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Metrotown, Burnaby

Metrotown is a town centre serving the southwest quadrant of Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. It is one of the city's four officially designated town centres,[3] as well as one of Metro Vancouver's regional town centres.[4] It is the central business district of the City of Burnaby.[5]

Metrotown
Metrotown skyline as seen from Richmond, British Columbia
Metrotown
Location of Metrotown within Metro Vancouver
Coordinates: 49°13′32″N 123°00′12″W / 49.2255°N 123.0032°W / 49.2255; -123.0032
Country Canada
Province British Columbia
RegionLower Mainland
Regional DistrictMetro Vancouver
CityBurnaby
QuadrantSouthwest
Government
 • MayorMike Hurley
 • MP (Fed.)Jagmeet Singh (NDP)
 • MLA (Prov.)Anne Kang (NDP)
Area
 • Land2.97 km2 (1.15 sq mi)
Population
 • Total24,889
Time zoneUTC−8 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−7 (PDT)
Area codes604, 778, 236, 672

As officially defined by the City of Burnaby, the town centre is bounded on the west by Boundary Road (taking in Central Park), on the south by Imperial Street, on the east by Royal Oak Avenue, and on the north by a series of local streets (Thurston, Bond, Grange and Dover streets),[6] giving an area of 2.97 km2 (730 acres).[1][7] Kingsway forms the central commercial spine for the neighbourhood, and is paralleled to the south by the SkyTrain tracks running alongside Central Boulevard.

The area is served by Patterson and Metrotown SkyTrain stations, while Royal Oak station sits just beyond the southeastern limits of the district. The area is characterised by its many high rise commercial and residential buildings.

Name origin edit

Urban researcher and economist R. W. Archer credited the Baltimore Regional Planning Council (BRPC) for coining the term "metrotown" in 1962.[8] The BRPC envisioned metrotowns as "cohesive urban developments... deployed radially and in a series of rings around the City of Baltimore", each accommodating 100,000 to 200,000 people and at greater densities than what was then common in suburban areas.[9][10]

Archer adapted the term in his two-part article From New Towns to Metrotowns and Regional Cities, which appeared in the July 1969 issue of The American Journal of Economics and Sociology,[11] to refer to "a unit for planned metropolitan development" consisting of a wide variety of land uses and offering "a large measure of local employment and city-type services", but still "significantly interdependent with the rest of the metropolis".[12] He further suggested that building a connected series of metrotowns was the most cost-effective manner for establishing new urban settlements,[11] and saw developments around Stockholm like Vällingby and Högdalen as examples of this type of built form.[13]

The term was subsequently adopted by the municipality of Burnaby in the 1970s, initially as a common noun to refer to a type of urban development; it eventually became a proper noun referring exclusively to the area around the intersection of Kingsway and Sussex Avenue.

History edit

 
SkyTrain tracks crossing over Kingsway in the western part of Metrotown, following the former Central Park Interurban's right of way

Settlement and industry edit

On the recommendation of Colonel Richard Moody, the Royal Engineers constructed a trail linking colonial capital New Westminster and False Creek to facilitate troop movement between the two points.[14][15] The trail (which later became Kingsway) opened in 1860, and cut diagonally across Burrard Peninsula;[14] land was set aside as a military reserve at a plateau along the road in the area of modern-day Metrotown.[14][15] The road was improved following Burnaby's municipal incorporation in 1892, and the parallel Central Park interurban line connecting Vancouver and New Westminster opened the previous year, making the area increasingly favourable for settlement.[14] Consequently, the provincial government established a series of holding lots out of the military reserve in the 1890s to accommodate working class residents.[14][15] The lots were drawn at right angles to the interurban line, which ran from the northwest to the southeast, accounting for Metrotown's street orientation.[15]

During the Great Depression, Burnaby reeve William Pritchard instituted a series of make-work programs to put the unemployed to work, using municipal funds and loans.[15] This put a strain on Burnaby's finances, and in 1932 the province stepped in by suspending the functions of Burnaby's government and appointing a commissioner to run municipal affairs.[15][16] Under the province's control, Burnaby struck a deal with the Ford Motor Company to build an assembly plant near Kingsway and McKay Avenue.[17] The plant opened in 1938, and was used to produce military vehicles during World War II;[17] it became an Electrolier facility at some point after the war.[18] Wholesale grocer Kelly-Douglas Company built a manufacturing plant and warehouse to the east of the Ford/Electrolier plant in 1946, and Simpsons-Sears opened a catalogue sales and distribution facility to the east of the Kelly-Douglas plant in 1954.[17]

Passenger service on the stretch of the Central Park interurban line through Burnaby and New Westminster ceased operations on October 23, 1953.[19]

Planning for a "metro town" edit

Building upon a 1964 report by the Lower Mainland Regional Planning Board (forerunner to the Greater Vancouver Regional District, GVRD), Burnaby's planning department prepared a report titled Apartment Study, which was approved by the municipal council in 1966.[20] In this document, Burnaby's planners proposed a hierarchical structure for co-locating housing, commercial activity and other amenities, with a "town centre" level as the highest tier.[21] The town centres were to serve as "a major focus of population and community activity", include "a complete cross section of commercial facilities" and "a full range of cultural and recreational activity", and provide residential accommodation "with easy access to well developed industrial areas and places of employment".[21][22] The planners further identified three sites around the municipality as candidates to be developed into town centres: Brentwood, Lougheed and the area around the Simpsons-Sears facility at Kingsway and Sussex Avenue.[21]

