The Province

Historic Leslie House survives move

QUICK TRANSPORT: Little yellow building placed in temporary location while 39-storey condo tower is built

- DERRICK PENNER NICK PROCAYLO depenner@postmedia.com twitter.com/derrickpen­ner

After almost 130 years — and 30 hours of site preparatio­n — it took less than 20 minutes to move historic Leslie House to its temporary home across the lane from 1380-82 Hornby Street in downtown Vancouver.

The house first needed to be lifted off its foundation for supporting steel beams to be put in place, then slid sideways onto another steel transport structure for the move. Two sets of wheels were placed beneath the frame at the rear of the house, then a heavy-duty diesel truck backed into place with a cross beam to support the front.

A driver with Supreme Structural Transport Ltd., under the close watch of an experience­d foreman and members of his crew, skilfully backed the whole house 60 metres across the lane, making it look as easy as backing a holiday trailer into a camping spot.

“There’s a fair amount of planning and preparatio­n work and a relatively quick execution, I guess,” said Bill Christense­n, president of Supreme Structural Transport.

That included engineerin­g work to design structural supports inside the house so its balloon frame would survive the move, Christense­n said.

“It’s a spectacula­r project to work on, a spectacula­r old house,” he said about what is, if not the oldest, one of the oldest houses still standing in the city.

Supreme completed the move on behalf of Ledcor Constructi­on, lead contractor for the developer Grosvenor Americas.

One onlooker on Tuesday had a particular interest in the move, having owned the house and made it famous in the city.

“I’m happy that everybody worked hard to save it,” said Vancouver restaurate­ur Umberto Menghi, who ran restaurant­s on the site including his famous Il Giardino.

“I thought it was the best location,” Menghi said, noting it was a leisurely stroll from downtown at lunch, with ample parking (then) for people to arrive at dinner, with only a few houses across the street.

“It did me good (and gave) me a life,” Menghi said, “it opened up the world for me in my business the first time.”

Menghi’s ownership of the site is a part of the history heritage architect Robert Lemon said is important to preserve in its pending restoratio­n.

“People knew it as Umberto’s little yellow house and it’s been like that since the mid ’70s,” said Lemon, who has been involved with the Leslie House restoratio­n since 2005 under a vision Menghi had for the site that didn’t proceed.

The house is being moved to make way for redevelopm­ent of the site by Grosvenor Americas into a 39-storey condo tower called The Pacific, under a conservati­on plan that will see it moved back to face Pacific Boulevard with setbacks around all sides to give it “some breathing room,” Lemon said.

While it is not the house’s original site, Lemon said from an urban-planning perspectiv­e, it was the best option to preserve and present it.

“It’s never perfect to have a little wooden house surrounded by towers, but it’s so important to the city,” Lemon said, noting it was one of the first houses built in the city following the fire of 1886 and the last remaining house from old Yaletown.

Built in 1888 as a worker’s family home for Cape Breton plasterer George Washington Leslie, Lemon said there is still a fair amount of original plaster work on its first floor, likely done by Leslie, that will be restored in keeping with its historical value.

“There is quite a bit of original material that will be retained as part of its interior use,” Lemon said, including an original staircase and stained glass windows. Wiring and other infrastruc­ture will be modernized.

And Lemon is working on a historical interpreta­tion for the final restoratio­n that will help tell its story from its beginning, through its conversion to commercial use in 1947 — first as an interior design studio and then fashion house before Menghi took it over.

“It was one of the earliest buildings that’s gone from being a residence to commercial use,” Lemon said. “It’s had this interestin­g history of layering of uses within this container of a historic wooden house.”

 ??  ?? Historic Leslie House was relocated Tuesday to a spot across the lane from its home at Hornby and Pacific and will stay there while the site is being redevelope­d.
Historic Leslie House was relocated Tuesday to a spot across the lane from its home at Hornby and Pacific and will stay there while the site is being redevelope­d.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada