Archive for January, 2006

Critic’s Restaurant Picks For Thursday January 12, 2006

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

Sun

A list of restaurants recommended and anonymously visited by Sun restaurant critic Mia Stainsby. Prices are per couple for three courses, with a glass of wine each, before tip and taxes.

$ means $50 or less

$$ means $50 to $100

$$$ means more than $100

– – –

WEST COAST

Aurora Bistro The first fine-dining room on Main Street. Inventive food, hip spot. 2420 Main, 604-873-9944. $$

Bishop’s Consistently one of the city’s best. Almost 100-per-cent organic foods. 2183 West Fourth Ave., 604-738-2025. $$$

Bin 941 Tapas bar in tiny eclectic space. 941 Davie St., 604-683-1246. $$/$$$

Bin 942 Creative, delectable tapas dishes. 1521 West Broadway, 604-734-9421. $$/$$$

Cru Blurs the lines of fine dining, lounge and bistro. Lovely “small plates” or a four-course prix fixe. 1459 West Broadway, 604-677-4111. $$

Fiction Young crowd, great tapas dishes. 3162 West Broadway, 604-736-7576. $$

Lucy Mae Brown Intimate space, assertive dishes. 862 Richards St., 604-899-9199. $$

Nu A sophisticated version of casual dining. Beautiful flavours, great atmosphere. 1661 Granville St., 604-646-4668. $$

Parkside Handsome room in residential West End, richly flavoured food. Great spot. 1906 Haro, 604-683-6912. $$/$$$

Raincity Grill A Vancouver moment by English Bay. Regional food. 1193 Denman St., 604-685-7337. $$$

West Vies for best restaurant in the city. 2881 Granville St., 604-738-8938. $$$

ITALIAN

Adesso Neighbourhood Italian spot with light, elegant food. 2201 West First Ave., 604-738-6515. $$

Cin Cin Restaurant and Bar A well-coiffed crowd. Entrees, pasta and pizzas. Nice summer patio. 1154 Robson St., 604-688-7338. $$/$$$

Cioppino’s Mediterranean Grill Fine Italian cuisine with a light touch. 1133 Hamilton St., 604-688-7466. $$$

Don Francesco Ristorante Romantic, classic Italian restaurant with heart. 860 Burrard St., 604-685-7770. $$$

Il Giardino “New Italian” food, light with exotic elements. Big on game. 1382 Hornby St., 604-669-2422. $$$.

Quattro on Fourth An Italian restaurant with flair. 2611 West Fourth Ave., 604-734-4444. $$/$$$

CHINESE

Hon’s Wun-Tun House Slurp noodles and chomp on delicious potstickers. Huge menu. 1339 Robson St., 604-685-0871. $

Kirin Seafood Exquisite Cantonese food. City Square, 555 West 12th Ave., 604-879-8038. $$$

Sun Sui Wah Cantonese cuisine with light, finely tuned flavours. 3888 Main St., 604-872-8822. $$

Wild Rice Modern Chinese food in a sophisticated, hip setting. 117 West Pender St., 604-642-2882. $$

JAPANESE

Black Tuna Tapas style Japanese dishes, sushi, lovingly cooked. 202 — 1184 Denman St., 604-408-7557. $$

Chopstick Cafe/Shiru-Bay Great atmosphere, intriguing izakaya food, budget prices. 1193 Hamilton St., 604-408-9315. $$

En Japanese Restaurant Bucks the usual conformity of Japanese restaurants. Splendid food. 2686 Granville St., 604-730-0330. $$

Hapa Izakaya Young and stylish; great izakaya-style Japanese food. 1479 Robson St., 604-689-4272. $/$$

Tojo’s Restaurant The topper in this category. Japanese food at its best. 202 — 777 West Broadway, 604-872-8050. $$$

Toshi Sushi Tiny place always packed for the fresh, tasty sushi. 181 East 16th Ave., 604-847-5173. $/$$

Umami A hybrid of Japanese and Mediterranean, the food is ambitious and creative. Good value wines. 572 Davie St., 604-696-9563. $$

Zest Japanese Cuisine Grazing style modern Japanese menu in cool modern room. 2775 West 16th Ave., 604-731-9378. $$

FRENCH/BELGIAN

Cafe de Paris Traditional French bistro. Lots of character. 751 Denman St., 604-687-1418. $$

Cassis Bistro Low budget but mod interior. Delicious traditional French bistro fare. Good value. 420 West Pender St., 604-605-0420. $$

Chambar Modern Belgian food. Hot hipster scene. Chef has cooked in a three-star Michelin restaurant. 562 Beatty St., 604-879-7119. $$

Elixir French brasserie in Yaletown; bistro food, haute quality. 322 Davie St., 604-642-0557. $$/$$$

Le Crocodile Refined French with incredible wines to boot. 909 Burrard St., 604-669-4298. $$$

Lumiere Chef Rob Feenie redefines restaurants in Vancouver. Tasting menus. 2551 West Broadway, 604-739-8185. $$$

Mistral Authentic Provencal food cooked by former Michelin chef. 2585 West Broadway, 604-733-0046. $$

Pastis French bistro with a lightness of being. 2153 West Fourth Ave., 604-731-5020. $$/$$$