Burnaby's planning department further conducted a survey of the local land-use structure, and published a hardcover book titled Urban Structure in 1971. Echoing Archer's metrotown concept, the book recommended establishing an "intermittent grid of metro towns" as the best alternative out of the various urban built forms.[23][24] However, by 1974, the planners decided instead to create only one metro town, for fear that having multiple such developments (as recommended by Urban Structure) would divide the municipality's focus and drain its resources.[25] Brentwood, Lougheed and the Simpsons-Sears site were evaluated as candidates for the site of the sole metro town; with the former two locations already gravitating towards a car-centric pattern of development, the planners decided that the Simpsons-Sears site had the most potential to match their original vision for a metro town.[25] The report thus recommended that "the Kingsway/Sussex town centre be designated as a Metrotown development area"; the recommendation was approved by the municipal council in July 1974.[26]

Concurrent with planning at the municipal level, the GVRD also worked on addressing growth patterns at the regional level, and in 1975 released The Livable Region 1976/1986, which proposed establishing "regional town centres" (RTCs) in several locations around Greater Vancouver. Such centres were envisioned as nodes of employment, entertainment and cultural amenities serving the local population, in order to reduce travel into the city of Vancouver.[27] Burnaby's central location within the metropolitan area was seen as an advantage to siting an RTC in the municipality,[28] and with the planning process for the Metrotown development at Kingsway/Sussex already under way, the GVRD expected that designating Metrotown as an RTC would provide for the easiest implementation of the concept and set an example for future RTCs to be established in Surrey and Coquitlam.[29][30] The site's location along the disused Central Park interurban was also considered favourable, as the GVRD was proposing to build a light rail transit system (which eventually became the SkyTrain) along that right of way.[31] The proposal thus recommended for an RTC to be "started immediately in the Central Park area of Burnaby" (as well as in downtown New Westminster).[30]

Burnaby and the GVRD subsequently launched a joint study of the Metrotown RTC,[28] and the municipality's planning department followed up in 1977 with the release of Metrotown's development plan, which further articulated the development concept and strategy for the area.[26][32]

Uncertainty emerges edit

 
Metropolis at Metrotown and Metrotowers, developed at the site of the former Kelly-Douglas facility

Recessions in the 1970s and early 1980s, along with an altered political landscape following the 1979 municipal election, cast uncertainties onto the Metrotown development,[32][33] with mayor Dave Mercier suggesting in 1981 that the Metrotown plans be revisited.[34] Meanwhile, with "Metrotown" being perceived by local residents as a "sterile name" unindicative of its environs, a naming contest was held in 1982 to rename the Kingsway/Sussex area.[35] "Orchard Park" was the leading candidate until the contest was called off by mayor Bill Lewarne, citing the expense associated with updating the literature already printed which promoted the area as Metrotown.[35]

By that point, Daon Development Corporation had emerged as the main developer for the Kelly-Douglas site at Metrotown, with proposals to build a department store complex, offices and residential towers.[36][37] However, the recessionary environment and the company's financial woes continued to stall development.[36] Further complicating matters was a proposal by Triple Five Group (developers of West Edmonton Mall and Mall of America) to build a large mall and amusement centre at the corner of Lougheed Highway and Boundary Road.[38] Fearing this proposal would deflect activity away from Metrotown, municipal council reaffirmed in 1984 that Metrotown would remain as Burnaby's commercial core,[38] and mayor Lewarne stated that council would not rezone the Lougheed/Boundary site for the Triple Five proposal.[39] With the provincial government refusing to intervene,[40] the Triple Five proposal was abandoned. Nonetheless, while that proposal was in play, the Metrotown development experienced delays in locating anchor tenants, further worsening Daon's finances.[39] Daon pulled out of the development in 1985 before ceasing operations the next year; the Kelly-Douglas site was subsequently acquired by Cambridge Shopping Centres (now Ivanhoe Cambridge).[41]

Development resumes edit

 
The Crystal Mall complex, opened between 1999 and 2000

Development in Metrotown began to pick up in the mid-1980s, in tandem with the launch in late 1985 of the SkyTrain system (including Metrotown Station), which follows the alignment of the former interurban through the area. The form of development, however, came to be dominated by retail complexes, differing markedly from the original vision for Metrotown as a pedestrian-oriented mixed-use node.[42]

Cal Investments received financial backing from Manulife Financial to develop the Simpsons-Sears site,[43] with ground breaking in August 1985 and completion targeted for fall 1986;[44] Sears was to remain as an anchor tenant at the new Metrotown Centre, to be joined in that role by Woodward's.[44]

The Electrolier site became Station Square, opened in 1988 by Wesbild Enterprises. On opening day in 1988, part of anchor tenant Save-On-Foods' rooftop parking deck collapsed, injuring 21 people but causing no deaths.[45] The strip mall closed in 2012 to go through redevelopment. Also called Station Square, it has five condominium towers that were all completed in August 2022.[46]

Cambridge developed the Kelly-Douglas site into Eaton Centre (named after its anchor), which opened in 1989;[47] the mall was renamed Metropolis following the demise of the Eaton's chain in 1999.

