Chinatown, Vancouver
Traditional Chinese溫哥華唐人街
Simplified Chinese温哥华唐人街
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinWēngēhuá Tángrénjiē
Wade–GilesWen1-ko1-hua2 T'ang2-jen2-chieh1
IPA[wə́nkɤ́xwǎ tʰǎŋɻə̌ntɕjé]
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingWan1go1waa4 Tong4jan4gaai1
Alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese溫哥華華埠
Simplified Chinese温哥华华埠
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinWēngēhuá Huá-bù
Wade–GilesWen1-ko1-hua2 Hua2-pu4
IPA[wə́nkɤ́xwǎ xwǎpû]
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingWan1go1waa4 Waa4fau6
Designations
Official nameVancouver's Chinatown National Historic Site of Canada
Designated2011
Chinatown, Vancouver, 1927

Due to the large ethnic Chinese presence in Vancouver—especially represented by mostly Cantonese-speaking multi-generation Chinese Canadians and first-generation immigrants from Hong Kong—the city has been referred to as "Hongcouver".[1] However, most immigration in recent years has been Mandarin-speaking residents from Mainland China. Chinatown remains a popular tourist attraction and is one of the largest historic Chinatowns in North America, but it experienced recent decline as newer members of Vancouver's Chinese community dispersed to other parts of the metropolitan area.

Geography edit

 
Selected locations in Chinatown, Vancouver 
  •  Points of interest 
  •  Parks and open spaces 

1
Millennium Gate
2
Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden
3
Sam Kee Building
4
International Village
5
Andy Livingstone Park
6
Chinese Benevolent Association of Vancouver
7
Kuomintang Building
8
Carnegie Community Centre

The approximate borders of Chinatown as designated by the City of Vancouver are the alley between Pender and Hastings Streets, Georgia Street, Gore Avenue, and Taylor Street,[2] although unofficially the area extends well into the rest of the Downtown Eastside. Main, Pender, and Keefer Streets are the principal areas of commercial activity.

Golden Village edit

It has been more recently overshadowed by the newer Chinese immigrant business district along No. 3 Road in the City of Richmond, south of Vancouver. Many affluent Hong Kong and Taiwanese immigrants have moved there since the late 1980s, coinciding with the increase of Chinese ethnic retail and restaurants in that area. This new area is designated the "Golden Village" by the City of Richmond. The proposed renaming of the area to "Chinatown" met resistance both from merchants in Vancouver's Chinatown and from non-Chinese residents and merchants in Richmond itself.

History edit

Early immigration and head tax edit

 
Chinese railway construction workers for CP Rail, 1884

Chinese immigrants, primarily men, first came to Vancouver in large numbers during the late 19th century, attracted in part by the British Columbia gold rush of 1858 and then the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway in the 1880s.[3]: 3  In the census of 1880–81, the total Chinese population in Canada was 4,383, of which the overwhelming majority (4,350) resided in British Columbia.[4]: 7  By 1884, 17,000 Chinese immigrants had arrived in Canada to work on the railroad alone.[3]: 3  The 1891 census counted 9,129 Chinese in Canada (8,910 in British Columbia), and the population at the 1901 census had increased to 16,792 in Canada (14,376 in British Columbia as an incomplete count).[4]: 7–8  Of the estimated 16,000 Chinese immigrants in British Columbia in 1901, 2,715 lived in Victoria and another 2,011 lived in Vancouver.[4]: 8 

After the completion of the railroad, under the Chinese Immigration Act of 1885, a head tax of CA$50 per person was levied solely on Chinese immigrants to discourage further settlement; the head tax was raised to $100 in 1900 and then $500 in 1903.[citation needed]

By 1900, Chinatown covered the four square blocks bounded by Canton Alley (on the west), Hastings Street (on the north), Keefer Street (on the south), and Main Street (on the east, named Westminster Avenue at the time), with Pender Street (then called Dupont) as the main commercial district.[3]: 4  During this time, Vancouver's Red Light district was present in the area, undergoing routine police checks and attempts to clean up the area. By 1906, the Dupont brothels were forced to close. As a result, several brothels and businesses moved to two parallel dirt paved, dead-end lanes off of Dupont, West of Carrall: Shanghai Alley and Canton Alley. While these immigrants were dispersed throughout Chinatown, they strongly concentrated these areas.[5] In 1896, the health officer for the City of Vancouver reported the city had to destroy houses in Chinatown "owing to their filthy condition" and that "one could hardly pass through the [Chinatown] quarter without holding one's nose."[4]: 14  Another health officer noted "The Chinese merchants and employers of labour endeavour to assist the health officials, and are, as a rule, willing to co-operate and help in this matter, but the lower classes of Chinese emigrants give a great deal of trouble unless constantly watched," concluding that continued immigration would lead to "circumstances and conditions which predispose to infectious disease, and serve to spread it rapidly when once it is roused into activity."[4]: 19  This perception only worsened with the turn of the district. Residents of the area where said to face continuous "white hostility and discrimination" due to three main vices, drug problems, gambling and sex work. As these perceptions grew, the discrimination turned to violence, resulting in a destructive raid in 1907 that caused irreversible damage to the area.[5]

Clan societies and 1907 riot edit

 
Boarded storefronts on Carrall Street following September 1907 riots

As more people of Chinese heritage came to Vancouver, clan associations were formed to help the newcomers assimilate in their adopted homeland and to provide friendship and support. Clan societies were often formed around a shared surname lineage, county (e.g., Kaiping, Zhongshan), or other feature of identity.[3]: 4 

Despite these efforts, discrimination against residents of the area continued to grow and eventually turned to violence.[5] The Vancouver riots of September 1907 grew out of an anti-immigration rally being held by the Asiatic Exclusion League, resulting in significant damage to Chinatown businesses.[6] 2,000 Chinese immigrants were displaced from their homes, and total property damage resulting from the actions of the mob of 10,000 was estimated at $15,000.[7] One news report speculated the riot was held to intimidate a visiting Japanese delegate.[8] Another blamed the presence of American agitators.[9] Mackenzie King, then the Deputy Minister of Labour, was dispatched to investigate the riot and recommended the disbursement of $36,000 in compensation.[10][11]

The head tax was repealed via the Chinese Immigration Act of 1923, which instead abolished Chinese immigration to Canada entirely, except in limited circumstances.[citation needed]

Late 20th century improvements edit

In 1979, the Chinatown Historic Area Planning Committee sponsored a streetscape improvement program to add various Chinese-style elements to the area, such as specially paved sidewalks and red dragon streetlamps that demarcated the area's borders while emphasizing it as a destination for heritage tourism. Starting with its designation by the province as a historic area in 1971 and subsequent economic shifts, Chinatown shifted from a central business district to playing a largely cultural role. Murality, a local non-profit, is installing a mural on East Pender Street with the aim of bringing colour and vitality to the neighbourhood.[12]

The growth of Chinatown during much of the 20th century created a healthy, robust community that gradually became an aging one as many Chinese immigrants no longer lived nearby. Noticing local businesses suffering, the Chinatown Merchants Association cited the lack of parking and restrictive heritage district rules as impediments to new uses and renovations. Their concerns subsequently led to a relaxation of zoning laws to allow for a wider range of uses, including necessary demolition.[13] Additions in the mid-1990s included a large parkade, a shopping mall, and the largest Chinese restaurant in Canada. More residential projects around the community and a lowering of property taxes helped to maintain a more rounded community. Reinvigoration was a discussed topic along government members, symbolically embedded in the Millennium Gate project, which opened in 2002.[14]

Recent immigration edit

 
Street in Chinatown

In addition to Han Chinese from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Mainland China, Chinese Latin Americans have also settled in the Chinatown area.[citation needed] Most of them were from Peru and arrived shortly after Juan Velasco Alvarado took over that country in a military coup in 1968. Others have come from Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, and Nicaragua.

