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Vancouverism

Vancouverism is an urban planning and architectural phenomenon in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It is characterized by a large residential population living in the city centre with mixed-use developments, typically with a medium-height, commercial base and narrow, high-rise residential towers, significant reliance on mass public transit, creation and maintenance of green park spaces, and preserving view corridors.[1][2][3][4][5][6] The architect Bing Thom described Vancouverism this way:[7]

Vancouver city skyline view
Vancouver high-rises often sit on top of a commercial or residential podium.

It's a spirit about public space. I think Vancouverites are very, very proud that we built a city that really has a tremendous amount of space on the waterfront for people to recreate and to enjoy. At the same time, False Creek and Coal Harbour were previously industrial lands that were very polluted and desecrated. We've refreshed all of this with new development, and people have access to the water and the views. So, to me, it's this idea of having a lot people living very close together, mixing the uses. So, we have apartments on top of stores. In Surrey we have a university on top of a shopping centre. This mixing of uses reflects Vancouver in terms of our culture and how we live together.[8]

An important aspect to note is that Vancouverism is an ideal that was developed in Vancouver but is not present in all regions of the city. Additionally, while outlying regions of Metro Vancouver, such as Surrey, have adopted aspects of these ideals, they did not originate outside the city of Vancouver.

Vancouver has been repeatedly ranked among the most livable cities in the world.[9] An article in San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association has taken note of Vancouver's approach to new development and view corridors and asks if San Francisco should pursue similar direction.[3] However, Vancouver's planning process has come under criticism for its unpredictability, lengthy approval process, lack of transparency, lack of public engagement, the repetitiveness of the built forms it produces, and the potential for the process to involve corruption.[10][11][12][13][14][15][16]

Background edit

Vancouverism developed in part as a product of Vancouver's geographical context. Wedged between the sea, mountains and the border with the United States, the Greater Vancouver Regional District partnered with the area's municipalities to encourage controlled development. Early recognition that British Columbia's farmland would be engulfed by sprawl led to the establishment of the Agricultural Land Reserve in the 1970s. This assisted in containing and intensifying development throughout the Vancouver metropolitan area and the Fraser Valley.[1]

Architect Arthur Erickson is credited by some with developing the concept that became Vancouverism in the mid-1950s, in a never-realized development called "Project 56".[17] Many of the principles were incorporated into the development of the West End. The city's planning department, under the direction of Ray Spaxman in the 1980s, began to expand on the concepts, many of which were brought into fruition with the development of the former Expo 86 lands along False Creek and Yaletown.

Another person who is credited with influencing Vancouverism is Jane Jacobs, author of The Death and Life of Great American Cities.[18] Brent Toderian, the former head of Planning for the City of Vancouver says of Jacobs: "There isn't a person or book more influential in creating 'Vancouverism' than Jane and The Death and Life ... I know what she means about people misunderstanding density – that's why we emphasize density done well rather than density as a mathematical exercise. [But] people 'round the world praise Vancouver's livability, and she had a big hand in it."[19]

Aesthetics edit

One principle associated with Vancouverism, as evidenced by planning policy, involves protecting "view corridors". Vancouver's "View Protection Guidelines" were approved in 1989 and amended in 1990, establishing height limits to protect views of the North Shore Mountains. This approach, while credited with preserving the city's scenic backdrop, has been criticized for lessening visual interest and failing to represent the city's contemporary image. In response, Council commissioned a "Skyline Study" in 1997 which concluded that Vancouver's skyline would benefit from the addition of a handful of buildings exceeding current height limits, to add visual interest to Vancouver's skyline.[20]

A study found that opportunities for such buildings were restricted due to a limited number of large development sites in the downtown.[21] Eight years later, five of the seven sites identified for higher buildings had been planned or developed. The tallest of the new buildings is the Living Shangri-La hotel/residential tower, which was completed in 2008, and stands 201 metres (659 ft)[22] tall (62 stories).[23]

 
Overhead SkyTrain tracks are visible in some parts of Vancouver and the surrounding area.