The Crystal Mall complex opened at Kingsway and Willingdon Avenue between 1999 and 2000,[48] incorporating an Asian-themed shopping centre, residential and commercial highrises, and a Hilton hotel. Ivanhoe Cambridge purchased Metrotown Centre in 2002,[15][49] which was merged with Metropolis into a single mall (Metropolis at Metrotown) in 2005,[50] creating the third largest enclosed shopping mall in Canada by total retail floor space.[4][51]

Features and amenities edit

 
Burnaby Public Library's Bob Prittie Metrotown branch

Central Park sits at the western edge of Metrotown, and includes amenities such as tennis courts, an outdoor swimming pool, a pitch-and-putt golf course, and Swangard Stadium at its northwestern corner.[52] Smaller parks in the area include Kinnee Park, Maywood Park and Old Orchard Park. The area is also served by the Bonsor Recreation Complex[53] and the Burnaby Public Library's Bob Prittie Metrotown branch.[54]

Marlborough Elementary School and Maywood Community School (K-7) both fall within Metrotown's borders, while Chaffey-Burke Elementary sits just to the north. The closest secondary schools serving Metrotown are Moscrop Secondary School at Willingdon Avenue and Moscrop Street, and Burnaby South Secondary School near Royal Oak Avenue and Rumble Street. All aforementioned schools are operated by the Burnaby School District.

The town centre is also home to Old Orchard Shopping Centre, a strip mall at the intersection of Kingsway and Willingdon Avenue which pre-dates the malls along the south side of Kingsway built since the 1980s.

Demographics edit

Population edit

Population history
YearPop.±%
200124,518—    
200625,540+4.2%
201127,970+9.5%
201629,009+3.7%
Source: Statistics Canada[55]

As of 2006, Metrotown had a population of 25,540, increasing by 4% from 2001.[56] Between 1991 and 2001, the town centre's population increased by 43.9%.[57] Jobs in the town centre numbered around 22,900 in 2006, accounting for 20% of employment in Burnaby.[58]

According to the 2006 census, 53% of the residents in the census tract immediately south of the Metrotown SkyTrain station commuted to work by public transit, the highest of any census tracts in Metro Vancouver;[59] public transit mode share to work for the entire Metrotown area was around 42%.[60]

Ethnicity edit

Ethnic groups in Metrotown (2016)[61][62][63][64][65][66]
Ethnic group Population %
East Asian 13,760 47.6%
European 7,720 26.7%
Southeast Asian 2,695 9.3%
South Asian 1,805 6.2%
Middle Eastern 1,220 4.2%
Latin American 615 2.1%
Aboriginal 395 1.4%
Black 390 1.3%
Other 625 2.2%
Total population 29,009 100%

Language edit

Languages spoken in Metrotown (2016)[61][62][63][64][65][66]
Language %
English 30.5%
Mandarin 25.3%
Cantonese 11%
Tagalog 4.6%
Korean 4.3%
Russian 2.7%
Persian 2.6%
Spanish 2.3%
Punjabi 2.1%
Hindi 1.8%
Serbian 1.7%
Arabic 1.6%
Portuguese 1.2%
Other 9.2%
Total % 100%

