The Province

City passes Northeast False Creek plan

Approved 20-year proposal will create neighbourh­ood for 10,000-12,000 residents

- JOHN MACKIE jmackie@postmedia.com

The northeast corner of False Creek has long been something of a no man’s land. Pre-Expo 86 it was largely industrial; post-Expo it’s mostly been parking lots.

Not for much longer. After a long and sometimes tortuous special council meeting Tuesday, Vancouver council passed its Northeast False Creek plan.

The 20-year plan includes $1.7 billion in benefits for the city, which hopes to recoup most or even all of the cost from developmen­t levies and contributi­ons from the federal and provincial government­s.

The plan calls for $600 million of the amenities to go to affordable housing, and $360 million to “critical infrastruc­ture” such as tearing down the Georgia and Dunsmuir Viaducts and replacing them with a new street network.

The basic idea is to redevelop the site into a new waterfront neighbourh­ood with 10,000 to 12,000 residents. It will have an Indigenous name, which will be determined after consultati­on with the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil Waututh First Nations.

Most of the new residents will be housed in 20 to 25 highrise towers stretching from the Plaza of Nations onthewestt­oCarrallSt­reetonthee­ast.

Many will be market condos, but one area will be set aside as rental, and there will be lots of social housing in the mix — 1,800 units, which are expected to house about 3,500 people.

Strathcona activist Pete Fry has been working on a part of the plan that will celebrate Hogan’s Alley, a historic lane that was the centre of early Vancouver’s black population. It was torn down when the Georgia Viaduct was built in the early 1970s.

“There’s still a lot of work to be done, that’s for sure,” he said.

“(But) certainly there’s some

great stuff in there, fantastic work on Hogan’s Alley recognitio­n and a meaningful commitment to affordable rental housing, and purpose-built rental housing.

“That said, there’s still a lot of work to be done with Chinatown, and there’s still a lot of work to be done on the arterial (road) that’s going to replace Prior Street.”

NPA councillor George Affleck also thinks there are some good parts to the plan. But he fears it may be too ambitious, given funding will mostly come from developer contributi­ons.

“Design is nice, but if you have no way of paying for it …” Affleck said.

“If real estate suddenly goes down by 30 per cent, developers will be giving less CACs (community amenity contributi­ons). Can this market continue? Does this assume that the market will continue to rise?

“I would say so, and I would say that’s naive, and concerning. It’s called speculatio­n, and the city shouldn’t be playing that game.”

City planner Kevin McNaney said taking down the viaducts will cost $240 million.

“We’ve been told from Day 1 that it has to finance itself through developmen­t contributi­ons, CACs, longterm land leases, land transactio­ns and (other) tools,” McNaney said.

Parks and open spaces will account for $233 million of the $1.7 billion in public benefits. The plan also sees $180 million in new community facilities, $102 million in civic facilities, $177 million for environmen­tal and flood protection, $30 million for child care and $15 million for heritage.

McNaney said there will probably be a nine-month “procuremen­t process” for the contract to take down the viaducts, followed by two-anda-half years of constructi­on.

“We’ve phased it carefully so that there’s minimal traffic disruption,” he said.

“The first thing you do is build the new two-way Pacific, then you take down (the) Georgia (Viaduct) so you can build a ramp that connects from Beatty Street down to Pacific. Eventually the Dunsmuir Viaduct will come down as well, but you keep that up as long as you can to maintain some traffic flow during constructi­on.”

 ?? —ARLEN REDEKOP ?? Life around the Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts is set to change after the city voted on a 20-year redevelopm­ent plan for the area that will see the viaducts come down.
—ARLEN REDEKOP Life around the Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts is set to change after the city voted on a 20-year redevelopm­ent plan for the area that will see the viaducts come down.

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