Transportation Infrastructure edit

Vancouver's street grid is finely-meshed, with mid-block lanes, which has allowed the city to easily densify and promotes walkability.[24] The overhead, visible, grade separated SkyTrain transit system is an integral part of the aesthetic of Vancouverism, as it promotes a healthy lifestyle.

Planning process edit

One of the circumstances allowing the development of Vancouverism was the discretionary planning process implemented by the city. The planning process of Vancouver is based on collaboration by aligning the development goals of the city prior to determining the particular actions for individual drivers.[25] Following the extended public outcry over a freeway and development program known as Project 200, Vancouver voted The Electors' Action Movement (TEAM) into power. TEAM ran on a platform of implementing more stringent design criteria and oversight to city developments. Development along South False Creek is the ideal urban form advocated by TEAM. The South False Creek development is characterized by low-density, mixed use and mixed-income residential properties with a high level of access to amenities. As well as favouring the urban form found along South False Creek, TEAM implemented significant reforms to the planning process. Discretionary planning allows the automatic approval of small developments that conform to the existing building codes. Larger projects are subject to the design review of the planning department. The planning department is empowered to make decisions that will force developments to conform to certain design guidelines.

Sustainable development edit

Sustainable development refers to solutions that not only benefit the present population, but also the future generations as well. This type of development requires looking at the consequences of decisions, which lead to solutions, and the consequences of those consequences too. Vancouver planners have been looking ahead of their current problems and solutions for decades. An example of this foresight can be seen in Vancouver's zoning regulations maintaining set-backs and sight-lines; and rejecting the downtown freeway, in which the city sacrificed initial gains for smaller long-term benefits and neighbourhood preservation—a trade-off that benefit current residents and later generations as well. Current issues revolve around finite energy sources and their impacts on the environment. These problems have led Vancouver to outline a growth strategy that considers the environment and community.

Criticism edit

Vancouver's planning process and Vancouverism have been widely criticized, including by prominent members of the planning and architectural communities in Vancouver, such as Patrick Condon, Scot Hein and Bing Thom, for a variety of reasons. Development potential on a site is typically divided into two categories, "outright" and "discretionary". Outright development is clearly defined in terms of use, height, and floor area and can proceed along a faster track than discretionary; however, the outright development potential is less than the discretionary track. Outright limitations may include lower height, less floor area, more restrictive uses, and larger setbacks.

A developer can exceed the outright potential by negotiating with the Planning Department over the limitations on categories that have been identified in the various planning controls as "at the discretion of the Director of Planning".[26][27] As noted above, this negotiating process gives the Planning Department significant leverage to negotiate design concessions or public benefits from developers; however, it does have numerous downsides, including:

  • Uncertainty about development potential and costs: The absence of up-front quantifiable values for height, floor area, use and setbacks in discretionary planning make it difficult for planners, developers, architects, residents or any others to predict or forecast accurately what can be built on any site in the city or what the development costs will be;[28][29]
  • Lengthy planning approval: Arriving at a negotiated agreement for the development of a site – usually performed as a custom rezoning arrangement called "spot rezoning", especially for a large site – produces a significant amount of work for the developer, designer and planner; the excessive workload borne by the Planning Department on numerous such approvals at any given time causes delays in the issuing of permits for development. The City of Vancouver, as a result, has the longest wait times for permit approvals in the region.[30][31][32]
  • Opacity of negotiation: The negotiations between planners and developers involve large amounts of money and affect the public, but lack transparency despite being negotiated by public servants on behalf of citizens;[33][34]
  • Lack of public engagement: Because the discretionary negotiation takes place between the developer and the Planning Department, the public is not involved in the planning process until after those two parties have already agreed most of the major aspects of the development. This frequently results in significant public backlash at the required public open houses, with citizens believing that they were not adequately consulted in advance. Examples include neighbourhood plans such as those for Norquay,[35] Marpole,[36] Mount Pleasant,[37] and northeast False Creek,[38] as well as for individual projects such as the tower at Kingsway and East Broadway[39] or the tower at 1725 Pendrell,[40] among others;
  • Potential for corruption: The amount of money involved in real estate development, together with the discretionary power of planning officials and lack of transparency in negotiations, combines to create a system of development approval that can be highly prone to corruption and likely to involve dark or laundered money.[41][42][43][44]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Short, Michael J. (2012). Planning for Tall Buildings. New York: Routledge. p. 169. ISBN 978-0-415-58107-3.
  2. ^ Hiller, Harry H. (2012). Host Cities and the Olympics: An interactionist approach. New York: Routledge. p. 157. ISBN 978-0-415-52241-0. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  3. ^ a b Chappell, Jim (November 1, 2003). "Vancouver's View Corridors: Should San Francisco adopt similar guidelines?". SPUR. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  4. ^ Boddy, Trevor 16.2, 2004, U.C. Berkeley journal "Places."
  5. ^ Boddy, Trevor (September 20, 2005). "INSIGHT: Vancouverism vs. Lower Manhattanism: Shaping the High Density City". ArchNewsNow.com. ArchNewsNow. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  6. ^ Beasley, Larry (2019). Vancouverism. Vancouver: On Point Press. ISBN 9780774890311.
  7. ^ . CBC News. Archived from the original on June 21, 2008.
  8. ^ Sharma, Ian Alexander Narasimha (2012). "On the Edge: Redevelopment Projects at the Urban-Marine Interface in Vancouver, BC". University of Washington. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  9. ^ "Vancouver The Most Livable City In North America: Economist". The Huffington Post. August 28, 2013. Retrieved January 24, 2014. Vancouver may be the best place to live in North America, but it has yet to recover from a Vancouver Island highway closure that dropped it to third in the world in 2011.
  10. ^ Crawford, Tiffany (January 22, 2019). "Vancouver housing second least affordable in world: report". Vancouver Sun.
  11. ^ Daily Hive (March 28, 2019). "Vancouver ranked North America's 2nd least affordable city for housing".
