Western Living

Jayne & Suzanne Bradbury

- Rosemary Poole

On Jayne and Suzanne Bradbury’s company website, a succinct credo, courtesy of Winston Churchill: “We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us.” The joint owners of Fort Properties, a threegener­ation property management company in Victoria, refer to it often. “That quote touches every part of the work we do,” says Jayne (seen above, left, with Suzanne). “Our built environmen­t affects us in so many different ways. It’s really that intersecti­on of place and well-being.”

When the sisters assumed leadership of the company in 2012, they embarked on a long-term revitaliza­tion of their flagship properties known as the Fort Common District, slowly transformi­ng a hodgepodge of four buildings fronting Broughton Avenue and Fort and Blanshard Streets and into the city’s buzziest food and dining area. Among their tenants: Fishhook, Chorizo and Co. and Be Love, plus recent arrivals Farm and Field Butchers, a shop that sources its meats and products directly from Island farmers. Suzanne says supporting that farm-to-table economy is an important part of their business model: “We love to eat and our passion is great food, but we take a very holistic approach to building the whole system, wherever we can.”

Last year, the Bradburys made their boldest building improvemen­ts to date, adding new indoor and outdoor space for both Discovery Coffee and the Livet restaurant, and turning the once-underutili­zed brick carriage yard at the back of the site into an atmospheri­c venue for outdoor events, lit by strings of lights overhead. As tech offices and condos enter the scene, taking over the antique shops that once dominated the area—there’s a metaphor in here somewhere—the city’s mayor has called Fort Street’s revitaliza­tion “a microcosm of the kind of economic ecosystem we are trying to build in Victoria.” We call it simply good taste.—

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