Vancouver experienced large numbers of immigrants from the Asia-Pacific region in the last two decades of the twentieth century, most notably from China, whose population in the Vancouver Census Metropolitan Area was estimated at 300,000 in the mid-1990s.[15]

Businesses and development edit

Chinatown is becoming more prosperous as new investment and old traditional businesses flourish[citation needed]. Today the neighbourhood features many traditional restaurants, banks, markets, clinics, tea shops, clothing stores, and other shops catering to the local community and tourists alike. The Vancouver office of Sing Tao Daily, one of the city's four Chinese-language dailies, remains in Chinatown. OMNI British Columbia (formerly Channel M) had its television studio in Chinatown from 2003 to 2010. Vancouver Film School also has a satellite location in Chinatown. The renowned bar & nightclub known as ‘Fortune Sound Club’ is situated within the heart of Chinatown (formerly Ming’s Restaurant). As of 2019, they have grown to become one of the most popular night clubs in all of BC, rivalling off the Granville Entertainment District and bringing in world-class musicians.

Chinatown's businesses today predominantly consist of those selling lower-order, working-class goods, such as groceries, tea shops, and souvenir stores. While some businesses, such as restaurants, stand out, they are no longer the only Chinese food establishments in the city, a shift that contributed to a visible decline in foot traffic and nighttime activity in Chinatown. As the vacancy rate in Chinatown currently stands at 10%, it has been acknowledged that Chinatown needs a new approach to development, since some businesses have relocated to suburban shopping centres while others simply retired or went out of business. Examples include the closing of some restaurants and shops, sometimes in instances where the family did not have successors or where the business could not sustain itself any longer. Although there is a considerable business vacancy, Chinatown lease rates are considered the cheapest in the city, at $15–$30 per square foot—about one-tenth of the asking price on Vancouver's Downtown Robson Street, the city's upscale shopping district.[16]

The new Chinatown business plan encourages new entrepreneurs to move in—and has attracted a longboard store and German sausage shop—as ways of restoring storefronts and bringing in a younger crowd, and to make higher-income people more comfortable in the area.[17] Attracted to the lower rent and the building's heritage status, younger businesses have moved in, often with white owners who also live in apartments above the shops.[18] The general consensus is that Chinatown's priority is to attract people of all backgrounds to Chinatown, and it is believed that the opening of non-traditional stores will bring a new flow of energy and income to the streets.[19] As a result, the commercial activity is becoming more diversified, dotted with Western chain stores such as Waves Coffeeshop and Dollar Giant. Other additions include vintage stores, two art galleries, bars, and a nightclub, built on the site of the former Ming's restaurant,[20] in an attempt to bring something of a nightlife atmosphere, reminiscent of the 1950s and 1960s, back to the neighbourhood. The diversity of new shops and businesses is believed to be necessary in creating a new image for Chinatown in order to bring vibrancy back to the area and encourage commercial activities in general, and as a way to compete with suburban districts as well as nearby Gastown and Downtown Vancouver.

Chinatown Revitalization Action Plan edit

The Chinatown Historic Area planning committee, along with AECOM Economics, a US-based planning firm, helped to prepare a Chinatown Revitalization Action Plan for Vancouver's planning department in November 2011.[21] Vancouver planners surveyed 77 businesses and found that 64% reported a decrease in revenue between 2008 and 2011. The majority of consumers, 58%, were local residents, with 21% coming from elsewhere in the Lower Mainland. Tourist spending accounted for only 12% of Chinatown customers.[22]

Condominium development edit

 
Chinese themed street-light

Vancouver city councillors voted in 2011 to raise building height restrictions in Chinatown in order to boost its population density. A limit of 9 stories for most of the neighbourhood was set, with a maximum of 15 stories on the busiest streets.[23]

Architecture edit

The neighbourhood was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 2011.[24]

Ongoing efforts at revitalization include efforts by the business community to improve safety by hiring private security, considering new marketing promotions, and introducing residential units into the neighbourhood by restoring and renovating heritage buildings. The current focus is on the restoration and adaptive reuse of the distinctive association buildings.

Historical and significant architecture in Chinatown, Vancouver
Name Street Builder/Designer Year Built by/for Notes Photo
Sam Kee Building 8 West Pender Street Brown and Gillam 1913 Chang Toy (Sam Kee Company) Narrowest commercial building in the world, according to the Guinness Book of Records; front-to-back depth is only 6 ft (1.8 m).[25]  
Wing Sang Building 51 East Pender Street Thomas Ennor Julian 1889–1901 Yip Sang (Wing Sang Company) One of the oldest buildings in Chinatown. The 6-storey building was home to Yip Sang's Wing Sang Company (Wing Sang Limited) from 1889 to 1955. T.E. Julian added third storey in 1901.[26]  
Chinese Freemasons Building 1–5 West Pender Street S.B. Birds 1906, 1913 Modified by Samuel Buttrey Birds in 1913. Facade retained after building was demolished in 1975.[27]  
Chinese Benevolent Association of Vancouver 104–108 East Pender Street 1901–1910 Chinese Benevolent Association The Association was organized by leading businessmen including Yip Sang, Chang Toy, and Wang Yu Shan.[28]  
Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden 578 Carrall St Joe Wai, Donald Vaughan, Wang Zu-Xin 1986  
Lim Sai Hor Association Building 525–531 Carrall Street Samuel Buttrey Birds, W. H. Chow 1903, 1914 Chinese Empire Reform Association Altered in 1914, keeping with the contemporary style of Chinatown buildings.[29]
Mah Society of Canada 137–139 East Pender Street H.B. Watson, E.J. Boughen 1913, 1921 Originally housed street-level grocery with residences above; top storey added in 1921 for Mah Society.[30]  
Yue Shan Society 33–47 East Pender St. W.H. Chow 1889, 1898, 1920 Consists of three buildings around a central courtyard: 41–47 E Pender (1889), 33–39 E Pender (1920), and 37 E Pender (1914).[31]  
Chinese Times Building 1 East Pender Street William Tuff Whiteway 1902 Yip Sang (Wing Sang Company) One of the first brick buildings in Chinatown; influenced later architecture.[32]  
Chinese School 121–125 East Pender Street J.A. Radford and G.L. Southall 1910, 1921 Mon Keang School Altered by Radford in 1921. Mon Keang School established in 1925.[33]
Lee Building 127–131 East Pender Street Henriquez and Todd 1907, 1973 Lee's Association Original building was damaged in a 1972 fire and demolished; the facade was retained and a new building was constructed behind it in 1973, designed by Henriquez and Todd.[27]  
Carnegie Community Centre 401 Main Street G.W. Grant 1902–03 Vancouver Public Library; later as Vancouver Museum and City Archives Carnegie library from its construction until 1957.[34]  
Commercial Buildings 235–257 East Hastings Street 1901–1913 Includes the Hotel Empress (235),[35] Phoenix Hotel (237),[36] Belmont Building (241),[37] and Afton Hotel (249).[38]  
Hotel East 445 Gore Street S.B. Birds 1912 Lee Kee Part of the expansion of Chinatown to east of Main.[39]  
Kuomintang Building 296 East Pender Street W.E. Sproat 1920 The Kuomintang (KMT, or Chinese Nationalist League)  
Chin Wing Chun Society 158–160 East Pender Street R.A. McKenzie 1925 Chin Wing Chun Society Meeting rooms above street-level commercial space.[40]  
Ho Ho Restaurant and Sun Ah Hotel 100–102 East Pender Street R.T. Perry and White and Cockrill 1911 Loo Gee Wing Ho Ho Restaurant opened in 1954.[41]  
May Wah Hotel 258 East Pender Street William Frederick Gardiner 1913 Messrs. Barrett and Deane SRO hotel; built in response to the Lodging House By-Law of 1910. Used by both Chau Luen Society and Shon Yee Benevolent Association of Canada.[42]  
Chau Luen Tower 325 Keefer 1971 Chau Luen Benevolent Society
London Drugs 800 Main St Unknown-1968 (Expropriated) Chau Luen Benevolent Society [43]