GREEK

Apollonia Well-prepared Greek food and very good pizzas. 1830 Fir St., 604-736-9559. $/$$

The Main Friendly, funky spot. Wonderful roast lamb. 4210 Main St., 604-709-8555. $$

Maria’s Taverna Friendly service. 2324 West Fourth Ave., 604-731-4722. $$

Stepho’s Nightly lineups because of low prices. 1124 Davie St., 604-683-2555. $

INDIAN

Maurya Fine Indian food in glam surroundings. 1643 West Broadway, 604-742-0622. $$$

Rangoli Vij’s casual and take-out next-door sidekick. Impressive. 1488 West 11th Ave., 604-736-5711. $

Samosa Garden Smooth sauces, lovely food, good service. 3502 Kingsway, 604-437-3502. $$

Tamarind A hip spin-off from the traditional Rubina Tandoori restaurant with modern elements. 1626 West Broadway, 604-733-5335. $$

Vij’s Dishes are a symphony of wondrous flavours. 1480 West 11th Ave., 604-736-6664. $$

SOUTHEAST ASIAN

Banana Leaf Homestyle Malaysian food. 820 West Broadway, 604-731-6333 and 1096 Denman St., 604-683-3333. $$

Chi Modern take on Malaysian and Thai cuisines. 1796 Nanaimo St., 604-215-0078. $$

Monsoon An “East-West” brasserie with tropical Asian dishes, loads of atmosphere. 2526 Main St., 604-879-4001. $$

Montri Thai Restaurant Some of the best Thai food in the city. 3629 West Broadway, 604-738-9888. $$

Pondok Authentic Indonesian dishes, freshly cooked. 2781 Commercial Dr., 604-872-8718. $$

Salathai Thai Dishes are freshly prepared and consistent. 3364 Cambie St., 604-875-6999. $$

Sawasdee Thai Gracious service keeps the regulars hooked. 4250 Main St., 604-876-4030. $$

Simply Thai On the A-list for Thai food. 1211 Hamilton St., 604-642-0123. $$

SEAFOOD

Bluewater Cafe and Raw Bar Handsome spot. Impressive seafood, impressive wine list. 1095 Hamilton St., 604-688-8078. $$$

C Chef Robert Clark takes seafood to a new level. 1600 Howe St., 604-681-1164. $$$

Cannery Seafood Fine dining in rustic nautical decor on working waterfront. 2205 Commissioner St., 604-254-9606 $$$

Coast Restaurant Yaletown chic, shares kinship with Glowbal Grill and Satay. Seafood emphasis. 1157 Hamilton St., 604-685-5010. $$$

Joe Fortes Seafood and Chop House Fresh shucked oysters, cedar plank salmon, grilled chops. High energy. 777 Thurlow St., 604-669-1940. $$$

Rodney’s Oyster House Specializes in very fresh shellfish and oysters. 1228 Hamilton St., 604-609-0080. $$

AMERICAN

Memphis Blues Barbecue House Slow-cooked, southern style BBQ. Delish. 1465 West Broadway, 604-738-6806; 1342 Commercial Dr., 604-215-2599. $

VEGETARIAN

Habibi’s Lebanese food. Not the same old, same old. 1128 West Broadway, 604-732-7487. $

The Naam Wide variety of vegetarian fare. Quiet patio in summer. 2724 West Fourth Ave., 604-738-7151. $

Om Vegetarian Flavourful, fresh Buddhist-based vegetarian food. 3466 Cambie St., 604-873-6878. $

Raw Raw veggie and fruit dishes (preserves enzymes) as well as cooked. Food is 80 to 90 per cent organic. 1849 West First Ave., 604-737-0420. $

LATIN AMERICA

Banano’s No-frills Venezuelan/Colombian cafe. Delicious arepas. 1223 Pacific Boulevard, 604-408-4228. $

Havana Cuban food, tweaked for Commercial Drive. 1212 Commercial Dr., 604-253-9119. $

Latin Quarter Mexican and Mediterranean tapas dishes as well as music in the evenings. 1305 Commercial Dr., 604-251-1144. $$

Lolita’s South of the Border Cantina Casual Mexican food with sparkle. Lots of buzz in the room. 1326 Davie St., 604-696-9996. $$

Mexico Sabroso A slice of Mexico. Very inexpensive, authentic Mexican cafe. 440 West Hastings St., 604-688-7426. $

Mouse and Bean Fresh, homey Mexican food, in a funky space. 207 West Hastings, 604-633-1781. $

Rinconcito Salvadorean Restaurant Fresh Salvadorean cuisine. Lovely pupusas. 2062 Commercial Dr., 604-879-2600. $

Tio Pepe’s Yucatan food, nicely prepared. 1134 Commercial Dr., 604-254-8999. $

MEDITERRANEAN

Circolo Italian, French, and a little bit of New York. Awesome wine list. 1116 Mainland, 604-687-1116. $$$

Provence Mediterranean Grill The menu is a marriage of French and Italian. Lovely flavours. 4473 West 10th Ave., 604-222-1980 and 1177 Marinaside Cres., 604-681-4144. $$

EASTERN EUROPEAN, CENTRAL ASIAN

Accent Eastern European, French, Russian accents on a continental theme. 1967 West Broadway, 604-734-6660. $$