References edit

Footnotes
  1. ^ a b Burnaby Planning Department 1977, p. 14.
  2. ^ (PDF). City of Burnaby. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 20, 2017. Retrieved September 9, 2017.
  3. ^ . City of Burnaby. Archived from the original on 2021-02-17. Retrieved 2012-12-21.
  4. ^ a b . Metro Vancouver. Archived from the original on 2013-01-06. Retrieved 2012-12-21.
  5. ^ "Metrotown Downtown Plan". City of Burnaby. Retrieved 30 September 2019.
  6. ^ Perkins 1992, p. 159.
  7. ^ (PDF). City of Burnaby. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-10-13. Retrieved 2012-12-21.
  8. ^ Pereira 2011, p. 15.
  9. ^ Baltimore Regional Planning Council; Maryland State Planning Department (1962). Metrotowns for the Baltimore Region: A pattern emerges (Report). pp. 2–3.
  10. ^ O'Bryan, Deric; McAvoy, Russell L. (1966). Gunpowder Falls Maryland: Uses of a water resource today and tomorrow. U.S. Geological Survey. p. 64.
  11. ^ a b Pereira 2011, p. 14.
  12. ^ R. W. Archer (1969). "From New Towns to Metrotowns and Regional Cities, I". The American Journal of Economics and Sociology. 28 (3): 257–269. doi:10.1111/j.1536-7150.1969.tb03223.x.
  13. ^ R. W. Archer (1969). "From New Towns to Metrotowns and Regional Cities, II". The American Journal of Economics and Sociology. 28 (3): 385–398. doi:10.1111/j.1536-7150.1969.tb03104.x.
  14. ^ a b c d e Beasley 1976, pp. 106–107.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Glavin, Terry (2006). . Vancouver Review. Archived from the original on 2013-04-11. Retrieved 2012-12-21.
  16. ^ (PDF). City of Burnaby. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-09-21. Retrieved 2012-12-21.
  17. ^ a b c . Heritage Burnaby. Archived from the original on 2012-10-11. Retrieved 2012-12-21.
  18. ^ Burnaby Planning Department 1977, p. 18.
  19. ^ Ewert, Henry (January–February 2010). (PDF). Canadian Rail (534): 9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-06-22. Retrieved 2013-01-01.
  20. ^ Pereira 2011, p. 34.
  21. ^ a b c Pereira 2011, p. 35.
  22. ^ Parr, A.L.; Burnaby Planning Department (1966). Apartment Study (Report). pp. 2–3.
  23. ^ Pereira 2011, p. 45.
  24. ^ Beasley 1976, pp. 35–37.
  25. ^ a b Pereira, David. "The Town Centre Model: Part 3". Retrieved 2012-12-25.
  26. ^ a b Burnaby Planning Department 1977, p. 7.
  27. ^ Greater Vancouver Regional District 1975, p. 18.
  28. ^ a b Greater Vancouver Regional District 1975, p. 32.
  29. ^ Perkins 1992, p. 48.
  30. ^ a b Greater Vancouver Regional District 1975, p. 20.
  31. ^ Greater Vancouver Regional District 1975, p. 20–21, 24.
  32. ^ a b Pereira, David. "Metrotown". Retrieved 2012-12-25.
  33. ^ Pereira 2011, pp. 88–91.
  34. ^ Mackey, Lloyd (1981-09-16). "Burnaview". Burnaby Today.
  35. ^ a b "Metrotown name stays". Burnaby Today. 1982-10-20.
  36. ^ a b "No early awakening for Metrotown". Burnaby Today. 1982-09-08.
  37. ^ "Daon plans huge project". Burnaby Now. 1983-12-12.
  38. ^ a b "Backroom deal favors mall; Political involvement slammed". Burnaby Now. 1985-02-04.
  39. ^ a b "Kiss Metrotown Goodbye?". Burnaby Now. 1985-02-25.
  40. ^ "Victoria 'out' of mall brawl". Burnaby Now. 1985-02-11.
  41. ^ "Daon out of Metrotown". Burnaby Now. 1985-10-16.
  42. ^ Pereira 2011, p. 91.
  43. ^ "Metrotown makes it big". Burnaby Now. 1985-04-01.
  44. ^ a b "Bulldozers mark Metrotown's start". Burnaby Now. 1985-09-02.
  45. ^ Feld, Jacob; Carper, Kenneth L. (1996). Construction Failure. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 193–194. ISBN 9780471574774.
  46. ^ Chan, Kenneth (September 26, 2022). "That time Save-On-Foods Metrotown collapsed during its grand opening". Daily Hive. Burnaby, B.C. Retrieved April 10, 2023.
  47. ^ Constantineau, Bruce (1987-02-25). "Developers take Burnaby to court". The Vancouver Sun.
  48. ^ . The Crystal Mall. Archived from the original on 2013-01-03. Retrieved 2012-12-29.
  49. ^ "Ivanhoe Canmbridge Purchases Metrotown Centre". Lexpert Magazine. Retrieved 2020-12-04.
  50. ^ 2005 Report on Activities (PDF) (Report). Ivanhoe Cambridge. 2005. Retrieved 2020-12-04.
  51. ^ "Burnaby Visitor's Guide" (PDF). City of Burnaby. Retrieved 2012-12-29.
  52. ^ "Central Park". City of Burnaby. Retrieved 2012-12-27.
  53. ^ "Bonsor Recreation Complex". City of Burnaby. Retrieved 2012-12-27.
  54. ^ "Bob Prittie Metrotown: Burnaby Public Library". Burnaby Public Library. Retrieved 2012-12-27.
  55. ^ "Census Tract Reference Maps, by Census Metropolitan Areas or Census Agglomerations" (PDF).
  56. ^ (PDF) (Report). Greater Vancouver Regional District. March 2007. p. 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-03-31. Retrieved 2012-12-29.
  57. ^ GVRD Policy and Planning Department (2002). 2002 Annual Report: Livable Region Strategic Plan (PDF) (Report). Greater Vancouver Regional District. p. 19. Retrieved 2012-12-29. {{cite report}}: |author= has generic name (help)[permanent dead link]
  58. ^ Tate 2009, p. 15.
  59. ^ Skelton, Chad (2012-03-01). "Metrotown the most transit-friendly neighbourhood in the region". The Vancouver Sun. Retrieved 2012-12-29.
  60. ^ Pereira 2011, pp. 75, 144.
  61. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2017-02-08). "Census Profile, 2016 Census - 9330227.02 [Census tract], British Columbia and Vancouver [Census metropolitan area], British Columbia". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  62. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2017-02-08). "Census Profile, 2016 Census - 9330228.03 [Census tract], British Columbia and Vancouver [Census metropolitan area], British Columbia". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  63. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2017-02-08). "Census Profile, 2016 Census - 9330226.03 [Census tract], British Columbia and Vancouver [Census metropolitan area], British Columbia". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  64. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2017-02-08). "Census Profile, 2016 Census - 9330227.01 [Census tract], British Columbia and Vancouver [Census metropolitan area], British Columbia". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  65. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2017-02-08). "Census Profile, 2016 Census - 9330226.04 [Census tract], British Columbia and Vancouver [Census metropolitan area], British Columbia". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  66. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2017-02-08). "Census Profile, 2016 Census - 9330228.02 [Census tract], British Columbia and Vancouver [Census metropolitan area], British Columbia". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
Bibliography
  • Beasley, Larry (1976). A design probe comparison of regional and municipal attitudes toward regional town centres: Case study in Burnaby, B.C. (M.A. thesis). University of British Columbia. Retrieved 2012-12-23.
  • Burnaby Planning Department; Norman Hotson Architects (June 1977). (PDF) (Report). City of Burnaby. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-02-17. Retrieved 2012-12-21.
  • Greater Vancouver Regional District (1975-03-26). The Livable Region 1976/1986 (Report).
  • Pereira, David (2011). The intersection of town centre planning and politics: Alternative development in an inner suburban municipality in the Metro Vancouver region (M.Urb. thesis). Simon Fraser University. Archived from the original on 2013-02-19. Retrieved 2012-12-23.
  • Perkins, Ralph A. (1992). Greater Vancouver regional town centres policy in comparative perspective (M.A. (Planning) thesis). University of British Columbia. Retrieved 2013-01-01.
  • Tate, Laura Ellen (2009). Communicative regionalism and metropolitan growth management outcomes: A case study of three employment nodes in Burnaby - an inner suburb of Greater Vancouver (M.A. (Planning) thesis). University of British Columbia. Retrieved 2012-12-31.

