|
|
Millennium Gate marking the western entrance to Chinatown, incorporates both Eastern and Western symbols to commemorate the "Journey in Time" looking both to the past and the future. [1]
Chinatown in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, is the Western Hemisphere's second largest Chinatown in area (after San Francisco), and third largest in population (after San Francisco and New York City). Centred on Pender Street, it is surrounded by Gastown and the Downtown Financial and Central Business Districts to the west, the Downtown Eastside to the north, the remnant of old Japantown to the northeast, and the residential neighbourhood of Strathcona to the east. The approximate street borders of Chinatown's commercial area are the alley between Pender Street and Hastings, Georgia, Gore, and Taylor Streets,[2] although its unofficial boundaries extend well into the rest of the Downtown Eastside. Main, Pender, and Keefer Streets are the principal areas of commercial activity.
Due to the large ethnic Chinese presence in Vancouver—especially represented by multi-generation Chinese Canadians and first-generation immigrants from Hong Kong, the city has been referred to as "Hongcouver" (a term considered derogatory by some)[3]. Chinatown remains a popular tourist attraction, and is one of the largest historic Chinatowns in North America. However, it went into decline as newer members of Vancouver's Cantonese Chinese community dispersed to other areas of the metropolis. It has been more recently overshadowed by the newer Chinese immigrant business district along No. 3 Road in the Vancouver suburb of Richmond, which had been an Anglo-Saxon bastion until the 1980s. 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, which met resistance to the proposed renaming of the area to "Chinatown" both from merchants in Vancouver's Chinatown and also from non-Chinese residents and merchants in Richmond itself.
Chinatown was once known for its neon signs but like the rest of the city lost many of the spectacular signs to changing times and a new sign bylaw passed in 1974. The last of these was the Ho Ho sign (which showed a rice bowl and chop sticks) which was removed in 1997. Ongoing efforts at revitalization include efforts by the business community to improve safety by hiring private security; looking at new marketing promotions and introducing residential units into the neighbourhood by restoring and renovating some of the heritage buildings. Current focus is on the restoration and adaptive reuse of the distinctive Association buildings.
Chinese New Year parade, 2007.
|
Contents
- 1 Amenities
- 2 Demographics
- 3 Facts and figures
- 4 List of historic buildings in Chinatown
- 5 International Village
- 6 References
- 7 Further reading
- 8 External links
|
Amenities
Chinatown is becoming more prosperous as new investment and old traditional businesses flourish. Today the neighbourhood is complete with many traditional restaurants, banks, open markets and clinics, tea shops, clothing 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 dailies, remains in Chinatown along with the television studio of OMNI British Columbia.
Demographics
As with many other Chinatowns, it is still heavily populated by older immigrants; but younger residents, including Taiwanese, white, and Hong Kong yuppies lured by its convenient location and amenities at the heart of the city, have returned downtown and settled in Chinatown over the past decade.[citation needed]
Facts and figures
- The 'China Gate' on 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 re-built and received a major renovated facade employing stone and steel. Funding for this renovation came through some government and private support; the renovated gate had its unveiling during the October 2005 visit of Guangdong governor Huang Huahua.
- The Sam Kee Building - The Sam Kee Company, run by Chang Toy one of the wealthier merchants in turn-of-the-last-century Chinatown, bought this land as a standard-sized lot in 1903. However, in 1912 the City widened Pender Street, expropriating all but 6 feet off the Pender Street side of the lot. In 1913 the architects Brown and Gillam designed this narrow, steel-framed free-standing building on the left-over 6 feet. The basement, extending under the sidewalk and much wider than the rest of the building, housed public baths; with shops were 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 building is considered the narrowest commercial building in the world according to the Guinness Book of Records.
- Lord Strathcona Elementary School, the oldest public school in Greater Vancouver, is the only public school serving Vancouver's Chinatown.
- Wing Sang Building is one of the oldest buildings in Chinatown. Built in 1889 by Thomas Ennor Julian, the six storey home was home to Yip Sang's Wing Sang Company (Wing Sang Limited) from 1889 to 1955.
- 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 the country in a military coup in 1968. Others have come from Brazil, Mexico, and Nicaragua.