Gates edit

 
As-built for Expo 86 (1995)
 
Rebuilt in 2005 (2010)
China Gate on Pender Street (by Chinese Cultural Centre)

The China Gate (next to the Chinese Cultural Centre, near the intersection with Carrall) facing Pender Street was donated to the City of Vancouver by the Government of the People's Republic of China following the Expo 86 world's fair, where it was on display. After being displayed for almost 20 years at its current location, the gate was rebuilt and received a major renovation of its façade employing stone and steel. Funding for the renovation came from government and private sources; the renovated gate was unveiled during the October 2005 visit of Guangdong governor Huang Huahua.

 
Temporary welcome arch (1901)
 
Millennium Gate (2015)
Gates straddling Pender Street

This is not to be confused with the larger Millennium Gate, which straddles Pender Street at the west end of Chinatown, near the intersection with Taylor Street. The Millennium Gate was approved on September 20, 2001,[44] and erected in 2002 at the same site as a temporary wooden arch built to celebrate the 1901 royal tour by the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York.[45][46] Joe Y. Wai designed the Millennium Gate.[47]

Notable buildings edit

The Sam Kee Company, run by Chang Toy, one of the wealthier merchants in turn-of-the-20th-century Chinatown, bought the land for the Sam Kee Building as a standard-sized lot in 1903. However, in 1912 the city widened Pender Street, expropriating all but 6 feet of the Pender Street side of the lot. This lot was the previous home to Shanghai Alley, an early Vancouver red light district which collaboratively hosted 105 brothels with Canton Alley.[5] In 1913 the architects Brown and Gillam designed this narrow, steel-framed free-standing building on the remaining 6-foot strip. The basement, extending under the sidewalk and much wider than the rest of the building, housed public baths, with shops on the ground floor and offices above (such basements in Vancouver were once common and zoned as "areaways"). The 1980s' rehabilitation of the building for Jack Chow was designed by Soren Rasmussen Architect and completed in 1986.

The Lord Strathcona Elementary School is the oldest public school in Greater Vancouver and the only public school serving Vancouver's Chinatown.

Neon signs edit

 
Reconstructed Sai Woo sign

Chinatown was once known for its neon signs, but like the rest of the city, lost many signs to changing times and a sign bylaw passed in 1974.[48][49] The last of these was the Ho Ho sign (which showed a rice bowl and chop sticks),[50] which was removed in 1997.

A large 45 ft (14 m) tall neon sign was approved for the Chinatown Plaza parkade project in 2008 under the City of Vancouver's Great Beginnings initiative.[51] The new sign was installed in March 2010.[52]

In 2017, a neon sign featuring a large green and yellow-coloured rooster for the Sai Woo Restaurant was installed on Pender Street. The new owner of the Sai Woo was made aware of the original sign that hung outside the earlier incarnation of the restaurant (1925–59) from a one-second clip from a movie of a 1958 parade in Chinatown, and launched a search for the original sign which was unsuccessful.[53] The sign was recreated from the archived footage.[54] At the same time, plans were announced to relight the tall Ho Ho sign in 2018 or 2019.[55][56]

Laozi Mural edit

Vancouver's Laozi (also referred to "Lao Tzu" and "Lao Tsu", 老子) mural is located on the Western wall of the Lee's Association building, at the corner of Gore Avenue and Pender Street, on the boundary of Chinatown. The mural was unveiled on October 2, 2010, by the Mayor of the City of Vancouver, Gregor Robertson.[57] as part of the celebration of the 125 years of Vancouver's Chinatown.[58] The mural is featured in multiple lists of notable Vancouver murals.[59][60]

It was designed by Kenson Seto and painted by Alex Li & Falk.[61] The mural is 223 square metres, and cost $18,000 [62] which was split between the City of Vancouver and Lee's Association of Vancouver. It was defaced multiple times by graffiti,[62] causing outrage in the community.[63]

On April 5, 2016, the City of Vancouver rezoned the lot at 303 E Pender St/450 Gore Avenue,[64] allowing construction of a six-story building [65] that hid the mural from sight.[58] The building, marketed as Brixton Flats [66] was designed by architect Gair Williamson and developed by GMC Projects Inc., whose website features an image of the Laozi mural [67]

Vancouver City Council added a condition to the rezoning:

"Design development to create a new mural to reflect the character and history of Chinatown;

Note to Applicant: The intent is not to recreate the existing mural, but rather to seek a viable opportunity to create a new mural of a suitable size and location on the building, including possible location on the eastern side of the building."[68]

The developer is studying the possibility of painting a smaller version of the original mural on the new building.[69]

Notable residents edit

Community groups edit

  • Hua Foundation, non-profit building community engagement in environmentalism and sustainability