External links edit

  • DavidPereira.ca: Metrotown — History of Metrotown's development

metrotown, burnaby, this, article, about, town, centre, burnaby, british, columbia, shopping, mall, metropolis, metrotown, skytrain, station, metrotown, station, highrise, development, hong, kong, metro, town, metrotown, town, centre, serving, southwest, quadr. This article is about the town centre in Burnaby British Columbia For the shopping mall see Metropolis at Metrotown For the SkyTrain station see Metrotown station For the highrise development in Hong Kong see Metro Town Metrotown is a town centre serving the southwest quadrant of Burnaby British Columbia Canada It is one of the city s four officially designated town centres 3 as well as one of Metro Vancouver s regional town centres 4 It is the central business district of the City of Burnaby 5 MetrotownTown centre of BurnabyMetrotown skyline as seen from Richmond British ColumbiaMetrotownLocation of Metrotown within Metro VancouverCoordinates 49 13 32 N 123 00 12 W 49 2255 N 123 0032 W 49 2255 123 0032Country CanadaProvince British ColumbiaRegionLower MainlandRegional DistrictMetro VancouverCityBurnabyQuadrantSouthwestGovernment MayorMike Hurley MP Fed Jagmeet Singh NDP MLA Prov Anne Kang NDP Area 1 Land2 97 km2 1 15 sq mi Population 2011 2 Total24 889Time zoneUTC 8 PST Summer DST UTC 7 PDT Area codes604 778 236 672 As officially defined by the City of Burnaby the town centre is bounded on the west by Boundary Road taking in Central Park on the south by Imperial Street on the east by Royal Oak Avenue and on the north by a series of local streets Thurston Bond Grange and Dover streets 6 giving an area of 2 97 km2 730 acres 1 7 Kingsway forms the central commercial spine for the neighbourhood and is paralleled to the south by the SkyTrain tracks running alongside Central Boulevard The area is served by Patterson and Metrotown SkyTrain stations while Royal Oak station sits just beyond the southeastern limits of the district The area is characterised by its many high rise commercial and residential buildings Contents 1 Name origin 2 History 2 1 Settlement and industry 2 2 Planning for a metro town 2 3 Uncertainty emerges 2 4 Development resumes 3 Features and amenities 4 Demographics 4 1 Population 4 2 Ethnicity 4 3 Language 5 References 6 External linksName origin editUrban researcher and economist R W Archer credited the Baltimore Regional Planning Council BRPC for coining the term metrotown in 1962 8 The BRPC envisioned metrotowns as cohesive urban developments deployed radially and in a series of rings around the City of Baltimore each accommodating 100 000 to 200 000 people and at greater densities than what was then common in suburban areas 9 10 Archer adapted the term in his two part article From New Towns to Metrotowns and Regional Cities which appeared in the July 1969 issue of The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 11 to refer to a unit for planned metropolitan development consisting of a wide variety of land uses and offering a large measure of local employment and city type services but still significantly interdependent with the rest of the metropolis 12 He further suggested that building a connected series of metrotowns was the most cost effective manner for establishing new urban settlements 11 and saw developments around Stockholm like Vallingby and Hogdalen as examples of this type of built form 13 The term was subsequently adopted by the municipality of Burnaby in the 1970s initially as a common noun to refer to a type of urban development it eventually became a proper noun referring exclusively to the area around the intersection of Kingsway and Sussex Avenue History edit nbsp SkyTrain tracks crossing over Kingsway in the western part of Metrotown following the former Central Park Interurban s right of way Settlement and industry edit On the recommendation of Colonel Richard Moody the Royal Engineers constructed a trail linking colonial capital New Westminster and False Creek to facilitate troop movement between the two points 14 15 The trail which later became Kingsway opened in 1860 and cut diagonally across Burrard Peninsula 14 land was set aside as a military reserve at a plateau along the road in the area of modern day Metrotown 14 15 The road was improved following Burnaby s municipal incorporation in 1892 and the parallel Central Park interurban line connecting Vancouver and New Westminster opened the previous year making the area increasingly favourable for settlement 14 Consequently the provincial government established a series of holding lots out of the military reserve in the 1890s to accommodate working class residents 14 15 The lots were drawn at right angles to the interurban line which ran from the northwest to the southeast accounting for Metrotown s street orientation 15 During the Great Depression Burnaby reeve William Pritchard instituted a series of make work programs to put the unemployed to work using municipal funds and loans 15 This put a strain on Burnaby s finances and in 1932 the province stepped in by suspending the functions of Burnaby s government and appointing a commissioner to run municipal affairs 15 16 Under the province s control Burnaby struck a deal with the Ford Motor Company to build an assembly plant near Kingsway and McKay Avenue 17 The plant opened in 1938 and was used to produce military vehicles during World War II 17 it became an Electrolier facility at some point after the war 18 Wholesale grocer Kelly Douglas Company built a manufacturing plant and warehouse to the east of the Ford Electrolier plant in 1946 and Simpsons Sears opened a catalogue sales and distribution facility to the east of the Kelly Douglas plant in 1954 17 Passenger service on the stretch