Atomic Ranch

Miami Modernism in Vancouver

The pastel colors, innovative design and view- friendly balconies on these towering Vancouver apartment buildings bring the Miami Modern style to the North.

- Written and photograph­ed Ken MacIntyre

Brightly colored apartment buildings bring some Miami Mod style to Vancouver. These pastel beauties from the midcentury are still standing … for now.

More and more, it seems,

new constructi­on has Midcentury Modern enthusiast­s collective­ly mourning the loss of their favorite vintage buildings. While increasing density continues to threaten many of these structures, there’s one neighborho­od in West Vancouver, Canada, that should be singled out for managing to withstand this trend for as long as it has.

In 1959, when Metro Vancouver was enjoying its postwar boom years, 50 acres in the Ambleside and Hollyburn communitie­s of West Vancouver were rezoned for apartment buildings, so it’s heartening to report that this area— specifical­ly the waterfront blocks of Bellevue and Argyle Avenues near 22nd Street— still boasts nearly all of the Midcentury Modern buildings that were erected at that time … for now.

PASTEL PARADISE

Some of the neighborho­od’s sleek residentia­l concrete properties hark back to the days of Miami Modernism, towering next to the ocean with pastel- colored edifices and stylish- looking balconies, part of a movement known as New Sensualism.

The Crescent, named for its distinctiv­e curved profile, was the area’s first condominiu­m tower, and the very first in all of West Vancouver. Designed and built by Kenneth Gardner and Warnett Kennedy in 1961, the 10- story building is topped with a series of playful “spider legs” and features repurposed terra- cotta drainage tile on every floor, which doubles as a breeze- block brise soleil for its south- facing floor- to- ceiling windows.

The boom years continued through the 1960s, and several of the area’s towers built during that decade are now considered to be some of Metro Vancouver’s most sought- after accommodat­ions.

AN UNFORTUNAT­E ENDING

Sadly, two of its standouts have been slated for redevelopm­ent in the coming years; the circular, turquoisec­olored Shoreland Apartments designed by G. Leach Consulting in 1963— said to have been inspired by a Hawaiian vacation taken by its architect— and the iconic Villa Maris apartments, built in 1965 and affectiona­tely known to locals as the “Pink Palace.”

While the demolition of midcentury properties has been de rigueur of late— and the potential loss of these buildings would be a tragedy for sure— it’s gratifying to know that communitie­s like this one are hanging on, with one foot still planted firmly in the past.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? LEFT: THE SHORELAND APARTMENTS ( 1963). OPPOSITE: THE VILLA MARIS APARTMENTS ( 1965) ARE ALSO KNOWN TO LOCALS AS THE “PINK PALACE.”
LEFT: THE SHORELAND APARTMENTS ( 1963). OPPOSITE: THE VILLA MARIS APARTMENTS ( 1965) ARE ALSO KNOWN TO LOCALS AS THE “PINK PALACE.”
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? THE CRESCENT CONDOMINIU­M TOWER ( 1961).
THE CRESCENT CONDOMINIU­M TOWER ( 1961).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States