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Cernetig, Miro (June 30, 2007). . Archived from the original on October 30, 2007.
  2. ^ . City of Vancouver. March 27, 2019. Archived from the original on April 27, 2006.
  3. ^ a b c d Chinese Canadian Historical Society (July 2005). Historic Study of the Society Buildings in Chinatown (PDF) (Report). City of Vancouver. Retrieved June 5, 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e Report of the Royal Commission on Chinese and Japanese Immigration (Report). Ottawa: S.E. Dawson, Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty. 1902. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d Francis, Daniel (2006). Red Light Neon. Vancouver, BC.: Subway Books. pp. 7–191. ISBN 0-9736675-2-4.
  6. ^ "Japs attacked in Vancouver". The Morning Press. Santa Barbara. Associated Press. September 10, 1907. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  7. ^ "2000 Chinese driven out: Rioters at Vancouver attack Orientals". Los Angeles Herald. Associated Press. September 9, 1907. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  8. ^ "Riot planned to impress Ishii, is belief at Seattle". Los Angeles Herald. Associated Press. September 11, 1907. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  9. ^ "Blame American Agitators: London View of Vancouver Troubles". Chico Record. September 12, 1907. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  10. ^ King, William Lyon Mackenzie (1908). Report by W. L. Mackenzie King, C.M.G., Deputy Minister of Labour, Commissioner appointed to investigate into the Losses Sustained by the Chinese Population of Vancouver, B.C. on the occasion of the riots in that city in September, 1907 (Report). Ottawa: S.E. Dawson, Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  11. ^ King, William Lyon Mackenzie (1908). Report by W. L. Mackenzie King, C.M.G., Deputy Minister of Labour, Commissioner appointed to investigate into the Losses Sustained by the Japanese Population of Vancouver, B.C. on the occasion of the riots in that city in September, 1907 (Report). Ottawa: S.E. Dawson, Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  12. ^ Davis, Chuck (October 2011). The Chuck Davis History of Metropolitan Vancouver. Harbour Publishing. p. 351. ISBN 978-1-55017-533-2. Retrieved June 5, 2019.
  13. ^ Yee, Paul (2006). Saltwater City. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre Ltd. p. 219. ISBN 978-1-55365-174-1. Retrieved June 5, 2019.
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  25. ^ "Sam Kee Building". www.historicplaces.ca. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  26. ^ "Wing Sang Building". www.historicplaces.ca. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  27. ^ a b "Chinese Freemasons Building". www.historicplaces.ca. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
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  32. ^ "Chinese Times Building". www.historicplaces.ca. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
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  34. ^ "Carnegie Centre". www.historicplaces.ca. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
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  37. ^ "Belmont Building". www.historicplaces.ca. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  38. ^ "Afton Hotel". www.historicplaces.ca. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  39. ^ "445 Gore Avenue". www.historicplaces.ca. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
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  47. ^ "Historic Chinatown: Vancouver's Chinatown Map Guide" (PDF). Vancouver Heritage Foundation. May 2018. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
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  61. ^ "18. Lao Tsu Mural (Covered up) | Vancouver Mural Tour". vancouvermurals.ca. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
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  64. ^ City of Vancouver "Zoning and Development By-law CD-1 (626)"
  65. ^ Staff, DH Vancouver (July 8, 2014). "450 Gore Avenue development responds to the DTES Local Area Plan | Daily Hive Vancouver". Daily Hive. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  66. ^ "Welcome". Brixton Flats. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  67. ^ "Brixton Flats". GMC Projects. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  68. ^ "CHAPC Agenda : 2015-10-13" (PDF).
  69. ^ "CHAPC Minutes : 2015-12-08" (PDF).

Further reading edit

  • Anderson, Kay (1991). Vancouver's Chinatown: Racial Discourse in Canada, 1875–1980. Montreal and Buffalo: McGill-Queen's University Press.
  • Anderson, Kay (June 1988). "Cultural Hegemony and the Race Definition Process in Vancouver's Chinatown: 1880–1980". Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 6 (2): 127–149. doi:10.1068/d060127. Reprinted in 1996, Social Geography: A Reader, ed. Hamnett C., (Arnold, London)
  • Anderson, Kay (December 1987). "The Idea of Chinatown: The Power of Place and Institutional Practice in the Making of a Racial Category". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 77 (4): 580–598. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8306.1987.tb00182.x. JSTOR 2563924. Reprinted in 1992, A Daunting Modernity: A Reader in Post-Confederation Canada ed. McKay, I (McGraw-Hill Ryerson, Ontario).
  • Anderson, Kay (1986). 'East' as 'West': Place, State and the Institutionalization of Myth in Vancouver's Chinatown, 1880–1980. Department of Geography (Doctor of Philosophy thesis). University of British Columbia. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  • Ng, Wing Chung (1999). The Chinese in Vancouver 1945–80: The Pursuit of Identity and Power. Vancouver: UBC Press. ISBN 9780774807326.
  • Yee, Paul (1988). Saltwater City: An Illustrated History of the Chinese in Vancouver. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. ISBN 9780888946164.

External links edit

  • "For the love of Chinatown," 1968 clip from CBC Radio
  • Chinese Community Policing Centre
  • Vincent Miller, "Mobile Chinatowns: The Future of Community in a Global Space of Flows." Article analyzing the differences between Vancouver's Chinatown and the Chinese community in Richmond. June 3, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  • Walking Tour: Chinatown
  • "Chinatown Revitalization Project on the City of Vancouver Planning Department"
  • "Chinatown Canada: The first in a four-part video series about Canada's Chinatowns from CityTv"[permanent dead link]
  • Vancouver Chinatown – Simon Fraser University