  12. ^ Connolly, Joannah (January 21, 2019). "Vancouver now ranked 'second-least affordable' global housing market". Vancouver Courier.
  13. ^ Patrick Condon and Scot Hein (July 19, 2019). "Hard Questions about Vancouver's New Affordability Approach". The Tyee.
  14. ^ Condon, Patrick (August 14, 2017). "Learning from Vancouver: Housing Affordability & the Myth of Supply-Side Densification". The Planning Report.
  15. ^ Lee, Marc (May 2016). "Getting Serious About Affordable Housing" (PDF). Policy Alternatives.
  16. ^ Pearson, Natalie (July 13, 2018). "Vancouver's One-Two Punch Is Expensive Homes and Low Wages". Bloomberg.
  17. ^ "Vancouver's architectural style in spotlight at London exhibit". CBC News. June 23, 2008.
  18. ^ Wood, Daniel (June 7, 2012). "Vancouver's density debate pits Sullivanism versus the ideas of Jane Jacobs". The Georgia Straight. Retrieved June 11, 2012. She is why international experts come to Vancouver to study its renowned livability. She's the mother of Vancouverism.
  19. ^ Wikens, Stephen (May 6, 2011). Jane Jacobs: Honoured in the breach. Globe and Mail Retrieved on: May 13, 2011
  20. ^ "Downtown Vancouver Skyline Study". Special Council Meeting Minutes. City of Vancouver. April 7, 1997. Retrieved April 9, 2018.
  21. ^ "General Policy for Higher Buildings" (PDF). City of Vancouver. May 6, 1997.
  22. ^ . Emporis Buildings. Archived from the original on April 18, 2005. Retrieved February 6, 2007.
  23. ^ "Living Shangri-La, Vancouver". Emporis Buildings. Retrieved December 10, 2009.[dead link]
  24. ^ City of Vancouver (2020). TRANSPORTATION 2040 (PDF). p. 22.
  25. ^ RGS Goals and Strategies. Metrovancouver.org (July 29, 2011). Retrieved on 2014-04-12.
  26. ^ City of Vancouver (June 19, 2018). "Broadway Plan" (PDF).
  27. ^ City of Vancouver (November 14, 2017). "CD-1 Bylaw" (PDF).
  28. ^ BC Chamber of Commerce (2014). "REMOVING UNCERTAINTY FROM COMMUNITY AMENITY CONTRIBUTIONS".
  29. ^ Adam, Mattinson (April 2015). "DEALING WITH DENSITY: AN EVALUATION OF DENSITY BENEFIT INCENTIVES IN THE METRO VANCOUVER REGION" (PDF).
  30. ^ Daily Hive (September 27, 2018). "This is how architects and builders wait in line at Vancouver's building permit office".
  31. ^ Vancouver Sun (March 8, 2017). "Vancouver to test ways to speed up approval of development permits".
  32. ^ Vancouver Sun (December 2, 2016). "City of Vancouver looks to reduce building permit waits as citizens suffer".
  33. ^ Community Association of New Yaletown (January 2015). "Supreme Court: Vancouver Development Process Unfair, Illegal".
  34. ^ Punter, John (2003). The Vancouver Achievement: Urban Planning and Design. Vancouver: UBC Press. p. 295. ISBN 0774809728.
  35. ^ Kimmett, Colleen (September 21, 2007). "Birth of EcoDensity Backlash". The Tyee.
  36. ^ Pablo, Carlito (August 21, 2013). "Planning process for Vancouver's Marpole district sparks community backlash". The Georgia Straight.
  37. ^ O'Connor, Naoibh (August 20, 2014). "Residents RAMP up suit against City of Vancouver". Vancouver Courier.
  38. ^ Zeidler, Maryse (February 13, 2018). "Vancouver approves plan to revitalize northeast False Creek". CBC News.
  39. ^ Smith, Charlie (February 28, 2012). "Rize Alliance proposal in Mount Pleasant receives a thumbs up from Vancouver city staff". The Georgia Straight.
  40. ^ Lupick, Travis (February 16, 2016). "West End residents lose court challenge that aimed to block 21-story tower". The Georgia Straight.
  41. ^ Condon, Patrick (July 14, 2014). "Vancouver's 'Spot Zoning' Is Corrupting Its Soul". The Tyee.
  42. ^ Connolly, Joannah (December 14, 2018). "Many Metro Vancouverites describe real estate sector as corrupt: poll". Vancouver Courier.
  43. ^ CBC News (December 13, 2018). "37% of Metro Vancouverites think real estate market is 'extremely corrupt': report".
  44. ^ Canadian Press (May 13, 2019). "Why criminals look to Canada to launder their money through real estate". Vancouver Sun.