The Budapest Big doses of Hungarian comfort. Smouldering goulash soup. 3250 Main St. 604-877-1949. $

Rasputin Large selection of vodkas, wonderful live music and dishes such as grilled Georgian cornish game hen. 457 West Broadway, 604-879-6675.$$

NORTH SHORE

Beach House at Dundarave Pier Spectacular setting for brunch by Dundarave Beach. West Coast cuisine. 150 25th St., West Van, 604-922-1414. $$$

Beach Side Cafe Elegant room, summer patio, fine Italian cuisine. 1362 Marine Dr., West Van, 604-925-1945. $$$

Bravo Cucina Traditional Italian, cooked with care. 1209 Lonsdale Ave., North Van, 604-985-3006. $$

Brown’s Restaurant and Bar Casually chic and bustling bistro with burgers, rice bowls, entrees. 1764 Lonsdale Ave., North Van, 604-929-5401. $/$$

Dundarave Fish Market Charming spot; fabulous seafood from the adjoining fish market. 2419 Marine Dr., West Vancouver, 604-922-1155. $

Gusto Di Quattro Cosy, warm. Italian food. 1 Lonsdale Ave., North Van, 604-924-4444 . $$/$$$

La Regalade A truly, deeply French bistro. Wonderful atmosphere. 2232 Marine Dr., West Van, 604-921-2228. $$/$$$

Mythos Whitewashed walls, azure blue trim say “sun-drenched Greece.” 1811 Lonsdale Ave., North Van, 604-984-7411. $$

Nobu Tiny, with just enough room to make the lovely sushi. 3197 Edgemont Blvd.,North Van., 604-988-4553. $

Palki An Indian restaurant with a good grip on the spices. Fresh ingredients. 116 East 15th St., North Van, 604-986-7555. $$

Saltaire Gorgeous roof patio. Good value West Coast food. 2nd floor – 235 15th St., West Van, 604-913-8439. $$

Zen Japanese Restaurant Creative kitchen, quality ingredients. Good sake list. 2232 Marine Dr., West Van, 604-925-0667. $$/$$$

BURNABY/NEW WEST

Anton’s Gargantuan portions of pasta. No reservations. 4260 Hastings St., Burnaby, 604-299-6636. $$

Boat House Conservative seafood menu. Restaurant overlooks Fraser River. 900 Quayside, New Westminster, 604-525-3474. $$

Bombay Bhel Lovely Indian food. Menu features Mumbai-style snacks. 4266 Hastings St., 604-299-2500. $/$$

The Hart House In Tudor mansion. Exacting West Coast fare. 6664 Deer Lake Ave., Burnaby, 604-298-4278. $$$

Orange Room Casual tapas. International flavours. 620 Sixth Ave., New Westminster, 604-520-6464. $$

Pear Tree Small menu, sublime continental food. 4120 Hastings St., Burnaby, 604-299-2772. $$$

Vassili Souvlaki Greek Taverna Traditional Greek foods with no reticence when it comes to portions. 6558 Kingsway, Burnaby, 604-434-0626. $$

COQUITLAM, POCO, PORT MOODY

Joey Tomato’s Mediterranean Grill Casual family retaurant. 550 Lougheed Hwy., Coquitlam, 604-939-3077

John B Pub Above-average pub food. 1000 Austin Ave., Coquitlam, 604-931-5115. $$

Kirin Seafood Restaurant Chinese food for the discriminating palate. 2nd floor, Henderson Place, 1163 Pinetree Way, Coquitlam, 604-944-8833. $$/$$$

Pasta Polo Organic wheat pastas, pizzas. Family restaurant. 2754 Barnet Highway, Coquitlam, 604-464-7656. $/$$

RICHMOND

Also Lounge and Restaurant A blend of Italian/French with Asian accents and high-end presentation. 4200 No. 3 Rd., Richmond, 604-303-9906. $$

The Flying Beaver Bar Funky bar overlooking the Fraser River. 4760 Inglis Dr., Richmond, 604-273-0278. $/$$

Globe at YVR Impressive food, sleek contemporary decor with view of U.S. arrivals terminal. Fairmont Hotel, Vancouver Airport, Richmond, 604-248-3281. $$$

Hon’s Wun-Tun House Noodles and delicious pot stickers, panfried or steamed. 4600 No. 3 Road, Richmond, 604-273-0871. $

Sun Sui Wah Impressive way with seafood. 4940 No. 3 Rd., Richmond, 604-273-8208. $$

Zen Fine Chinese Cuisine Multi-coursed tasting menus and personalized dinners. Excellent. 2015 — 8580 Alexandra Rd., Richmond, 604-233-0077. $$$

SURREY, WHITE ROCK, DELTA, TSAWWASSEN

Giraffe Charming place, eclectic West Coast menu. 15053 Marine Dr., White Rock, 604-538-6878. $$/$$$

La Belle Auberge In a heritage house in Ladner. Sublime French food. 4856 48th Ave., Ladner, 604-946-7717. $$$

Pearl on the Rock Modern Pacific Northwest cuisine with emphasis on seafood. 14955 Marine Dr., White rock. 604-542-1064. $$$