of the Central Park interurban line through Burnaby and New Westminster ceased operations on October 23 1953 19 Planning for a metro town edit Building upon a 1964 report by the Lower Mainland Regional Planning Board forerunner to the Greater Vancouver Regional District GVRD Burnaby s planning department prepared a report titled Apartment Study which was approved by the municipal council in 1966 20 In this document Burnaby s planners proposed a hierarchical structure for co locating housing commercial activity and other amenities with a town centre level as the highest tier 21 The town centres were to serve as a major focus of population and community activity include a complete cross section of commercial facilities and a full range of cultural and recreational activity and provide residential accommodation with easy access to well developed industrial areas and places of employment 21 22 The planners further identified three sites around the municipality as candidates to be developed into town centres Brentwood Lougheed and the area around the Simpsons Sears facility at Kingsway and Sussex Avenue 21 Burnaby s planning department further conducted a survey of the local land use structure and published a hardcover book titled Urban Structure in 1971 Echoing Archer s metrotown concept the book recommended establishing an intermittent grid of metro towns as the best alternative out of the various urban built forms 23 24 However by 1974 the planners decided instead to create only one metro town for fear that having multiple such developments as recommended by Urban Structure would divide the municipality s focus and drain its resources 25 Brentwood Lougheed and the Simpsons Sears site were evaluated as candidates for the site of the sole metro town with the former two locations already gravitating towards a car centric pattern of development the planners decided that the Simpsons Sears site had the most potential to match their original vision for a metro town 25 The report thus recommended that the Kingsway Sussex town centre be designated as a Metrotown development area the recommendation was approved by the municipal council in July 1974 26 Concurrent with planning at the municipal level the GVRD also worked on addressing growth patterns at the regional level and in 1975 released The Livable Region 1976 1986 which proposed establishing regional town centres RTCs in several locations around Greater Vancouver Such centres were envisioned as nodes of employment entertainment and cultural amenities serving the local population in order to reduce travel into the city of Vancouver 27 Burnaby s central location within the metropolitan area was seen as an advantage to siting an RTC in the municipality 28 and with the planning process for the Metrotown development at Kingsway Sussex already under way the GVRD expected that designating Metrotown as an RTC would provide for the easiest implementation of the concept and set an example for future RTCs to be established in Surrey and Coquitlam 29 30 The site s location along the disused Central Park interurban was also considered favourable as the GVRD was proposing to build a light rail transit system which eventually became the SkyTrain along that right of way 31 The proposal thus recommended for an RTC to be started immediately in the Central Park area of Burnaby as well as in downtown New Westminster 30 Burnaby and the GVRD subsequently launched a joint study of the Metrotown RTC 28 and the municipality s planning department followed up in 1977 with the release of Metrotown s development plan which further articulated the development concept and strategy for the area 26 32 Uncertainty emerges edit nbsp Metropolis at Metrotown and Metrotowers developed at the site of the former Kelly Douglas facility Recessions in the 1970s and early 1980s along with an altered political landscape following the 1979 municipal election cast uncertainties onto the Metrotown development 32 33 with mayor Dave Mercier suggesting in 1981 that the Metrotown plans be revisited 34 Meanwhile with Metrotown being perceived by local residents as a sterile name unindicative of its environs a naming contest was held in 1982 to rename the Kingsway Sussex area 35 Orchard Park was the leading candidate until the contest was called off by mayor Bill Lewarne citing the expense associated with updating the literature already printed which promoted the area as Metrotown 35 By that point Daon Development Corporation had emerged as the main developer for the Kelly Douglas site at Metrotown with proposals to build a department store complex offices and residential towers 36 37 However the recessionary environment and the company s financial woes continued to stall development 36 Further complicating matters was a proposal by Triple Five Group developers of West Edmonton Mall and Mall of America to build a large mall and amusement centre at the corner of Lougheed Highway and Boundary Road 38 Fearing this proposal would deflect activity away from Metrotown municipal council reaffirmed in 1984 that Metrotown would remain as Burnaby s commercial core 38 and mayor Lewarne stated that council would not rezone the Lougheed Boundary site for the Triple Five proposal 39 With the provincial government refusing to intervene 40 the Triple Five proposal was abandoned Nonetheless while that proposal was in play the Metrotown development experienced delays in locating anchor tenants further worsening Daon s finances 39 Daon pulled out of the development in 1985 before ceasing operations the next year the Kelly Douglas site was subsequently acquired by Cambridge Shopping Centres now Ivanhoe Cambridge 41 Development resumes edit nbsp The Crystal Mall complex opened between 1999 and 2000 Development