External links edit

  • Translink Regional Transportation Strategy Strategic Framework
  • Punter, John. The Vancouver Achievement:Urban Planning and Design. N.p.: n.p., 2004. Print.

vancouverism, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, improve, removing, pro. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Vancouverism news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Vancouverism is an urban planning and architectural phenomenon in Vancouver British Columbia Canada It is characterized by a large residential population living in the city centre with mixed use developments typically with a medium height commercial base and narrow high rise residential towers significant reliance on mass public transit creation and maintenance of green park spaces and preserving view corridors 1 2 3 4 5 6 The architect Bing Thom described Vancouverism this way 7 Vancouver city skyline viewVancouver high rises often sit on top of a commercial or residential podium It s a spirit about public space I think Vancouverites are very very proud that we built a city that really has a tremendous amount of space on the waterfront for people to recreate and to enjoy At the same time False Creek and Coal Harbour were previously industrial lands that were very polluted and desecrated We ve refreshed all of this with new development and people have access to the water and the views So to me it s this idea of having a lot people living very close together mixing the uses So we have apartments on top of stores In Surrey we have a university on top of a shopping centre This mixing of uses reflects Vancouver in terms of our culture and how we live together 8 An important aspect to note is that Vancouverism is an ideal that was developed in Vancouver but is not present in all regions of the city Additionally while outlying regions of Metro Vancouver such as Surrey have adopted aspects of these ideals they did not originate outside the city of Vancouver Vancouver has been repeatedly ranked among the most livable cities in the world 9 An article in San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association has taken note of Vancouver s approach to new development and view corridors and asks if San Francisco should pursue similar direction 3 However Vancouver s planning process has come under criticism for its unpredictability lengthy approval process lack of transparency lack of public engagement the repetitiveness of the built forms it produces and the potential for the process to involve corruption 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Contents 1 Background 2 Aesthetics 3 Transportation Infrastructure 4 Planning process 5 Sustainable development 6 Criticism 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksBackground editVancouverism developed in part as a product of Vancouver s geographical context Wedged between the sea mountains and the border with the United States the Greater Vancouver Regional District partnered with the area s municipalities to encourage controlled development Early recognition that British Columbia s farmland would be engulfed by sprawl led to the establishment of the Agricultural Land Reserve in the 1970s This assisted in containing and intensifying development throughout the Vancouver metropolitan area and the Fraser Valley 1 Architect Arthur Erickson is credited by some with developing the concept that became Vancouverism in the mid 1950s in a never realized development called Project 56 17 Many of the principles were incorporated into the development of the West End The city s planning department under the direction of Ray Spaxman in the 1980s began to expand on the concepts many of which were brought into fruition with the development of the former Expo 86 lands along False Creek and Yaletown Another person who is credited with influencing Vancouverism is Jane Jacobs author of The Death and Life of Great American Cities 18 Brent Toderian the former head of Planning for the City of Vancouver says of Jacobs There isn t a person or book more influential in creating Vancouverism than Jane and The Death and Life I know what she means about people misunderstanding density that s why we emphasize density done well rather than density as a mathematical exercise But people round the world praise Vancouver s livability and she had a big hand in it 19 Aesthetics editOne principle associated with Vancouverism as evidenced by planning policy involves protecting view corridors Vancouver s View Protection Guidelines were approved in 1989 and amended in 1990 establishing height limits to protect views of the North Shore Mountains This approach while credited with preserving the city s scenic backdrop has been criticized for lessening visual interest and failing to represent the city s contemporary image In response Council commissioned a Skyline Study in 1997 which concluded that Vancouver s skyline would benefit from the addition of a handful of buildings exceeding current height limits to add visual interest to Vancouver s skyline 20 A study found that opportunities for such buildings were restricted due to a limited number of large development sites in the downtown 21 Eight years later five of the seven sites identified for higher buildings had been planned or developed The tallest of the new buildings is the Living Shangri La hotel residential tower which was completed in 2008 and stands 201 metres 659 ft 22 tall 62 stories 23 nbsp Overhead SkyTrain tracks are visible in some parts of Vancouver and the surrounding area Transportation Infrastructure