Southside Grill West Coast cuisine, tasteful ambience. 1201 — 56th St., Tsawwassen, 604-948-2662. $$/$$$

FRASER VALLEY

Bacchus Bistro At Domain de Chaberton Estate Winery. Limited hours. Mediterranean food. 1064 — 216th St., Langley. 604-530-9694. $$

Bravo Bistro Swish little bistro, run by former Delilah’s restaurant veterans. 46224 Yale Rd., Chilliwack. 1-604-792-7721. $$

SQUAMISH AND WHISTLER

Araxi Restaurant & Bar Handsome Tuscan looks, regional cuisine. Outstanding wine list. 4222 Village Square, Whistler, 604-932-4540. $$/$$$

Ciao Thyme Small and crowded but a budget-minded jewel. Great breakfasts. 4573 Chateau Blvd., Whistler, 604-932-7051. $

Caramba! Mostly Italian but Spanish, Asian and regional flavours sneak in. 4314 Main St., Whistler, 604-938-1879. $/$$

Fifty Two 80 Bistro Every dish a ‘wow’. Gorgeous room. Four Seasons Hotel, 4591 Blackcomb Way, Whistler, 604-935-3400. $$$

Howe Sound Inn and Brewing Co. The brew pub serves casual fare. The Red Heather dining room offers a finer menu. 37801 Cleveland Ave., Squamish, 604-892-2603. $/$$$

The Roadhouse Diner at Klahanie Pasta, light meals, entrees with West Coast flavours. Shannon Falls, Highway 99, 604-892-5312. $$

La Rua Refined tastes of the Mediterranean with B.C. backups. Romantic. Le Chamois Hotel, 4557 Blackcomb Way, Whistler, 604-932-5011. $$/$$$

Quattro at Whistler Contemporary Italian cuisine. 4319 Main St., Whistler, 604-905-4844. $$/$$$

Rim Rock Cafe Chalet style restaurant consistently offers exquisite food. 2117 Whistler Rd., Whistler, 604-932-5565. $$$

Trattoria di Umberto Tucked away from the throngs but always packed.Lovely affordable Italian food. 4417 Sundial Place, 604-932-5858. $$/$$$

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

Critic’s Restaurant Picks For Thursday January 12, 2006

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

Sun

A list of restaurants recommended and anonymously visited by Sun restaurant critic Mia Stainsby. Prices are per couple for three courses, with a glass of wine each, before tip and taxes.

$ means $50 or less

$$ means $50 to $100

$$$ means more than $100

– – –

WEST COAST

Aurora Bistro The first fine-dining room on Main Street. Inventive food, hip spot. 2420 Main, 604-873-9944. $$

Bishop’s Consistently one of the city’s best. Almost 100-per-cent organic foods. 2183 West Fourth Ave., 604-738-2025. $$$

Bin 941 Tapas bar in tiny eclectic space. 941 Davie St., 604-683-1246. $$/$$$

Bin 942 Creative, delectable tapas dishes. 1521 West Broadway, 604-734-9421. $$/$$$

Cru Blurs the lines of fine dining, lounge and bistro. Lovely “small plates” or a four-course prix fixe. 1459 West Broadway, 604-677-4111. $$

Fiction Young crowd, great tapas dishes. 3162 West Broadway, 604-736-7576. $$

Lucy Mae Brown Intimate space, assertive dishes. 862 Richards St., 604-899-9199. $$

Nu A sophisticated version of casual dining. Beautiful flavours, great atmosphere. 1661 Granville St., 604-646-4668. $$

Parkside Handsome room in residential West End, richly flavoured food. Great spot. 1906 Haro, 604-683-6912. $$/$$$

Raincity Grill A Vancouver moment by English Bay. Regional food. 1193 Denman St., 604-685-7337. $$$

West Vies for best restaurant in the city. 2881 Granville St., 604-738-8938. $$$

ITALIAN

Adesso Neighbourhood Italian spot with light, elegant food. 2201 West First Ave., 604-738-6515. $$

Cin Cin Restaurant and Bar A well-coiffed crowd. Entrees, pasta and pizzas. Nice summer patio. 1154 Robson St., 604-688-7338. $$/$$$

Cioppino’s Mediterranean Grill Fine Italian cuisine with a light touch. 1133 Hamilton St., 604-688-7466. $$$

Don Francesco Ristorante Romantic, classic Italian restaurant with heart. 860 Burrard St., 604-685-7770. $$$

Il Giardino “New Italian” food, light with exotic elements. Big on game. 1382 Hornby St., 604-669-2422. $$$.

Quattro on Fourth An Italian restaurant with flair. 2611 West Fourth Ave., 604-734-4444. $$/$$$

CHINESE

Hon’s Wun-Tun House Slurp noodles and chomp on delicious potstickers. Huge menu. 1339 Robson St., 604-685-0871. $

Kirin Seafood Exquisite Cantonese food. City Square, 555 West 12th Ave., 604-879-8038. $$$

Sun Sui Wah Cantonese cuisine with light, finely tuned flavours. 3888 Main St., 604-872-8822. $$

Wild Rice Modern Chinese food in a sophisticated, hip setting. 117 West Pender St., 604-642-2882. $$

JAPANESE

Black Tuna Tapas style Japanese dishes, sushi, lovingly cooked. 202 — 1184 Denman St., 604-408-7557. $$

Chopstick Cafe/Shiru-Bay Great atmosphere, intriguing izakaya food, budget prices. 1193 Hamilton St., 604-408-9315. $$

En Japanese Restaurant Bucks the usual conformity of Japanese restaurants. Splendid food. 2686 Granville St., 604-730-0330. $$

Hapa Izakaya Young and stylish; great izakaya-style Japanese food. 1479 Robson St., 604-689-4272. $/$$

Tojo’s Restaurant The topper in this category. Japanese food at its best. 202 — 777 West Broadway, 604-872-8050. $$$

Toshi Sushi Tiny place always packed for the fresh, tasty sushi. 181 East 16th Ave., 604-847-5173. $/$$

Umami A hybrid of Japanese and Mediterranean, the food is ambitious and creative. Good value wines. 572 Davie St., 604-696-9563. $$

Zest Japanese Cuisine Grazing style modern Japanese menu in cool modern room. 2775 West 16th Ave., 604-731-9378. $$

FRENCH/BELGIAN

Cafe de Paris Traditional French bistro. Lots of character. 751 Denman St., 604-687-1418. $$

Cassis Bistro Low budget but mod interior. Delicious traditional French bistro fare. Good value. 420 West Pender St., 604-605-0420. $$

Chambar Modern Belgian food. Hot hipster scene. Chef has cooked in a three-star Michelin restaurant. 562 Beatty St., 604-879-7119. $$

Elixir French brasserie in Yaletown; bistro food, haute quality. 322 Davie St., 604-642-0557. $$/$$$

Le Crocodile Refined French with incredible wines to boot. 909 Burrard St., 604-669-4298. $$$

Lumiere Chef Rob Feenie redefines restaurants in Vancouver. Tasting menus. 2551 West Broadway, 604-739-8185. $$$

Mistral Authentic Provencal food cooked by former Michelin chef. 2585 West Broadway, 604-733-0046. $$

Pastis French bistro with a lightness of being. 2153 West Fourth Ave., 604-731-5020. $$/$$$

GREEK

Apollonia Well-prepared Greek food and very good pizzas. 1830 Fir St., 604-736-9559. $/$$

The Main Friendly, funky spot. Wonderful roast lamb. 4210 Main St., 604-709-8555. $$

Maria’s Taverna Friendly service. 2324 West Fourth Ave., 604-731-4722. $$

Stepho’s Nightly lineups because of low prices. 1124 Davie St., 604-683-2555. $

INDIAN

Maurya Fine Indian food in glam surroundings. 1643 West Broadway, 604-742-0622. $$$

Rangoli Vij’s casual and take-out next-door sidekick. Impressive. 1488 West 11th Ave., 604-736-5711. $

Samosa Garden Smooth sauces, lovely food, good service. 3502 Kingsway, 604-437-3502. $$

Tamarind A hip spin-off from the traditional Rubina Tandoori restaurant with modern elements. 1626 West Broadway, 604-733-5335. $$

Vij’s Dishes are a symphony of wondrous flavours. 1480 West 11th Ave., 604-736-6664. $$

SOUTHEAST ASIAN

Banana Leaf Homestyle Malaysian food. 820 West Broadway, 604-731-6333 and 1096 Denman St., 604-683-3333. $$

Chi Modern take on Malaysian and Thai cuisines. 1796 Nanaimo St., 604-215-0078. $$

Monsoon An “East-West” brasserie with tropical Asian dishes, loads of atmosphere. 2526 Main St., 604-879-4001. $$

Montri Thai Restaurant Some of the best Thai food in the city. 3629 West Broadway, 604-738-9888. $$

Pondok Authentic Indonesian dishes, freshly cooked. 2781 Commercial Dr., 604-872-8718. $$

Salathai Thai Dishes are freshly prepared and consistent. 3364 Cambie St., 604-875-6999. $$

Sawasdee Thai Gracious service keeps the regulars hooked. 4250 Main St., 604-876-4030. $$

Simply Thai On the A-list for Thai food. 1211 Hamilton St., 604-642-0123. $$

SEAFOOD

Bluewater Cafe and Raw Bar Handsome spot. Impressive seafood, impressive wine list. 1095 Hamilton St., 604-688-8078. $$$

C Chef Robert Clark takes seafood to a new level. 1600 Howe St., 604-681-1164. $$$

Cannery Seafood Fine dining in rustic nautical decor on working waterfront. 2205 Commissioner St., 604-254-9606 $$$

Coast Restaurant Yaletown chic, shares kinship with Glowbal Grill and Satay. Seafood emphasis. 1157 Hamilton St., 604-685-5010. $$$

Joe Fortes Seafood and Chop House Fresh shucked oysters, cedar plank salmon, grilled chops. High energy. 777 Thurlow St., 604-669-1940. $$$

Rodney’s Oyster House Specializes in very fresh shellfish and oysters. 1228 Hamilton St., 604-609-0080. $$

AMERICAN

Memphis Blues Barbecue House Slow-cooked, southern style BBQ. Delish. 1465 West Broadway, 604-738-6806; 1342 Commercial Dr., 604-215-2599. $

VEGETARIAN

Habibi’s Lebanese food. Not the same old, same old. 1128 West Broadway, 604-732-7487. $

The Naam Wide variety of vegetarian fare. Quiet patio in summer. 2724 West Fourth Ave., 604-738-7151. $

Om Vegetarian Flavourful, fresh Buddhist-based vegetarian food. 3466 Cambie St., 604-873-6878. $

Raw Raw veggie and fruit dishes (preserves enzymes) as well as cooked. Food is 80 to 90 per cent organic. 1849 West First Ave., 604-737-0420. $

LATIN AMERICA

Banano’s No-frills Venezuelan/Colombian cafe. Delicious arepas. 1223 Pacific Boulevard, 604-408-4228. $

Havana Cuban food, tweaked for Commercial Drive. 1212 Commercial Dr., 604-253-9119. $

Latin Quarter Mexican and Mediterranean tapas dishes as well as music in the evenings. 1305 Commercial Dr., 604-251-1144. $$

Lolita’s South of the Border Cantina Casual Mexican food with sparkle. Lots of buzz in the room. 1326 Davie St., 604-696-9996. $$

Mexico Sabroso A slice of Mexico. Very inexpensive, authentic Mexican cafe. 440 West Hastings St., 604-688-7426. $

Mouse and Bean Fresh, homey Mexican food, in a funky space. 207 West Hastings, 604-633-1781. $

Rinconcito Salvadorean Restaurant Fresh Salvadorean cuisine. Lovely pupusas. 2062 Commercial Dr., 604-879-2600. $

Tio Pepe’s Yucatan food, nicely prepared. 1134 Commercial Dr., 604-254-8999. $

MEDITERRANEAN

Circolo Italian, French, and a little bit of New York. Awesome wine list. 1116 Mainland, 604-687-1116. $$$

Provence Mediterranean Grill The menu is a marriage of French and Italian. Lovely flavours. 4473 West 10th Ave., 604-222-1980 and 1177 Marinaside Cres., 604-681-4144. $$

EASTERN EUROPEAN, CENTRAL ASIAN

Accent Eastern European, French, Russian accents on a continental theme. 1967 West Broadway, 604-734-6660. $$

The Budapest Big doses of Hungarian comfort. Smouldering goulash soup. 3250 Main St. 604-877-1949. $

Rasputin Large selection of vodkas, wonderful live music and dishes such as grilled Georgian cornish game hen. 457 West Broadway, 604-879-6675.$$

NORTH SHORE

Beach House at Dundarave Pier Spectacular setting for brunch by Dundarave Beach. West Coast cuisine. 150 25th St., West Van, 604-922-1414. $$$

Beach Side Cafe Elegant room, summer patio, fine Italian cuisine. 1362 Marine Dr., West Van, 604-925-1945. $$$

Bravo Cucina Traditional Italian, cooked with care. 1209 Lonsdale Ave., North Van, 604-985-3006. $$

Brown’s Restaurant and Bar Casually chic and bustling bistro with burgers, rice bowls, entrees. 1764 Lonsdale Ave., North Van, 604-929-5401. $/$$

Dundarave Fish Market Charming spot; fabulous seafood from the adjoining fish market. 2419 Marine Dr., West Vancouver, 604-922-1155. $

Gusto Di Quattro Cosy, warm. Italian food. 1 Lonsdale Ave., North Van, 604-924-4444 . $$/$$$

La Regalade A truly, deeply French bistro. Wonderful atmosphere. 2232 Marine Dr., West Van, 604-921-2228. $$/$$$

Mythos Whitewashed walls, azure blue trim say “sun-drenched Greece.” 1811 Lonsdale Ave., North Van, 604-984-7411. $$

Nobu Tiny, with just enough room to make the lovely sushi. 3197 Edgemont Blvd.,North Van., 604-988-4553. $

Palki An Indian restaurant with a good grip on the spices. Fresh ingredients. 116 East 15th St., North Van, 604-986-7555. $$

Saltaire Gorgeous roof patio. Good value West Coast food. 2nd floor – 235 15th St., West Van, 604-913-8439. $$

Zen Japanese Restaurant Creative kitchen, quality ingredients. Good sake list. 2232 Marine Dr., West Van, 604-925-0667. $$/$$$

BURNABY/NEW WEST

Anton’s Gargantuan portions of pasta. No reservations. 4260 Hastings St., Burnaby, 604-299-6636. $$

Boat House Conservative seafood menu. Restaurant overlooks Fraser River. 900 Quayside, New Westminster, 604-525-3474. $$

Bombay Bhel Lovely Indian food. Menu features Mumbai-style snacks. 4266 Hastings St., 604-299-2500. $/$$

The Hart House In Tudor mansion. Exacting West Coast fare. 6664 Deer Lake Ave., Burnaby, 604-298-4278. $$$

Orange Room Casual tapas. International flavours. 620 Sixth Ave., New Westminster, 604-520-6464. $$

Pear Tree Small menu, sublime continental food. 4120 Hastings St., Burnaby, 604-299-2772. $$$