chinatown, vancouver, chinatown, neighbourhood, vancouver, british, columbia, canada, largest, chinatown, centred, around, pender, street, surrounded, gastown, north, downtown, financial, central, business, districts, west, georgia, viaduct, false, creek, inle. Chinatown is a neighbourhood in Vancouver British Columbia and is Canada s largest Chinatown Centred around Pender Street it is surrounded by Gastown to the north the Downtown financial and central business districts to the west the Georgia Viaduct and the False Creek inlet to the south the Downtown Eastside and the remnant of old Japantown to the northeast and the residential neighbourhood of Strathcona to the southeast ChinatownNeighbourhoodMillennium Gate on Pender Street in ChinatownCoordinates 49 16 48 N 123 5 58 W 49 28000 N 123 09944 W 49 28000 123 09944Country CanadaProvince British ColumbiaCityVancouverTime zoneUTC 8 Pacific Summer DST UTC 7 PDT Area Codes604 778 236Chinatown VancouverTraditional Chinese溫哥華唐人街Simplified Chinese温哥华唐人街TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinWengehua TangrenjieWade GilesWen1 ko1 hua2 T ang2 jen2 chieh1IPA we nkɤ xwa tʰa ŋɻe ntɕje Yue CantoneseJyutpingWan1go1waa4 Tong4jan4gaai1Alternative Chinese nameTraditional Chinese溫哥華華埠Simplified Chinese温哥华华埠TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinWengehua Hua buWade GilesWen1 ko1 hua2 Hua2 pu4IPA we nkɤ xwa xwa pu Yue CantoneseJyutpingWan1go1waa4 Waa4fau6DesignationsNational Historic Site of CanadaOfficial nameVancouver s Chinatown National Historic Site of CanadaDesignated2011Chinatown Vancouver 1927Due to the large ethnic Chinese presence in Vancouver especially represented by mostly Cantonese speaking multi generation Chinese Canadians and first generation immigrants from Hong Kong the city has been referred to as Hongcouver 1 However most immigration in recent years has been Mandarin speaking residents from Mainland China Chinatown remains a popular tourist attraction and is one of the largest historic Chinatowns in North America but it experienced recent decline as newer members of Vancouver s Chinese community dispersed to other parts of the metropolitan area Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Golden Village 2 History 2 1 Early immigration and head tax 2 2 Clan societies and 1907 riot 2 3 Late 20th century improvements 2 4 Recent immigration 3 Businesses and development 3 1 Chinatown Revitalization Action Plan 3 2 Condominium development 4 Architecture 4 1 Gates 4 2 Notable buildings 4 3 Neon signs 4 4 Laozi Mural 5 Notable residents 6 Community groups 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Further reading 9 External linksGeography edit nbsp fullscreen map Selected locations in Chinatown Vancouver Points of interest Parks and open spaces 1 Millennium Gate2 Dr Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Garden3 Sam Kee Building4 International Village5 Andy Livingstone Park6 Chinese Benevolent Association of Vancouver7 Kuomintang Building8 Carnegie Community Centre The approximate borders of Chinatown as designated by the City of Vancouver are the alley between Pender and Hastings Streets Georgia Street Gore Avenue and Taylor Street 2 although unofficially the area extends well into the rest of the Downtown Eastside Main Pender and Keefer Streets are the principal areas of commercial activity Golden Village edit It has been more recently overshadowed by the newer Chinese immigrant business district along No 3 Road in the City of Richmond south of Vancouver Many affluent Hong Kong and Taiwanese immigrants have moved there since the late 1980s coinciding with the increase of Chinese ethnic retail and restaurants in that area This new area is designated the Golden Village by the City of Richmond The proposed renaming of the area to Chinatown met resistance both from merchants in Vancouver s Chinatown and from non Chinese residents and merchants in Richmond itself History editEarly immigration and head tax edit nbsp Chinese railway construction workers for CP Rail 1884Chinese immigrants primarily men first came to Vancouver in large numbers during the late 19th century attracted in part by the British Columbia gold rush of 1858 and then the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway in the 1880s 3 3 In the census of 1880 81 the total Chinese population in Canada was 4 383 of which the overwhelming majority 4 350 resided in British Columbia 4 7 By 1884 17 000 Chinese immigrants had arrived in Canada to work on the railroad alone 3 3 The 1891 census counted 9 129 Chinese in Canada 8 910 in British Columbia and the population at the 1901 census had increased to 16 792 in Canada 14 376 in British Columbia as an incomplete count 4 7 8 Of the estimated 16 000 Chinese immigrants in British Columbia in 1901 2 715 lived in Victoria and another 2 011 lived in Vancouver 4 8 After the completion of the railroad under the Chinese Immigration Act of 1885 a head tax of CA 50 per person was levied solely on Chinese immigrants to discourage further settlement the head tax was raised to 100 in 1900 and then 500 in 1903 citation needed By 1900 Chinatown covered the four square blocks bounded by Canton Alley on the west Hastings Street on the north Keefer Street on the south and Main Street on the east named Westminster Avenue at the time with Pender Street then called Dupont as the main commercial district 3 4 During this time Vancouver s Red Light district was present in the area undergoing routine police checks and attempts to clean up the area By 1906 the Dupont brothels were forced to close As a result several brothels and businesses moved to two parallel dirt paved dead end lanes off of Dupont West of Carrall Shanghai Alley and Canton Alley While these immigrants were dispersed throughout Chinatown they strongly concentrated these areas 5 In 1896 the health officer for the City of Vancouver reported the city had to destroy houses in Chinatown owing to their filthy condition and that one could hardly pass through the Chinatown quarter without holding one s nose 4 14 Another health officer noted The Chinese merchants and employers of labour endeavour to assist the health officials and are as a rule willing to co operate and help in this matter but the lower classes of Chinese emigrants give a great deal of trouble unless constantly watched concluding that continued immigration would lead to circumstances and conditions which predispose to infectious disease and serve to spread it rapidly when once it is roused into activity 4 19 This perception only worsened with the turn of the district Residents of the area where said to face continuous white hostility and discrimination due to three main vices drug problems gambling and sex work As these perceptions grew the discrimination turned to violence resulting in a destructive raid in 1907 that caused irreversible damage to the area 5 Clan societies and 1907 riot edit nbsp Boarded storefronts on Carrall Street following September 1907 riotsAs more people of Chinese heritage came to Vancouver clan associations were formed to help the newcomers assimilate in their adopted homeland and to provide friendship and support Clan societies were often formed around a shared surname lineage county e g Kaiping Zhongshan or other feature of identity 3 4 Despite these efforts discrimination against residents of the area continued to grow and eventually turned to violence 5 The Vancouver riots of September 1907 grew out of an anti immigration rally being held by the Asiatic Exclusion League resulting in significant damage to Chinatown businesses 6 2 000 Chinese immigrants were displaced from their homes and total property damage resulting from the actions of the mob of 10 000 was estimated at 15 000 7 One news report speculated the riot was held to intimidate a visiting Japanese delegate 8 Another blamed the presence of American agitators 9 Mackenzie King then the Deputy Minister of Labour was dispatched to investigate the riot and recommended the disbursement of 36 000 in compensation 10 11 The head tax was repealed via the Chinese Immigration Act of 1923 which instead abolished Chinese immigration to Canada entirely except in limited circumstances citation needed Late 20th century improvements edit In 1979 the Chinatown Historic Area Planning Committee sponsored a streetscape improvement program to add various Chinese style elements to the area such as specially paved sidewalks and red dragon streetlamps that demarcated the area s borders while emphasizing it as a destination for heritage tourism Starting with its designation by the province as a historic area in 1971 and subsequent economic shifts Chinatown shifted