editVancouver s street grid is finely meshed with mid block lanes which has allowed the city to easily densify and promotes walkability 24 The overhead visible grade separated SkyTrain transit system is an integral part of the aesthetic of Vancouverism as it promotes a healthy lifestyle Planning process editOne of the circumstances allowing the development of Vancouverism was the discretionary planning process implemented by the city The planning process of Vancouver is based on collaboration by aligning the development goals of the city prior to determining the particular actions for individual drivers 25 Following the extended public outcry over a freeway and development program known as Project 200 Vancouver voted The Electors Action Movement TEAM into power TEAM ran on a platform of implementing more stringent design criteria and oversight to city developments Development along South False Creek is the ideal urban form advocated by TEAM The South False Creek development is characterized by low density mixed use and mixed income residential properties with a high level of access to amenities As well as favouring the urban form found along South False Creek TEAM implemented significant reforms to the planning process Discretionary planning allows the automatic approval of small developments that conform to the existing building codes Larger projects are subject to the design review of the planning department The planning department is empowered to make decisions that will force developments to conform to certain design guidelines Sustainable development editSustainable development refers to solutions that not only benefit the present population but also the future generations as well This type of development requires looking at the consequences of decisions which lead to solutions and the consequences of those consequences too Vancouver planners have been looking ahead of their current problems and solutions for decades An example of this foresight can be seen in Vancouver s zoning regulations maintaining set backs and sight lines and rejecting the downtown freeway in which the city sacrificed initial gains for smaller long term benefits and neighbourhood preservation a trade off that benefit current residents and later generations as well Current issues revolve around finite energy sources and their impacts on the environment These problems have led Vancouver to outline a growth strategy that considers the environment and community Criticism editThe neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Vancouver s planning process and Vancouverism have been widely criticized including by prominent members of the planning and architectural communities in Vancouver such as Patrick Condon Scot Hein and Bing Thom for a variety of reasons Development potential on a site is typically divided into two categories outright and discretionary Outright development is clearly defined in terms of use height and floor area and can proceed along a faster track than discretionary however the outright development potential is less than the discretionary track Outright limitations may include lower height less floor area more restrictive uses and larger setbacks A developer can exceed the outright potential by negotiating with the Planning Department over the limitations on categories that have been identified in the various planning controls as at the discretion of the Director of Planning 26 27 As noted above this negotiating process gives the Planning Department significant leverage to negotiate design concessions or public benefits from developers however it does have numerous downsides including Uncertainty about development potential and costs The absence of up front quantifiable values for height floor area use and setbacks in discretionary planning make it difficult for planners developers architects residents or any others to predict or forecast accurately what can be built on any site in the city or what the development costs will be 28 29 Lengthy planning approval Arriving at a negotiated agreement for the development of a site usually performed as a custom rezoning arrangement called spot rezoning especially for a large site produces a significant amount of work for the developer designer and planner the excessive workload borne by the Planning Department on numerous such approvals at any given time causes delays in the issuing of permits for development The City of Vancouver as a result has the longest wait times for permit approvals in the region 30 31 32 Opacity of negotiation The negotiations between planners and developers involve large amounts of money and affect the public but lack transparency despite being negotiated by public servants on behalf of citizens 33 34 Lack of public engagement Because the discretionary negotiation takes place between the developer and the Planning Department the public is not involved in the planning process until after those two parties have already agreed most of the major aspects of the development This frequently results in significant public backlash at the required public open houses with citizens believing that they were not adequately consulted in advance Examples include neighbourhood plans such as those for Norquay 35 Marpole 36 Mount Pleasant 37 and northeast False Creek 38 as well as for individual projects such as the tower at Kingsway and East Broadway 39 or the tower at 1725 Pendrell 40 among others Potential for corruption The amount of money involved in real estate development together with the discretionary power of planning officials