Canadian Geographic

ON MAIN STREET

VANCOUVER

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“When Vancouveri­tes say ‘Let’s meet on Main,’ ” says Dee Hon, a journalist who’s lived and worked in the city for 20 years, “we’re not talking about the part of the street that passes downtown attraction­s such as Chinatown and Science World; we’re talking about the rapidly gentrifyin­g multicultu­ral stretch farther south that teems with one-off restaurant­s, boutiques, breweries and markets. Outsiders might call it Vancouver’s coolest neighbourh­ood, but I call it home.” Here are Hon’s insider tips on how to live like a local on Main Street.

SIP, SNACK

You can’t shake your umbrella on Main without hitting someone’s latte, but most are worth spilling to have a Chemex-brewed Ethiopian Kochere from Matchstick Coffee Roasters (4807 Main St.) instead. Get your sugar hit via new-school artisanal donuts at Cartems Donuterie (2190 Main St.) or destroy your diet with the out-of-this-world apple tarts at L’atelier Pâtisserie (260 Fifth Ave.), which I’m convinced is a portal to the old-world charms of Provence hidden beside an appliance warehouse.

CHILLED DRINKS

Main has many bars best ignored for the local product you can find along its Brewery Creek area. The neighbourh­ood’s namesake breweries from the 1890s are long gone, but craft beer makers Main Street Brewing Co. ( 261 E. Seventh Ave.), 33 Acres Brewing Co. (15 W. Eighth Ave.), and Brassneck Brewery (2148 Main St.) are reviving that heritage. Sip your Schwarzbie­r in nearby Dude Chilling Park (Brunswick Street and Seventh Avenue), which has become the neighbourh­ood’s de facto backyard and draws road-tripping, van-dwelling, neo-bohemians from across the continent. Neither public drinking laws nor dog-leash bylaws see much enforcemen­t, but my neighbours would prefer the vibe remains relaxed, not rowdy.

OUTDOORS, INDOORS

Tumble over faux concrete at Origins Parkour (2655 Main St.) or scale plastic rock at Cliffhange­r Climbing Gym (670 Industrial Ave.) and The Hive Bouldering Gym (520 Industrial Ave.). Climbers gather at the artificial boulder at Riley Park (Ontario Street and 33rd Avenue) on summer nights when the gyms are too sweaty.

EAT

You can find affordable, fresh, inventive and internatio­nal cuisines all along Main, but Bob Likes Thai Food (3755 Main St.) puts all those elements together, encapsulat­ing the best of the street’s dining scene.

 ??  ?? Clockwise from ABOVE: Main Street local Dee Hon at Brassneck Brewery; the delectable croissants at L’atelier Pâtisserie; Hon climbs the artificial boulder at Riley Park.
Clockwise from ABOVE: Main Street local Dee Hon at Brassneck Brewery; the delectable croissants at L’atelier Pâtisserie; Hon climbs the artificial boulder at Riley Park.
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