from a central business district to playing a largely cultural role Murality a local non profit is installing a mural on East Pender Street with the aim of bringing colour and vitality to the neighbourhood 12 The growth of Chinatown during much of the 20th century created a healthy robust community that gradually became an aging one as many Chinese immigrants no longer lived nearby Noticing local businesses suffering the Chinatown Merchants Association cited the lack of parking and restrictive heritage district rules as impediments to new uses and renovations Their concerns subsequently led to a relaxation of zoning laws to allow for a wider range of uses including necessary demolition 13 Additions in the mid 1990s included a large parkade a shopping mall and the largest Chinese restaurant in Canada More residential projects around the community and a lowering of property taxes helped to maintain a more rounded community Reinvigoration was a discussed topic along government members symbolically embedded in the Millennium Gate project which opened in 2002 14 Recent immigration edit nbsp Street in ChinatownIn addition to Han Chinese from Taiwan Hong Kong and Mainland China Chinese Latin Americans have also settled in the Chinatown area citation needed Most of them were from Peru and arrived shortly after Juan Velasco Alvarado took over that country in a military coup in 1968 Others have come from Argentina Brazil Mexico and Nicaragua Vancouver experienced large numbers of immigrants from the Asia Pacific region in the last two decades of the twentieth century most notably from China whose population in the Vancouver Census Metropolitan Area was estimated at 300 000 in the mid 1990s 15 Businesses and development editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Chinatown is becoming more prosperous as new investment and old traditional businesses flourish citation needed Today the neighbourhood features many traditional restaurants banks markets clinics tea shops clothing stores and other shops catering to the local community and tourists alike The Vancouver office of Sing Tao Daily one of the city s four Chinese language dailies remains in Chinatown OMNI British Columbia formerly Channel M had its television studio in Chinatown from 2003 to 2010 Vancouver Film School also has a satellite location in Chinatown The renowned bar amp nightclub known as Fortune Sound Club is situated within the heart of Chinatown formerly Ming s Restaurant As of 2019 they have grown to become one of the most popular night clubs in all of BC rivalling off the Granville Entertainment District and bringing in world class musicians Chinatown s businesses today predominantly consist of those selling lower order working class goods such as groceries tea shops and souvenir stores While some businesses such as restaurants stand out they are no longer the only Chinese food establishments in the city a shift that contributed to a visible decline in foot traffic and nighttime activity in Chinatown As the vacancy rate in Chinatown currently stands at 10 it has been acknowledged that Chinatown needs a new approach to development since some businesses have relocated to suburban shopping centres while others simply retired or went out of business Examples include the closing of some restaurants and shops sometimes in instances where the family did not have successors or where the business could not sustain itself any longer Although there is a considerable business vacancy Chinatown lease rates are considered the cheapest in the city at 15 30 per square foot about one tenth of the asking price on Vancouver s Downtown Robson Street the city s upscale shopping district 16 The new Chinatown business plan encourages new entrepreneurs to move in and has attracted a longboard store and German sausage shop as ways of restoring storefronts and bringing in a younger crowd and to make higher income people more comfortable in the area 17 Attracted to the lower rent and the building s heritage status younger businesses have moved in often with white owners who also live in apartments above the shops 18 The general consensus is that Chinatown s priority is to attract people of all backgrounds to Chinatown and it is believed that the opening of non traditional stores will bring a new flow of energy and income to the streets 19 As a result the commercial activity is becoming more diversified dotted with Western chain stores such as Waves Coffeeshop and Dollar Giant Other additions include vintage stores two art galleries bars and a nightclub built on the site of the former Ming s restaurant 20 in an attempt to bring something of a nightlife atmosphere reminiscent of the 1950s and 1960s back to the neighbourhood The diversity of new shops and businesses is believed to be necessary in creating a new image for Chinatown in order to bring vibrancy back to the area and encourage commercial activities in general and as a way to compete with suburban districts as well as nearby Gastown and Downtown Vancouver Chinatown Revitalization Action Plan edit The Chinatown Historic Area planning committee along with AECOM Economics a US based planning firm helped to prepare a Chinatown Revitalization Action Plan for Vancouver s planning department in November 2011 21 Vancouver planners surveyed 77 businesses and found that 64 reported a decrease in revenue between 2008 and 2011 The majority of consumers 58 were local residents with 21 coming from elsewhere in the Lower Mainland Tourist spending accounted for only 12 of Chinatown customers 22 Condominium development edit nbsp Chinese themed street lightVancouver city councillors voted in 2011 to raise building height restrictions in Chinatown in order to boost its population density A limit of 9 stories for most of the neighbourhood was set with a maximum of 15 stories on the busiest streets 23 Architecture editFurther information List of heritage buildings in Vancouver The neighbourhood was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 2011 24 Ongoing efforts at revitalization include efforts by the business community to improve safety by hiring private security considering new marketing promotions and introducing residential units into the neighbourhood by restoring and renovating heritage buildings The current focus is on the restoration and adaptive reuse of the distinctive association buildings Historical and significant architecture in Chinatown Vancouver Name Street Builder Designer Year Built by for Notes PhotoSam Kee Building 8 West Pender Street Brown and Gillam 1913 Chang Toy Sam Kee Company Narrowest commercial building in the world according to the Guinness Book of Records front to back depth is only 6 ft 1 8 m 25 nbsp Wing Sang Building 51 East Pender Street Thomas Ennor Julian 1889 1901 Yip Sang Wing Sang Company One of the oldest buildings in Chinatown The 6 storey building was home to Yip Sang s Wing Sang Company Wing Sang Limited from 1889 to 1955 T E Julian added third storey in 1901 26 nbsp Chinese Freemasons Building 1 5 West Pender Street S B Birds 1906 1913 Modified by Samuel Buttrey Birds in 1913 Facade retained after building was demolished in 1975 27 nbsp Chinese Benevolent Association of Vancouver 104 108 East Pender Street 1901 1910 Chinese Benevolent Association The Association was organized by leading businessmen including Yip Sang Chang Toy and Wang Yu Shan 28 nbsp Dr Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Garden 578 Carrall St Joe Wai Donald Vaughan Wang Zu Xin 1986 nbsp Lim Sai Hor Association Building 525 531 Carrall Street Samuel Buttrey Birds W H Chow 1903 1914 Chinese Empire Reform Association Altered in 1914 keeping with the contemporary style of Chinatown buildings 29 1 Mah Society of Canada 137 139 East Pender Street H B Watson E J Boughen 1913 1921 Originally housed street level grocery with residences above top storey added in 1921 for Mah Society 30 nbsp Yue Shan Society 33 47 East Pender St W H Chow 1889 1898 1920 Consists of three buildings around a central courtyard 41 47 E Pender 1889 33 39 E Pender 1920 and 37 E Pender 1914 31 nbsp Chinese Times Building 1 East Pender Street William Tuff Whiteway 1902 Yip Sang Wing Sang Company One of the first brick buildings in Chinatown influenced later architecture 32 nbsp Chinese School 121 125 East Pender Street J A Radford and G L Southall 1910 1921 Mon Keang School Altered by Radford in 1921 Mon Keang School established in 1925 33 2 Lee Building 127 131 East Pender Street Henriquez and Todd 1907 1973 Lee s Association Original building was damaged in a 1972 fire and demolished the facade was retained and a new building was constructed behind it in 1973 