Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver's Notorious Downtown Eastside Changes With Development

The Canadian Press, 30 Oct, 2017 12:11 PM
    VANCOUVER — Fraser Stuart looks at a chic, new tattoo shop metres away from the heart of Vancouver's notorious Downtown Eastside and shakes his head.
     
    A man saunters by mumbling "Drugs?" and flashes plastic bags in the palm of each hand.
     
    Inside, a young man in tight jeans and a toque chats with a tattoo artist, a bear's head hangs from the wall.
     
    "Ridiculous," says Stuart, a longtime resident and activist in the neighbourhood.
     
    "There's also a bicycle shop up the street where you can buy a $7,000 bicycle, if you want."
     
    There is a shift happening in the makeup of what has been called Canada's poorest postal code, known as home for people struggling with mental illness, addiction and homelessness.
     
    Entrepreneurs, developers and more affluent residents have moved into the neighbourhood's periphery at an accelerating rate, thanks to skyrocketing real estate prices elsewhere in the city, loosened zoning restrictions and the community's burgeoning appeal as a hip and happening place.
     
    Dan Olson, who opened Railtown Cafe in the district's northern fringe five years ago, said he was shocked when he first visited the area.
     
    "I kind of looked around the neighbourhood and thought, there's no way that I want to open up a restaurant here," he said.
     
    Things have changed for the better, Olson said, though there are still issues with needles in the alleys and makeshift tents around his business.
     
    A recent surge in property values reflects the accelerating change, said Landon Hoyt, head of the area's business improvement association.
     
    Numbers he provided show the assessed value of commercial property in the area jumped 11 per cent in 2015, 17 per cent in 2016 and 30 per cent this year.
     
    "We're seeing a lot of businesses close because of that," he said.
     
    The transition hasn't been without conflict.
     
    Brandon Grossutti opened Pidgin restaurant five years ago on the border of the Downtown Eastside, prompting pickets for months from protesters who said the business was a symbol of gentrification.
     
    But for Grossutti, who also has partnerships with non-profit organizations in the area, the decision to locate in the neighbourhood was partly a matter of survival.
     
    "The math doesn't make sense to open an independent business anywhere in Vancouver short of lower-rent districts," he said.
     
    Everyone in Vancouver is being displaced by property prices, though it is far more difficult for the city's most vulnerable, Grossutti said.
     
    "People always talk about pushing. I feel like it's being squeezed," he said, blaming a city planning project that restricted development to neighbourhoods immediately surrounding the district's core.
     
    Community activists are protesting the pressure felt by lower-income residents.
     
    Jean Swanson of the Carnegie Community Action Project contributed to a report last year that criticized the city for its failure to protect the most vulnerable in the Downtown Eastside by welcoming businesses and development that cater to higher-income residents and visitors.
     
    The pressure is inflating rental prices, which means more residents are being forced onto the street.
     
    "Some people are pushed out of the neighbourhood," Swanson said. "But for a lot of them, there's just no other place to go. There's no affordable housing, so people just stay on the streets. That's all they can do."
     
    Real estate agent Adam Scalena said he has noticed an abrupt shift in the interest clients are showing in the area's neighbourhoods.
     
    "It used to be, 'I want to live in Kits or Yaletown or the West End,' " Scalena said. "Now we're hearing almost continuously young people and even downsizers and people new to Vancouver saying, 'I want to live in Strathcona. I want to live in Chinatown. I want to live in Railtown.' "
     
    Some of the best bars and restaurants are in the area and people are moving in for lifestyle reasons, he said.
     
    Plans to redevelop the nearby waterfront area of False Creek Flats, including the new home for St. Paul's Hospital, will increase the pressure, Scalena added.
     
    "It's going to be very hard for … the residents who have been here for many years to remain," Scalena said.
     
    The city is conscious of the challenges and its 2014 local area plan was meant to cement its approach of "revitalization without displacement," said Tom Wanklin, a planner responsible for the area.
     
    "We are doing our best to manage particularly the heart of the Downtown Eastside, that it is a low-income priority area for those residents, rather than just a complete, open, anybody-can-come transformation process," Wanklin said.
     
    For instance, new businesses mean more jobs, but revitalization also risks putting a squeeze on existing residents, he explained.
     
    The city's development plan emphasizes social housing and rental property, as opposed to condominiums, Wanklin added.
     
    For Stuart, those words ring hollow.
     
    "It's so discouraging because it's just words coming from the city," he said.
     
    Stuart said in the mornings, there are more tents on the streets than he remembers in the past.
     
    In Chinatown, he said, seniors are calling the area Coffeetown because of all the cafes opening up.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    On Police Video, Borutski Says He Feels 'Sorry' After Ottawa Valley Killings

    On Police Video, Borutski Says He Feels 'Sorry' After Ottawa Valley Killings
    OTTAWA — The man accused of first-degree murder in the 2015 deaths of three women in the Ottawa Valley told police the day after the crimes that he felt sorry about the killings.

    On Police Video, Borutski Says He Feels 'Sorry' After Ottawa Valley Killings

    Two PMs, One U.S. Capital: Trudeau, Harper Talk NAFTA In D.C. On Same Day

    WASHINGTON — In an ironic scheduling twist, the current prime minister and his predecessor will both be in Washington, speaking on the same day, about the same issue: the renegotiation of NAFTA, which enters a high-stakes phase this week.

    Two PMs, One U.S. Capital: Trudeau, Harper Talk NAFTA In D.C. On Same Day

    Amazing Transition From 'Beti Bachao To Beta Bachao', Says Rahul Gandhi On Amit Shah's Son

    Amazing Transition From 'Beti Bachao To Beta Bachao', Says Rahul Gandhi On Amit Shah's Son
    There has been an amazing transition from 'beti bachao, beti padhao' to 'beta bachao', he jibed at the government on its slogan of saving and educating the girl child.

    Amazing Transition From 'Beti Bachao To Beta Bachao', Says Rahul Gandhi On Amit Shah's Son

    Man Charged After Accidentally Shooting Girlfriend In Abdomen: Police

    Man Charged After Accidentally Shooting Girlfriend In Abdomen: Police
    RCMP Sgt. Marc Fortin says police were called to a home in Cloverdale, near Hartland, around 2 p.m. Sunday where they discovered a 19-year-old woman had been shot.

    Man Charged After Accidentally Shooting Girlfriend In Abdomen: Police

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Campaigns In Quebec Riding Ahead Of Federal Byelection

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Campaigns In Quebec Riding Ahead Of Federal Byelection
    Singh has a busy day planned, including going door-to-door with his candidate Gisele Dallaire, a press conference and blueberry pie tasting.

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Campaigns In Quebec Riding Ahead Of Federal Byelection

    Chinese Student Whose Plane Crashed In Canada Declared Dead

    Chinese Student Whose Plane Crashed In Canada Declared Dead
    ANN ARBOR, Mich. — A judge has declared a University of Michigan doctoral student from China dead more than six months after he disappeared before his plane crashed in Canada.

    Chinese Student Whose Plane Crashed In Canada Declared Dead