and lack of transparency in negotiations combines to create a system of development approval that can be highly prone to corruption and likely to involve dark or laundered money 41 42 43 44 See also editArchitecture of Vancouver Brusselization James K M Cheng Manhattanization Neomodern architecture Vancouver SpecialReferences edit a b Short Michael J 2012 Planning for Tall Buildings New York Routledge p 169 ISBN 978 0 415 58107 3 Hiller Harry H 2012 Host Cities and the Olympics An interactionist approach New York Routledge p 157 ISBN 978 0 415 52241 0 Retrieved August 25 2014 a b Chappell Jim November 1 2003 Vancouver s View Corridors Should San Francisco adopt similar guidelines SPUR Retrieved August 25 2014 Boddy Trevor 16 2 2004 U C Berkeley journal Places Boddy Trevor September 20 2005 INSIGHT Vancouverism vs Lower Manhattanism Shaping the High Density City ArchNewsNow com ArchNewsNow Retrieved August 25 2014 Beasley Larry 2019 Vancouverism Vancouver On Point Press ISBN 9780774890311 Past Podcasts CBC Radio CBC News Archived from the original on June 21 2008 Sharma Ian Alexander Narasimha 2012 On the Edge Redevelopment Projects at the Urban Marine Interface in Vancouver BC University of Washington Retrieved August 25 2014 Vancouver The Most Livable City In North America Economist The Huffington Post August 28 2013 Retrieved January 24 2014 Vancouver may be the best place to live in North America but it has yet to recover from a Vancouver Island highway closure that dropped it to third in the world in 2011 Crawford Tiffany January 22 2019 Vancouver housing second least affordable in world report Vancouver Sun Daily Hive March 28 2019 Vancouver ranked North America s 2nd least affordable city for housing Connolly Joannah January 21 2019 Vancouver now ranked second least affordable global housing market Vancouver Courier Patrick Condon and Scot Hein July 19 2019 Hard Questions about Vancouver s New Affordability Approach The Tyee Condon Patrick August 14 2017 Learning from Vancouver Housing Affordability amp the Myth of Supply Side Densification The Planning Report Lee Marc May 2016 Getting Serious About Affordable Housing PDF Policy Alternatives Pearson Natalie July 13 2018 Vancouver s One Two Punch Is Expensive Homes and Low Wages Bloomberg Vancouver s architectural style in spotlight at London exhibit CBC News June 23 2008 Wood Daniel June 7 2012 Vancouver s density debate pits Sullivanism versus the ideas of Jane Jacobs The Georgia Straight Retrieved June 11 2012 She is why international experts come to Vancouver to study its renowned livability She s the mother of Vancouverism Wikens Stephen May 6 2011 Jane Jacobs Honoured in the breach Globe and Mail Retrieved on May 13 2011 Downtown Vancouver Skyline Study Special Council Meeting Minutes City of Vancouver April 7 1997 Retrieved April 9 2018 General Policy for Higher Buildings PDF City of Vancouver May 6 1997 Vancouver High rise buildings in feet Emporis Buildings Archived from the original on April 18 2005 Retrieved February 6 2007 Living Shangri La Vancouver Emporis Buildings Retrieved December 10 2009 dead link City of Vancouver 2020 TRANSPORTATION 2040 PDF p 22 RGS Goals and Strategies Metrovancouver org July 29 2011 Retrieved on 2014 04 12 City of Vancouver June 19 2018 Broadway Plan PDF City of Vancouver November 14 2017 CD 1 Bylaw PDF BC Chamber of Commerce 2014 REMOVING UNCERTAINTY FROM COMMUNITY AMENITY CONTRIBUTIONS Adam Mattinson April 2015 DEALING WITH DENSITY AN EVALUATION OF DENSITY BENEFIT INCENTIVES IN THE METRO VANCOUVER REGION PDF Daily Hive September 27 2018 This is how architects and builders wait in line at Vancouver s building permit office Vancouver Sun March 8 2017 Vancouver to test ways to speed up approval of development permits Vancouver Sun December 2 2016 City of Vancouver looks to reduce building permit waits as citizens suffer Community Association of New Yaletown January 2015 Supreme Court Vancouver Development Process Unfair Illegal Punter John 2003 The Vancouver Achievement Urban Planning and Design Vancouver UBC Press p 295 ISBN 0774809728 Kimmett Colleen September 21 2007 Birth of EcoDensity Backlash The Tyee Pablo Carlito August 21 2013 Planning process for Vancouver s Marpole district sparks community backlash The Georgia Straight O Connor Naoibh August 20 2014 Residents RAMP up suit against City of Vancouver Vancouver Courier Zeidler Maryse February 13 2018 Vancouver approves plan to revitalize northeast False Creek CBC News Smith Charlie February 28 2012 Rize Alliance proposal in Mount Pleasant receives a thumbs up from Vancouver city staff The Georgia Straight Lupick Travis February 16 2016 West End residents lose court challenge that aimed to block 21 story tower The Georgia Straight Condon Patrick July 14 2014 Vancouver s Spot Zoning Is Corrupting Its Soul The Tyee Connolly Joannah December 14 2018 Many Metro Vancouverites describe real estate sector as corrupt poll Vancouver Courier CBC News December 13 2018 37 of Metro Vancouverites think real estate market is extremely corrupt report Canadian Press May 13 2019 Why criminals look to Canada to launder their money through real estate Vancouver Sun External links editMetro Vancouver Regional Growth Strategy Translink Regional Transportation Strategy Strategic Framework Punter John The Vancouver Achievement Urban Planning and Design N p n p 2004 Print Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vancouverism amp oldid 1183752029, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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