in Metrotown began to pick up in the mid 1980s in tandem with the launch in late 1985 of the SkyTrain system including Metrotown Station which follows the alignment of the former interurban through the area The form of development however came to be dominated by retail complexes differing markedly from the original vision for Metrotown as a pedestrian oriented mixed use node 42 Cal Investments received financial backing from Manulife Financial to develop the Simpsons Sears site 43 with ground breaking in August 1985 and completion targeted for fall 1986 44 Sears was to remain as an anchor tenant at the new Metrotown Centre to be joined in that role by Woodward s 44 The Electrolier site became Station Square opened in 1988 by Wesbild Enterprises On opening day in 1988 part of anchor tenant Save On Foods rooftop parking deck collapsed injuring 21 people but causing no deaths 45 The strip mall closed in 2012 to go through redevelopment Also called Station Square it has five condominium towers that were all completed in August 2022 46 Cambridge developed the Kelly Douglas site into Eaton Centre named after its anchor which opened in 1989 47 the mall was renamed Metropolis following the demise of the Eaton s chain in 1999 The Crystal Mall complex opened at Kingsway and Willingdon Avenue between 1999 and 2000 48 incorporating an Asian themed shopping centre residential and commercial highrises and a Hilton hotel Ivanhoe Cambridge purchased Metrotown Centre in 2002 15 49 which was merged with Metropolis into a single mall Metropolis at Metrotown in 2005 50 creating the third largest enclosed shopping mall in Canada by total retail floor space 4 51 Features and amenities edit nbsp Burnaby Public Library s Bob Prittie Metrotown branch Central Park sits at the western edge of Metrotown and includes amenities such as tennis courts an outdoor swimming pool a pitch and putt golf course and Swangard Stadium at its northwestern corner 52 Smaller parks in the area include Kinnee Park Maywood Park and Old Orchard Park The area is also served by the Bonsor Recreation Complex 53 and the Burnaby Public Library s Bob Prittie Metrotown branch 54 Marlborough Elementary School and Maywood Community School K 7 both fall within Metrotown s borders while Chaffey Burke Elementary sits just to the north The closest secondary schools serving Metrotown are Moscrop Secondary School at Willingdon Avenue and Moscrop Street and Burnaby South Secondary School near Royal Oak Avenue and Rumble Street All aforementioned schools are operated by the Burnaby School District The town centre is also home to Old Orchard Shopping Centre a strip mall at the intersection of Kingsway and Willingdon Avenue which pre dates the malls along the south side of Kingsway built since the 1980s Demographics editPopulation edit Population historyYearPop 200124 518 200625 540 4 2 201127 970 9 5 201629 009 3 7 Source Statistics Canada 55 As of 2006 Metrotown had a population of 25 540 increasing by 4 from 2001 56 Between 1991 and 2001 the town centre s population increased by 43 9 57 Jobs in the town centre numbered around 22 900 in 2006 accounting for 20 of employment in Burnaby 58 According to the 2006 census 53 of the residents in the census tract immediately south of the Metrotown SkyTrain station commuted to work by public transit the highest of any census tracts in Metro Vancouver 59 public transit mode share to work for the entire Metrotown area was around 42 60 Ethnicity edit Ethnic groups in Metrotown 2016 61 62 63 64 65 66 Ethnic group Population East Asian 13 760 47 6 European 7 720 26 7 Southeast Asian 2 695 9 3 South Asian 1 805 6 2 Middle Eastern 1 220 4 2 Latin American 615 2 1 Aboriginal 395 1 4 Black 390 1 3 Other 625 2 2 Total population 29 009 100 Language edit Languages spoken in Metrotown 2016 61 62 63 64 65 66 Language English 30 5 Mandarin 25 3 Cantonese 11 Tagalog 4 6 Korean 4 3 Russian 2 7 Persian 2 6 Spanish 2 3 Punjabi 2 1 Hindi 1 8 Serbian 1 7 Arabic 1 6 Portuguese 1 2 Other 9 2 Total 100 References editFootnotes a b Burnaby Planning Department 1977 p 14 Metrotown Highlights PDF City of Burnaby Archived from the original PDF on July 20 2017 Retrieved September 9 2017 Town Centres City of Burnaby Archived from the original on 2021 02 17 Retrieved 2012 12 21 a b Metrotown City Centre Metro Vancouver Archived from the original on 2013 01 06 Retrieved 2012 12 21 Metrotown Downtown Plan City of Burnaby Retrieved 30 September 2019 Perkins 1992 p 159 Metrotown General Land Use Map PDF City of Burnaby Archived from the original PDF on 2018 10 13 Retrieved 2012 12 21 Pereira 2011 p 15 Baltimore Regional Planning Council Maryland State Planning Department 1962 Metrotowns for the Baltimore Region A pattern emerges Report pp 2 3 O Bryan Deric McAvoy Russell L 1966 Gunpowder Falls Maryland Uses of a water resource today and tomorrow U S Geological Survey p 64 a b Pereira 2011 p 14 R W Archer 1969 From New Towns to Metrotowns and Regional Cities I The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 28 3 257 269 doi 10 1111 j 1536 7150 1969 tb03223 x R W Archer 1969 From New Towns to Metrotowns and Regional Cities II The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 28 3 385 398 doi 10 1111 j 1536 7150 1969 tb03104 x a b c d e Beasley 1976 pp 106 107 a b c d e f g Glavin Terry 2006 Lost Cities Vancouver Review Archived from the original on 2013 04 11 Retrieved 2012 12 21 Young Burnaby 1911 1943 PDF City of Burnaby Archived from the original PDF on 2020 09 21 Retrieved 2012 12 21 a b c Burna Boom 1925 1954 Heritage Burnaby Archived from the original on 2012 10 11 Retrieved 2012 12 21 Burnaby Planning Department 1977 p 18 Ewert Henry January February 2010 British Columbia Electric Railway Company Limited PDF Canadian Rail 