Vassili Souvlaki Greek Taverna Traditional Greek foods with no reticence when it comes to portions. 6558 Kingsway, Burnaby, 604-434-0626. $$

COQUITLAM, POCO, PORT MOODY

Joey Tomato’s Mediterranean Grill Casual family retaurant. 550 Lougheed Hwy., Coquitlam, 604-939-3077

John B Pub Above-average pub food. 1000 Austin Ave., Coquitlam, 604-931-5115. $$

Kirin Seafood Restaurant Chinese food for the discriminating palate. 2nd floor, Henderson Place, 1163 Pinetree Way, Coquitlam, 604-944-8833. $$/$$$

Pasta Polo Organic wheat pastas, pizzas. Family restaurant. 2754 Barnet Highway, Coquitlam, 604-464-7656. $/$$

RICHMOND

Also Lounge and Restaurant A blend of Italian/French with Asian accents and high-end presentation. 4200 No. 3 Rd., Richmond, 604-303-9906. $$

The Flying Beaver Bar Funky bar overlooking the Fraser River. 4760 Inglis Dr., Richmond, 604-273-0278. $/$$

Globe at YVR Impressive food, sleek contemporary decor with view of U.S. arrivals terminal. Fairmont Hotel, Vancouver Airport, Richmond, 604-248-3281. $$$

Hon’s Wun-Tun House Noodles and delicious pot stickers, panfried or steamed. 4600 No. 3 Road, Richmond, 604-273-0871. $

Sun Sui Wah Impressive way with seafood. 4940 No. 3 Rd., Richmond, 604-273-8208. $$

Zen Fine Chinese Cuisine Multi-coursed tasting menus and personalized dinners. Excellent. 2015 — 8580 Alexandra Rd., Richmond, 604-233-0077. $$$

SURREY, WHITE ROCK, DELTA, TSAWWASSEN

Giraffe Charming place, eclectic West Coast menu. 15053 Marine Dr., White Rock, 604-538-6878. $$/$$$

La Belle Auberge In a heritage house in Ladner. Sublime French food. 4856 48th Ave., Ladner, 604-946-7717. $$$

Pearl on the Rock Modern Pacific Northwest cuisine with emphasis on seafood. 14955 Marine Dr., White rock. 604-542-1064. $$$

Southside Grill West Coast cuisine, tasteful ambience. 1201 — 56th St., Tsawwassen, 604-948-2662. $$/$$$

FRASER VALLEY

Bacchus Bistro At Domain de Chaberton Estate Winery. Limited hours. Mediterranean food. 1064 — 216th St., Langley. 604-530-9694. $$

Bravo Bistro Swish little bistro, run by former Delilah’s restaurant veterans. 46224 Yale Rd., Chilliwack. 1-604-792-7721. $$

SQUAMISH AND WHISTLER

Araxi Restaurant & Bar Handsome Tuscan looks, regional cuisine. Outstanding wine list. 4222 Village Square, Whistler, 604-932-4540. $$/$$$

Ciao Thyme Small and crowded but a budget-minded jewel. Great breakfasts. 4573 Chateau Blvd., Whistler, 604-932-7051. $

Caramba! Mostly Italian but Spanish, Asian and regional flavours sneak in. 4314 Main St., Whistler, 604-938-1879. $/$$

Fifty Two 80 Bistro Every dish a ‘wow’. Gorgeous room. Four Seasons Hotel, 4591 Blackcomb Way, Whistler, 604-935-3400. $$$

Howe Sound Inn and Brewing Co. The brew pub serves casual fare. The Red Heather dining room offers a finer menu. 37801 Cleveland Ave., Squamish, 604-892-2603. $/$$$

The Roadhouse Diner at Klahanie Pasta, light meals, entrees with West Coast flavours. Shannon Falls, Highway 99, 604-892-5312. $$

La Rua Refined tastes of the Mediterranean with B.C. backups. Romantic. Le Chamois Hotel, 4557 Blackcomb Way, Whistler, 604-932-5011. $$/$$$

Quattro at Whistler Contemporary Italian cuisine. 4319 Main St., Whistler, 604-905-4844. $$/$$$

Rim Rock Cafe Chalet style restaurant consistently offers exquisite food. 2117 Whistler Rd., Whistler, 604-932-5565. $$$

Trattoria di Umberto Tucked away from the throngs but always packed.Lovely affordable Italian food. 4417 Sundial Place, 604-932-5858. $$/$$$

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

Building growth to fuel 2006 expansion

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

Driving force also to be domestic spending on retail goods, experts say

Derrick Penner
Sun

A surge in retail spending, a 20.9-per-cent boost in planned major-project construction and stable housing growth will help fuel a 3.7-per-cent expansion of B.C.’s economy in 2006, an expert panel told a Vancouver Board of Trade audience Wednesday.

Helmut Pastrick, chief economist for Credit Union Central B.C., forecast another year of solid economic growth in 2006 at the Board of Trade’s 17th annual Economic Outlook forum.

Pastrick said the 3.7-per-cent growth he expects to see in 2006 will follow 3.9-per-cent growth in 2005 and four per cent in 2004.

“The economic outlook for B.C. continues to be robust,” Pastrick said. Growth is to be driven by domestic spending on retail goods and investment in businesses and residential construction.

