Guest Shot: Vancouver viaducts removal clears way to honour Hogan’s AlleyPosted in Articles, Canada, History, Media Archive, Politics/Public Policy on 2016-12-01 01:10Z by Steven |
Guest Shot: Vancouver viaducts removal clears way to honour Hogan’s Alley
Vancouver Metro News
2016-11-10
Vancouver writer Wayde Compton (Ayelet Tsabari/Submitted)
Removal of the 1960s downtown infrastructure a chance to create a gathering space, an archive, for future black communities, argues Wayde Compton
Last year, Vancouver City Council voted to take the Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts down.
This was the culmination of years of study, spearheaded by Coun. Geoff Meggs of Vision Vancouver. Before the vote, members of the public appeared before council to say a few words, to voice their hopes and concerns.
They were so numerous that two days were required to accommodate everyone. While a wide variety of opinions were aired, many of the people there insisted that in some way or other the new plans need to honour the history of Hogan’s Alley — the neighbourhood that existed for decades at the site where the viaducts were built in the late 1960s, and which included a sizeable population of black Vancouverites..
…The viaducts were part of an “urban renewal” scheme that fit a pattern of such plans all across North America during that era: freeways were slated to connect cities to their suburbs, and they were almost always run through black neighbourhoods — because black residents were considered expendable.
In the case of Vancouver, Chinatown was also targeted.
But as it turned out, Vancouver’s freeway plan was never realized, and the only portion built was the one that obliterated black centralization in the East End (or Strathcona, as it came to be called through this planning)…
Read the entire article here.