534 9 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 06 22 Retrieved 2013 01 01 Pereira 2011 p 34 a b c Pereira 2011 p 35 Parr A L Burnaby Planning Department 1966 Apartment Study Report pp 2 3 Pereira 2011 p 45 Beasley 1976 pp 35 37 a b Pereira David The Town Centre Model Part 3 Retrieved 2012 12 25 a b Burnaby Planning Department 1977 p 7 Greater Vancouver Regional District 1975 p 18 a b Greater Vancouver Regional District 1975 p 32 Perkins 1992 p 48 a b Greater Vancouver Regional District 1975 p 20 Greater Vancouver Regional District 1975 p 20 21 24 a b Pereira David Metrotown Retrieved 2012 12 25 Pereira 2011 pp 88 91 Mackey Lloyd 1981 09 16 Burnaview Burnaby Today a b Metrotown name stays Burnaby Today 1982 10 20 a b No early awakening for Metrotown Burnaby Today 1982 09 08 Daon plans huge project Burnaby Now 1983 12 12 a b Backroom deal favors mall Political involvement slammed Burnaby Now 1985 02 04 a b Kiss Metrotown Goodbye Burnaby Now 1985 02 25 Victoria out of mall brawl Burnaby Now 1985 02 11 Daon out of Metrotown Burnaby Now 1985 10 16 Pereira 2011 p 91 Metrotown makes it big Burnaby Now 1985 04 01 a b Bulldozers mark Metrotown s start Burnaby Now 1985 09 02 Feld Jacob Carper Kenneth L 1996 Construction Failure John Wiley amp Sons pp 193 194 ISBN 9780471574774 Chan Kenneth September 26 2022 That time Save On Foods Metrotown collapsed during its grand opening Daily Hive Burnaby B C Retrieved April 10 2023 Constantineau Bruce 1987 02 25 Developers take Burnaby to court The Vancouver Sun About Us The Crystal Mall Archived from the original on 2013 01 03 Retrieved 2012 12 29 Ivanhoe Canmbridge Purchases Metrotown Centre Lexpert Magazine Retrieved 2020 12 04 2005 Report on Activities PDF Report Ivanhoe Cambridge 2005 Retrieved 2020 12 04 Burnaby Visitor s Guide PDF City of Burnaby Retrieved 2012 12 29 Central Park City of Burnaby Retrieved 2012 12 27 Bonsor Recreation Complex City of Burnaby Retrieved 2012 12 27 Bob Prittie Metrotown Burnaby Public Library Burnaby Public Library Retrieved 2012 12 27 Census Tract Reference Maps by Census Metropolitan Areas or Census Agglomerations PDF 2006 Census Bulletin 1 Population and Dwelling Counts PDF Report Greater Vancouver Regional District March 2007 p 5 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 03 31 Retrieved 2012 12 29 GVRD Policy and Planning Department 2002 2002 Annual Report Livable Region Strategic Plan PDF Report Greater Vancouver Regional District p 19 Retrieved 2012 12 29 a href Template Cite report html title Template Cite report cite report a author has generic name help permanent dead link Tate 2009 p 15 Skelton Chad 2012 03 01 Metrotown the most transit friendly neighbourhood in the region The Vancouver Sun Retrieved 2012 12 29 Pereira 2011 pp 75 144 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2017 02 08 Census Profile 2016 Census 9330227 02 Census tract British Columbia and Vancouver Census metropolitan area British Columbia www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 09 16 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2017 02 08 Census Profile 2016 Census 9330228 03 Census tract British Columbia and Vancouver Census metropolitan area British Columbia www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 09 16 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2017 02 08 Census Profile 2016 Census 9330226 03 Census tract British Columbia and Vancouver Census metropolitan area British Columbia www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 09 16 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2017 02 08 Census Profile 2016 Census 9330227 01 Census tract British Columbia and Vancouver Census metropolitan area British Columbia www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 09 16 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2017 02 08 Census Profile 2016 Census 9330226 04 Census tract British Columbia and Vancouver Census metropolitan area British Columbia www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 09 16 a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2017 02 08 Census Profile 2016 Census 9330228 02 Census tract British Columbia and Vancouver Census metropolitan area British Columbia www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 09 16 Bibliography Beasley Larry 1976 A design probe comparison of regional and municipal attitudes toward regional town centres Case study in Burnaby B C M A thesis University of British Columbia Retrieved 2012 12 23 Burnaby Planning Department Norman Hotson Architects June 1977 Burnaby Metrotown a development plan PDF Report City of Burnaby Archived from the original PDF on 2021 02 17 Retrieved 2012 12 21 Greater Vancouver Regional District 1975 03 26 The Livable Region 1976 1986 Report Pereira David 2011 The intersection of town centre planning and politics Alternative development in an inner suburban municipality in the Metro Vancouver region M Urb thesis Simon Fraser University Archived from the original on 2013 02 19 Retrieved 2012 12 23 Perkins Ralph A 1992 Greater Vancouver regional town centres policy in comparative perspective M A Planning thesis University of British Columbia Retrieved 2013 01 01 Tate Laura Ellen 2009 Communicative regionalism and metropolitan growth management outcomes A case study of three employment nodes in Burnaby an inner suburb of Greater Vancouver M A Planning thesis University of British Columbia Retrieved 2012 12 31 External links editMetro Vancouver Metrotown City Centre DavidPereira ca Metrotown History of Metrotown s development Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metrotown Burnaby amp oldid 1212808973 Development resumes, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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