designed by Henriquez and Todd 27 nbsp Carnegie Community Centre 401 Main Street G W Grant 1902 03 Vancouver Public Library later as Vancouver Museum and City Archives Carnegie library from its construction until 1957 34 nbsp Commercial Buildings 235 257 East Hastings Street 1901 1913 Includes the Hotel Empress 235 35 Phoenix Hotel 237 36 Belmont Building 241 37 and Afton Hotel 249 38 nbsp Hotel East 445 Gore Street S B Birds 1912 Lee Kee Part of the expansion of Chinatown to east of Main 39 nbsp Kuomintang Building 296 East Pender Street W E Sproat 1920 The Kuomintang KMT or Chinese Nationalist League nbsp Chin Wing Chun Society 158 160 East Pender Street R A McKenzie 1925 Chin Wing Chun Society Meeting rooms above street level commercial space 40 nbsp Ho Ho Restaurant and Sun Ah Hotel 100 102 East Pender Street R T Perry and White and Cockrill 1911 Loo Gee Wing Ho Ho Restaurant opened in 1954 41 nbsp May Wah Hotel 258 East Pender Street William Frederick Gardiner 1913 Messrs Barrett and Deane SRO hotel built in response to the Lodging House By Law of 1910 Used by both Chau Luen Society and Shon Yee Benevolent Association of Canada 42 nbsp Chau Luen Tower 325 Keefer 1971 Chau Luen Benevolent SocietyLondon Drugs 800 Main St Unknown 1968 Expropriated Chau Luen Benevolent Society 43 Gates edit nbsp As built for Expo 86 1995 nbsp Rebuilt in 2005 2010 China Gate on Pender Street by Chinese Cultural Centre The China Gate next to the Chinese Cultural Centre near the intersection with Carrall facing Pender Street was donated to the City of Vancouver by the Government of the People s Republic of China following the Expo 86 world s fair where it was on display After being displayed for almost 20 years at its current location the gate was rebuilt and received a major renovation of its facade employing stone and steel Funding for the renovation came from government and private sources the renovated gate was unveiled during the October 2005 visit of Guangdong governor Huang Huahua nbsp Temporary welcome arch 1901 nbsp Millennium Gate 2015 Gates straddling Pender Street This is not to be confused with the larger Millennium Gate which straddles Pender Street at the west end of Chinatown near the intersection with Taylor Street The Millennium Gate was approved on September 20 2001 44 and erected in 2002 at the same site as a temporary wooden arch built to celebrate the 1901 royal tour by the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York 45 46 Joe Y Wai designed the Millennium Gate 47 Notable buildings edit The Sam Kee Company run by Chang Toy one of the wealthier merchants in turn of the 20th century Chinatown bought the land for the Sam Kee Building as a standard sized lot in 1903 However in 1912 the city widened Pender Street expropriating all but 6 feet of the Pender Street side of the lot This lot was the previous home to Shanghai Alley an early Vancouver red light district which collaboratively hosted 105 brothels with Canton Alley 5 In 1913 the architects Brown and Gillam designed this narrow steel framed free standing building on the remaining 6 foot strip The basement extending under the sidewalk and much wider than the rest of the building housed public baths with shops on the ground floor and offices above such basements in Vancouver were once common and zoned as areaways The 1980s rehabilitation of the building for Jack Chow was designed by Soren Rasmussen Architect and completed in 1986 The Lord Strathcona Elementary School is the oldest public school in Greater Vancouver and the only public school serving Vancouver s Chinatown Neon signs edit nbsp Reconstructed Sai Woo signChinatown was once known for its neon signs but like the rest of the city lost many signs to changing times and a sign bylaw passed in 1974 48 49 The last of these was the Ho Ho sign which showed a rice bowl and chop sticks 50 which was removed in 1997 A large 45 ft 14 m tall neon sign was approved for the Chinatown Plaza parkade project in 2008 under the City of Vancouver s Great Beginnings initiative 51 The new sign was installed in March 2010 52 In 2017 a neon sign featuring a large green and yellow coloured rooster for the Sai Woo Restaurant was installed on Pender Street The new owner of the Sai Woo was made aware of the original sign that hung outside the earlier incarnation of the restaurant 1925 59 from a one second clip from a movie of a 1958 parade in Chinatown and launched a search for the original sign which was unsuccessful 53 The sign was recreated from the archived footage 54 At the same time plans were announced to relight the tall Ho Ho sign in 2018 or 2019 55 56 Laozi Mural edit Vancouver s Laozi also referred to Lao Tzu and Lao Tsu 老子 mural is located on the Western wall of the Lee s Association building at the corner of Gore Avenue and Pender Street on the boundary of Chinatown The mural was unveiled on October 2 2010 by the Mayor of the City of Vancouver Gregor Robertson 57 as part of the celebration of the 125 years of Vancouver s Chinatown 58 The mural is featured in multiple lists of notable Vancouver murals 59 60 It was designed by Kenson Seto and painted by Alex Li amp Falk 61 The mural is 223 square metres and cost 18 000 62 which was split between the City of Vancouver and Lee s Association of Vancouver It was defaced multiple times by graffiti 62 causing outrage in the community 63 On April 5 2016 the City of Vancouver rezoned the lot at 303 E Pender St 450 Gore Avenue 64 allowing construction of a six story building 65 that hid the mural from sight 58 The building marketed as Brixton Flats 66 was designed by architect Gair Williamson and developed by GMC Projects Inc whose website features an image of the Laozi mural 67 Vancouver City Council added a condition to the rezoning Design development to create a new mural to reflect the character and history of Chinatown Note to Applicant The intent is not to recreate the existing mural but rather to seek a viable opportunity to create a new mural of a suitable size and location on the building including possible location on the eastern side of the building 68 The developer is studying the possibility of painting a smaller version of the original mural on the new building 69 Notable residents editWong Foon Sien journalist and social activist Bessie Lee community organizer and civic activist Mary Lee Chan civic activist Yip Sang businessman Yucho Chow photographer Wayson Choy author educatorCommunity groups editHua Foundation non profit building community engagement in environmentalism and sustainabilitySee also editChinese Benevolent Association of Vancouver Chinese Canadians in British Columbia Chinese Canadians in Greater Vancouver Chinese Canadians in the Greater Toronto Area History of Chinese immigration to Canada Chinese head tax in Canada Royal Commission on Chinese Immigration 1885 Chinese Immigration Act of 1885 Chinese Immigration Act 1923 Everything Will Be Julia Kwan s 2014 documentary film about ChinatownReferences edit Cernetig Miro June 30 2007 Chinese Vancouver A decade of change Archived from the original on October 30 2007 Chinatown Map City of Vancouver March 27 2019 Archived from the original on April 27 2006 a b c d Chinese Canadian Historical Society July 2005 Historic Study of the Society Buildings in Chinatown PDF Report City of Vancouver Retrieved June 5 2019 a b c d e Report of the Royal Commission on Chinese and Japanese Immigration Report Ottawa S E Dawson Printer to the King s Most Excellent Majesty 1902 Retrieved June 26 2019 a b c d Francis Daniel 2006 Red Light Neon Vancouver BC Subway Books pp 7 191 ISBN 0 9736675 2 4 Japs attacked in Vancouver The Morning Press Santa Barbara Associated Press September 10 1907 Retrieved June 26 2019 2000 Chinese driven out Rioters at Vancouver attack Orientals Los Angeles Herald Associated Press September 9 1907 Retrieved June 26 2019 Riot planned to impress Ishii is belief at Seattle Los Angeles Herald Associated Press September 11 1907 Retrieved June 26 2019 Blame American Agitators London View of Vancouver Troubles Chico Record September 12 1907 Retrieved June 26 2019 King William Lyon Mackenzie 1908 Report by W L Mackenzie King C M G Deputy Minister of Labour Commissioner appointed to investigate into the Losses Sustained by the Chinese Population of Vancouver B C on the occasion of the riots in that city in September 1907 Report Ottawa S E Dawson Printer to the King s Most Excellent Majesty Retrieved June 26 2019 King William Lyon Mackenzie 1908 Report by W L Mackenzie King C M G Deputy Minister of Labour Commissioner appointed to investigate into the Losses Sustained by the Japanese Population of Vancouver B C on the occasion