List of historic buildings in Chinatown
| Name |
Location |
Builder/Designer |
Year |
Built by/for |
Photo |
| Sam Kee Building |
8 West Pender Street |
Brown and Gillam |
1913 |
Sam Kee Company (三記號) |
[2] |
| Wing Sang Building |
51 East Pender Street |
Thomas Ennor Julian |
1889–1901 |
Wing Sang Company (永生號) |
|
| Chinese Freemasons (中國洪門民治黨) Building |
1 West Pender Street |
|
1901 |
|
[3] |
| Chinese Benevolent Association (中華會館) of Vancouver |
104–108 E Pender Street |
|
1901–1910 |
Chinese Benevolent Association |
[4] |
| Lim Sai Hor Association (林西河堂) Building |
525–531 Carrall Street |
|
1903 |
Chinese Empire Reform Association (保救大清光緒皇帝會) |
[5] |
| Mah Society (馬氏宗親會) of Canada |
137–139 E Pender Street |
|
1913 |
|
[6] |
| Shon Yee Benevolent Association (崇義會) |
258 E Pender Street |
|
1914 |
|
|
| Yue Shan Society (禺山公所) |
33–47 E Pender St. |
W.H. Chow |
1898, 1920 |
|
[7] |
| Chinese Times (大漢公報) Building |
1 East Pender Street |
W.T. Whiteway |
1902 |
Wing Sang Company |
[8] |
| Mon Keang School (文疆學校) |
123 East Pender Street |
J.A. Radford and G.L. Southall |
1921 |
Mon Keang School |
[9] |
| Lee Building |
129–131 East Pender Street |
Henriquez and Todd |
1907 |
Lee's Association (李氏公所) |
[10] |
| Carnegie Community Centre |
401 Main Street |
G.W. Grant |
1902–1903 |
Vancouver Public Library; later as Vancouver Museum and City Archives |
|
| Commercial Buildings |
237–257 East Hastings Street |
|
1901–1913 |
|
|
| Hotel East (東方酒店) |
445 Gore Street |
S.B. Birds |
1912 |
|
|
| Kuomintang (中國國民黨) Building |
296 East Pender Street |
W.E. Sproat |
1920 |
The Kuomintang (KMT, or Chinese Nationalist League) |
[11] |
| Chin Wing Chun Society (陳潁川堂) |
160 East Pender Street |
R.A. McKenzie |
1925 |
|
[12] |
| Ho Ho Restaurant (陶陶酒家) and Sun Ah Hotel (新亞旅館) |
102 East Pender Street |
R.T. Perry and White and Cockrill |
1911 |
|
|
International Village
In recent years Chinatown has seen growth in new construction as a downtown building boom continued into the Expo Lands, which adjoin Chinatown. New high-rise towers are being constructed around the old Expo 86 site including International Village, which was built twelve years after Expo (1998) and is located next to Stadium-Chinatown SkyTrain subway station. A shopping mall with a variety of Asian oriented shops, restaurants, and a movie theatre complex, Cinemark Tinseltown. (The name of the theatres has led to the popular but incorrect assumption that the name of the mall itself is "Tinseltown"[4]). International Village mall was also designed to be downtown's answer to the Asian malls found in the Golden Village, though it is not as racially exclusive and includes businesses and residents who are non-Chinese.
Besides the shopping mall, International Village also refers to the name given to the area by the mall's developer (a subsidiary of Henderson Land Development).
References
Further reading
- Anderson, Kay. Vancouver's Chinatown: Racial Discourse in Canada, 1875-1980 (Montreal and Buffalo: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1991).
- Anderson, Kay. Cultural Hegemony and the Race Definition Process in Vancouver's Chinatown: 1880-1980 in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 1988. Reprinted in 1996, Social Geography: A Reader, ed. Hamnett C., (Arnold, London)
- Anderson, Kay. The idea of Chinatown: the Power of Place and Institutional Practice in the Making of a Racial Category in Annals Association of American Geographers (1987 - vol. 77, no. 4). Reprinted in 1992, A Daunting Modernity: A Reader in Post-Confederation Canada ed. McKay, I (McGraw-Hill Ryerson, Ontario).
