TriCity News August 8 2019

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Coquitlam

Port Coquitlam

Port Moody

Fines for unsecured animal attractants are down.

UBC student brings 4-H Club to PoCo farm.

City said it will step up to support businesses.

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T H U R S D AY

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AUG. 8

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2019

tricitynews.com

‘Larry loves you’ texts surprise Coq. woman + PoMo will address Gatensbury issues + Email fraud hits B.C. lawyers for $2 million

PORT MOODY FIRE

PoMo ponders its heritage future after Clarke St. fire ‘You don’t know what you had until it’s gone,’ says Dilworth MARIO BARTEL mbartel@tricitynews.com

Port Moody Coun. Diana Dilworth, who’s also chair of the city’s heritage commission, checks out one of the tiled mosaics that highlights some of the history and stories about the city’s downtown. MARIO BARTEL/THE TRI-CITY NEWS

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The loss of the historic Roe & Abernathy grocery store on Clarke Street, and its neighbour the Gallery Bistro, may be just the opportunity Port Moody needs to reboot efforts to protect its heritage. Coun. Diana Dilworth, the chair of the city’s heritage commission, said “it’s a shame” the structures were destroyed by a fire on July 28. But the pile of sooted rubble that now occupies half a block of shops, which were once the commercial core of Port Moody when it was a bustling railway town, is also a reminder residents and property owners must remain vigilant about protecting the city’s past. “Heritage is something you

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take for granted until you lose it,” Dilworth said last Friday, while visiting the site for the first time since the fire. “You don’t know what you had until it’s gone.” Dilworth said going forward, as the site is rebuilt, it will be important to preserve the stories of the lost buildings and what they represented to the city and its residents. “History is about the story that is attached to the place,” she said. Already, the Moody Centre neighbourhood that contains several residential and commercial structures that date to the city’s earliest days as a railway and lumber hub is peppered with brass plaques affixed to rocks that recount significant people, places or events in Port Moody’s evolution. There’s also a series of colourful tile mosaics on metal pedestals and vinyl murals wrapped around utility boxes. see

FIRE page 11

.ca


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TriCity News August 8 2019 by Tri-City News - Issuu