VANCOUVER EASTSIDE May 26, 2016 Real Estate Weekly

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THURSDAY, MAY 26, 2016

VANCOUVER EASTSIDE

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R E A L E S TAT E W E E K LY Vanglo House

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133 East 8th

Vancouver Urban Design Awards An Unsung Hero of Architectural Honours

O

n May 9, 2016, 13 examples of Vancouver’s architectural excellence were honoured in the second biannual Vancouver Urban Design Awards at VanDusen Gardens. There was no fanfare, almost no advance publicity by the City, and virtually no media coverage about the event… which is a shame, because the level of creativity and vision was remarkable. First conceived two years ago, these awards are about more than outstanding architecture, they’re also a celebration – albeit a quiet one – of Vancouver’s renowned ability to create a city that works, a sustainable city that connects people on an emotional level with the city itself as well as those who live there.

The highly contemporary, sculputural house includes green materials and building processes, and is designed for multi-generational adaptability, with all three floors open concept in plan. Transformation was the vision that garnered 250 Powell the award for Outstanding Sustainable Design. Once a dehumanizing jailhouse, today this structure is an airy, inviting residence that provides a dignified affordable housing environment with outdoor spaces for gardening and relaxation on every level. An unusual collaboration between various levels of government, non-profit organizations, and the design community, 250 Powell now sends a positive message to future generations.

Celebrated Residential Projects

Other Major Winners

The evening began with a surprising nod to the iconic yet often maligned Vancouver Special. Winning in the Small-Scale Residential Building category, 430 House used contemporary materials to enhance and modernize the home’s inherent simplicity, then reimaged the original car-focused backyard into an outdoor living space, achieving the indoor/outdoor integration today’s homeowners aspire to. Top honours for Medium-Scale Residential Building went to a mixed-use project, 133 East 8th Avenue. The building’s playfully articulated façade and unusual splitlevel suites were described as “allowing it to read as a finer scaled building while being complementary to a more rugged and gritty context.” Already a landmark at Fraser and Broadway, Kwayatsut took home gold in the Large-Scale Residential Building. The eight-storey provides 99 much-needed social housing units, 30 of them reserved for at-risk, homeless youth. An inviting communal recreation room increases interaction between residents and provides space for a diverse range of social programs. Active sun shading on the southern façade adds textural layering. The award for Innovation went to Vanglo House in Mount Pleasant, East Vancouver. Designed by Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture, the project describes itself as a “provocative response within the context of prescriptive and constraining site and bylaw conditions.”

Adding another gold to its lengthy list of accolades, 564 Beatty was honoured in the Best Commercial category. This four-storey addition above a restored, threestorey heritage warehouse in Yaletown meticulously balances old and new to create a fresh, inviting twist to the downtown office scene. Theatre lovers rejoiced when York Theatre was named Best Government and Institutional Building. Now with an eye-catching red exterior, the theatre also boast a soaring, two-storey lobby with glazed wall that gives a visual connection from the street – like an invitation to come inside and discover more about the city’s vibrant arts and culture. This year two projects stuck gold in the Urban Elements Category: Mid-Main Park’s Bendy Straw Trellis that infuses this high-traffic site with a playful energy (no matter what you think of the giant poodle sculpture above), and the dazzling TELUS Garden’s 300-foot glass and glulam pavilion. Judges agreed TELUS Garden’s sweeping sculptural element and new connection between street and laneway greatly enhance the urban experience of Vancouver. There were a number of other winners, including three special jury prizes. For information on all the winners, visit vancouver.ca/design-awards. Be sure to check out the extended story and image gallery on REW.ca/News too, because these projects prove a picture truly is worth a thousand words.

GO TO

REW.CA /NEWS TO READ THESE STORIES AND MUCH MORE REAL ESTATE NEWS AND ADVICE

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Kwayatsut

250 Powell

430 House

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