of the riots in that city in September 1907 Report Ottawa S E Dawson Printer to the King s Most Excellent Majesty Retrieved June 26 2019 Davis Chuck October 2011 The Chuck Davis History of Metropolitan Vancouver Harbour Publishing p 351 ISBN 978 1 55017 533 2 Retrieved June 5 2019 Yee Paul 2006 Saltwater City Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre Ltd p 219 ISBN 978 1 55365 174 1 Retrieved June 5 2019 Millennium Gate Archived from the original on October 8 2012 Retrieved February 12 2013 Ng Wing Chung 1999 The Chinese in Vancouver 1945 80 Vancouver UBC Press p 137 ISBN 0 7748 0733 4 Retrieved June 5 2019 Bula Frances Behind the changing face of Vancouver s Chinatown The Globe and Mail Bula Frances January 12 2013 Behind the Changing Face of Vancouver s Chinatown The Globe and Mail Toronto Retrieved February 12 2013 Quinn Stephen February 8 2013 Saving Chinatown One Sausage and Pilates pose at a Time The Globe and Mail Toronto Retrieved February 12 2013 Allingham Jeremy February 7 2013 Vancouver s Chinatown embraces change CBC News Retrieved February 12 2013 Fortune Sound Club Archived from the original on February 19 2013 Retrieved February 12 2013 Chinatown Revitalization City of Vancouver Retrieved February 12 2013 Howell Mike July 23 2012 Vancouver prepares plan to renew ailing Chinatown Vancouver Courier Retrieved February 12 2013 Hutchinson Brian September 28 2012 Can condo zones save Vancouver s beleaguered Chinatown National Post Retrieved February 12 2013 Vancouver s Chinatown Directory of Federal Heritage Designations Parks Canada Retrieved May 4 2012 Sam Kee Building www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Wing Sang Building www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 a b Chinese Freemasons Building www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Chinese Benevolent Association Building www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Lim Sai Hor Association Building www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Mah Society Building www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Yue Shan Society Buildings www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Chinese Times Building www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Chinese School www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Carnegie Centre www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Hotel Empress www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Phoenix Hotel www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Belmont Building www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Afton Hotel www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 445 Gore Avenue www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Chin Wing Chun Society Building www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Sun Ah Hotel www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 May Wah Hotel www historicplaces ca Retrieved March 17 2018 Chinatown and Hogan s Alley advocates call for greater reconciliation in Vancouver s Northeast False Creek Plan Metro Vancouver metronews ca Archived from the original on March 17 2018 Retrieved March 17 2018 Herbert Alan Leduc Janet October 2001 Chinatown Millennium Gate Approved PDF Heritage Vancouver Newsletter Vol 10 no 9 Heritage Vancouver Retrieved June 4 2019 Chinatown Millennium Gate Lonely Planet Retrieved June 4 2019 Pope Joseph 1903 V British Columbia and Return Journey The Tour of Their Royal Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York through the Dominion of Canada in the Year 1901 Ottawa S E Dawson Printer to the King s Most Excellent Majesty pp 88 89 Retrieved June 4 2019 After the presentation of the mayor of Vancouver and prominent citizens and of the officers of the warships in port the Duke and Duchess proceeded to the court house by a royally decorated route spanned by a series of arches erected by the city by the Chinese residents Japanese firemen and others These arches were all strikingly handsome Historic Chinatown Vancouver s Chinatown Map Guide PDF Vancouver Heritage Foundation May 2018 Retrieved June 4 2019 Lederman Marsha January 28 2012 The anti neon crusade Vancouver s light pollution battle from another era The Globe and Mail Retrieved June 5 2019 Mackie John November 13 2009 Bright lights old city Remembering Vancouver s neon glory Vancouver Sun Retrieved June 5 2019 Cannon Paul 1983 Item CVA 1376 344 Ho Ho Chop Suey neon sign City of Vancouver Retrieved June 5 2019 Great Beginnings Old Streets New Pride June 2009 Project Progress Report PDF Report City of Vancouver June 2009 Retrieved June 5 2019 Chinatown Plaza Vancouver Neon Retrieved June 5 2019 Vancouver restaurateur on the hunt for Sai Woo s original neon sign CTV News March 2 2017 Retrieved June 5 2019 Kurucz John August 7 2017 Sai Woo s neon sign returns to Chinatown Vancouver Courier Retrieved June 5 2019 Chan Cheryl August 4 2017 Sai Woo s neon rooster sign crows over Chinatown once again Vancouver Sun Retrieved June 5 2019 MacEacheran Mike May 4 2018 North America s unexpected neon jungle BBC Travel Retrieved June 5 2019 Lee Fred Mural Unveiling Lee s Benevolent Association Of Canada leesofcanada com Retrieved March 17 2018 a b Staff DH Vancouver March 4 2015 City green lights Chinatown development blocking iconic mural Daily Hive Vancouver Daily Hive Retrieved March 17 2018 5 Iconic Vancouver Murals Vancouver Blog Miss604 January 26 2015 Retrieved March 17 2018 Staff DH Vancouver May 7 2015 7 best murals in Vancouver Daily Hive Vancouver Daily Hive Retrieved March 17 2018 18 Lao Tsu Mural Covered up Vancouver Mural Tour vancouvermurals ca Retrieved March 17 2018 a b Suspect sought after iconic 18 000 Chinatown mural defaced British Columbia September 24 2015 Retrieved March 17 2018 It is a real insult says Chinatown historian on 2nd mural defaced in a month CBC News Retrieved March 17 2018 City of Vancouver Zoning and Development By law CD 1 626 Staff DH Vancouver July 8 2014 450 Gore Avenue development responds to the DTES Local Area Plan Daily Hive Vancouver Daily Hive Retrieved March 17 2018 Welcome Brixton Flats Retrieved March 17 2018 Brixton Flats GMC Projects Retrieved March 17 2018 CHAPC Agenda 2015 10 13 PDF CHAPC Minutes 2015 12 08 PDF Further reading edit Anderson Kay 1991 Vancouver s Chinatown Racial Discourse in Canada 1875 1980 Montreal and Buffalo McGill Queen s University Press Anderson Kay June 1988 Cultural Hegemony and the Race Definition Process in Vancouver s Chinatown 1880 1980 Environment and Planning D Society and Space 6 2 127 149 doi 10 1068 d060127 Reprinted in 1996 Social Geography A Reader ed Hamnett C Arnold London Anderson Kay December 1987 The Idea of Chinatown The Power of Place and Institutional Practice in the Making of a Racial Category Annals of the Association of American Geographers 77 4 580 598 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8306 1987 tb00182 x JSTOR 2563924 Reprinted in 1992 A Daunting Modernity A Reader in Post Confederation Canada ed McKay I McGraw Hill Ryerson Ontario Anderson Kay 1986 East as West Place State and the Institutionalization of Myth in Vancouver s Chinatown 1880 1980 Department of Geography Doctor of Philosophy thesis University of British Columbia Retrieved June 4 2019 Ng Wing Chung 1999 The Chinese in Vancouver 1945 80 The Pursuit of Identity and Power Vancouver UBC Press ISBN 9780774807326 Yee Paul 1988 Saltwater City An Illustrated History of the Chinese in Vancouver Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre ISBN 9780888946164 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chinatown Vancouver nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Gastown Chinatown For the love of Chinatown 1968 clip from CBC Radio Chinese Community Policing Centre Vincent Miller Mobile Chinatowns The Future of Community in a Global Space of Flows Article analyzing the differences between Vancouver s Chinatown and the Chinese community in Richmond Archived June 3 2009 at the Wayback Machine Yin and Yang Chinatown Past and Present Multimedia site from Knowledge Network based on Paul Yee s book Saltwater City An Illustrated History of the Chinese in Vancouver Vancouver Douglas amp McIntyre 1988 Walking Tour Chinatown Chinatown Revitalization Project on the City of Vancouver Planning Department Chinatown Canada The first in a four part video series about Canada s Chinatowns from CityTv permanent dead link Vancouver Chinatown Simon Fraser University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinatown Vancouver amp oldid 1206446461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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