External links
|
Neighbourhoods in Vancouver, British Columbia |
|
| Downtown neighbourhoods |
Coal Harbour • Chinatown • Davie Village • Downtown Eastside • English Bay • Financial District • Gastown • Granville Entertainment District • Granville Mall • International Village • Japantown • Robsonstrasse • Stanley Park • Victory Square • West End • Yaletown
|
 |
|
| West Side neighbourhoods |
Arbutus Ridge • Dunbar-Southlands • Fairview • False Creek • Kerrisdale • Kitsilano • Marpole • Oakridge • Shaughnessy • South Cambie • West Point Grey
|
|
| East Side neighbourhoods |
Grandview-Woodland • Hastings-Sunrise • Kensington-Cedar Cottage • Killarney • Mount Pleasant • Renfrew-Collingwood • Riley Park-Little Mountain • Strathcona • Sunset • Victoria-Fraserview
|
|
| Other locations |
Champlain Heights • Commercial Drive • Granville Island • Greektown • Little Italy • Punjabi Market/Little India • Uptown/South Granville • South Main • University Endowment Lands • Hogan's Alley • Stanley Park
|
|
|
Landmarks in Metro Vancouver |
|
| Buildings |
BC Place Stadium | Beatty Street Drill Hall | Bentall Centre | BowMac Sign | Canada Place | CBC Regional Broadcast Centre Vancouver | Central City Tower | Central Heat Distribution | The Coaster | Dominion Building | Empire Landmark Hotel | Former Vancouver Public Library | General Motors Place | Gulf of Georgia Cannery | H. R. MacMillan Space Centre | Harbour Centre | Hotel Europe | Hotel Georgia | Hotel Vancouver | International Buddhist Temple | Living Shangri-La | Marine Building | One Wall Centre | Orpheum | Pacific Central Station | Pacific Coliseum | Park Royal | Royal Centre | Science World | Seaforth Armoury | Sinclair Centre | Stanley Theatre | Sun Tower | Sylvia Hotel | Vancouver City Hall | Vancouver Public Library | Waterfront Station
|
|
|
| Bridges |
Alex Fraser Bridge | Arthur Laing Bridge | Burrard Bridge | Cambie Street Bridge | Capilano Suspension Bridge | Georgia Viaduct | Granville Street Bridge | Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Crossing | Knight Street Bridge | Lions Gate Bridge | Oak Street Bridge | Pattullo Bridge | Pitt River Bridge | Port Mann Bridge | Queensborough Bridge | Skybridge
|
|
| Locations |
Chinatown | "The Drive" | Gastown | Golden Village | Granville Island | Kitsilano Beach | Metrotown | Punjabi Market | Robson Square | Stanley Park / Vancouver Aquarium
|
|
| Geographical |
Burnaby Mountain | Burrard Inlet | Burrard Peninsula | Cypress Mountain | English Bay | Fraser River | Golden Ears | Grouse Mountain | Indian Arm | The Lions | Mount Seymour | Point Grey | Little Mountain
|
|
|
Chinese Canadians |
|
| Topics |
Chinese Canadian · History of Chinese immigration to Canada · Chinese Immigration Act of 1885 · Chinese Canadians · List of Canadian cities with large Chinese populations · Canadian Chinese cuisine · Chinese Canadian National Council · Canadians of Taiwanese descent · List of Chinese Canadians
|
|
Chinatowns and
Chinese communities |
Chinatowns in North America · Chinatown patterns in North America · Calgary · Lethbridge · Montreal · Golden Village, Richmond BC · Toronto · Vancouver · Victoria · Winnipeg
|
|
|
Chinatowns |
|
| Argentina |
Buenos Aires
|
|
| Australia |
Adelaide · Brisbane · Melbourne · Perth · Sydney
|
|
| Belgium |
Antwerp
|
|
| Canada |
Calgary · Lethbridge · Montreal · Toronto · Vancouver · Victoria · Winnipeg
|
|
| Cuba |
Havana
|
|
| France |
Paris
|
|
| India |
Kolkata · Mumbai
|
|
| Indonesia |
Jakarta
|
|
| Japan |
Kobe · Nagasaki · Yokohama
|
|
| Malaysia |
Kuala Lumpur
|
|
| Myanmar |
Yangon
|
|
| Peru |
Lima
|
|
| Philippines |
Manila
|
|
| Singapore |
Singapore
|
|
| South Africa |
Johannesburg
|
|
| Korea |
Incheon
|
|
| Thailand |
Bangkok
|
|
| United Kingdom |
Aberdeen · Belfast · Birmingham · Liverpool · London · Manchester · Newcastle · Sheffield
|
|
| United States |
Boston · Chicago · Cleveland · Houston · Las Vegas · Los Angeles · Newark · New York · Oakland · Oklahoma City · Philadelphia · Portland · San Francisco · Seattle · Washington D.C.
|
|
| Vietnam |
Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon)
|
|
Coordinates: 49°16′48″N 123°5′58″W / 49.28°N 123.09944°W / 49.28; -123.09944
|
|