Pastrick also estimated that the growth will be broadly based, both across sectors and across regions, with industries such as mining and construction showing strong growth.

Pastrick said residential construction might ease in 2006, and though he estimates that real estate sales will show a slight increase over the year, he also wouldn’t be surprised to see property transactions decline slightly from 2005 levels.

Keith Sashaw, president of the Vancouver Regional Construction Association, laid out an optimistic future for B.C.’s construction sector until at least 2010, which he backed up by pointing to some $83 billion in construction intentions listed in the provincial government’s Major Projects Inventory.

Sashaw noted that the most recent inventory figure was calculated at the end of September, and the $83 billion figure came in 20.9 per cent higher than the $68 billion counted on the inventory just six months earlier.

He added that while 56 per cent of the 682 projects on the list are residential construction projects, the rest are spread broadly across other sectors of the economy, “which bodes very well for the construction industry.”

“If you take a look at non-residential investment spending, and this is the real story,” Sashaw said.

While Sashaw expects to new housing construction to level off at the 34,000-units-per-year level, spending on non-residential projects is being ramped up.

They are projects such as the Vancouver Convention and Exhibition Centre, which has seen its budget revised up to $615 million, to $1.8 billion in additions to the Vancouver International Airport and $1.8 billion construction of the Canada Line rapid-transit expansion.

“What we’re seeing is across-the-board increases in commercial, industrial, institutional and government spending,” Sashaw said.

Sashaw spoke at length about the challenges that the construction sector faces in trying to control rising costs and fill shortage of skilled workers that the sector needs to complete all the projects.

Sashaw noted that in greater Vancouver alone, the construction workforce rocketed to some 80,000 workers by the end of November, compared with 60,000 in January, 2004.

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

Telecommunication giants battle

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

Shaw launches digital phones, Telus offers TV service

Fiona Anderson
Sun

Jim Shaw (left), CEO of Shaw Communications and Peter Bissonnette, president, launch new phone service. Photograph by : Bill Keay, Vancouver Sun

Shaw’s digital phone terminal

The war of the telecommunications titans heated up Wednesday as Shaw Communications Inc. launched its digital telephone service in Vancouver and Telus Corp. volleyed back with news of its Telus TV.

Entering the phone market gives Shaw a “triple-play” of Internet, television and telephone in Vancouver, Shaw’s CEO Jim Shaw said at a news conference.

“With the launch of Shaw digital phone in Vancouver, customers can take care of all their entertainment and communications needs with one phone call to Shaw,” Shaw’s president Peter Bissonnette said. “They also have all of their entertainment and communications services on one bill each month.”

For $65 a month — or $55 for those who already have Shaw cable television or Internet — customers will get unlimited local and North American telephone calls, as well as standard phone features like call display and voice mail.

The price may be higher than Voice-over-Internet-Protocol services — such as Vonage which charges about $40 per month — but the service is better, Bissonnette told reporters after the announcement.

“[Standard VoIP] is an Internet-to-Internet service,” Bissonnette said. “So you actually contend with traffic on the Internet. On our service we actually built a separate network so … it’s not contending with anything.”

“It makes a big difference in terms of quality,” he said. “It’s a consistent, reliable service that we’re offering as opposed to one that relies on computers and on the Internet.”

Shaw already has 90,000 customers signed on to its phone service, which it launched in Calgary last February and in Victoria in October. It hopes to have 200,000 customers by the end of 2006, Jim Shaw said.

More than 11 million people called on the Shaw network over Christmas, and the company now processes 1.5 million calls a day, Bissonnette said.

The telephone service — which Shaw calls digital telephone rather than VoIP service — is delivered through existing telephones by installing a small black box called a digital telephone terminal in the home. The box is owned by Shaw and loaned free of charge to customers.

Customers who are willing to get a new phone number can have the service installed immediately, Bissonnette said. Those who want to keep the number they have will need to wait between four and seven days for the number to be transferred.

The all-in-one price includes 911 and 411 service as well as around-the-clock support.

Shaw also introduced its international calling plan — called Shaw International Direct — to coincide with its Vancouver launch, which came a day before today’s annual shareholders’ meeting. The long distance service enables Shaw customers to dial direct — something they have not been able to do to date — at rates as low as three cents a minute to China and Western Europe.

Shaw anticipates expanding its telephone service to the North Shore, Richmond and Burnaby in April.

Meanwhile Telus announced it was building a $15-million satellite and content distribution centre in an undisclosed location north of the Fraser Valley that will bring customers of its Telus TV — to be launched in B.C. in the second half of 2006 — hundreds of digital channels.

Telus‘ Internet protocol television service had a friendly launch — among friends and family of Telus employees — in Alberta in November. That has led to “spill-over” that has brought subscribers on board, said Fred Di Blasio, Telus vice-president of consumer product marketing. How many people have signed up, Di Blasio would not say.

“We are taking a slow-go approach to our launch. We want to make sure we don’t overwhelm our installation and repair workforce to do the installations properly and serve our customers in a future-friendly manner,” Di Blasio said.

The investment in the satellite centre — called a head end — is part of a $1.8 billion investment in the province in the last three years.

Telus also plans to launch a VoIP telephone service but no potential date has been disclosed, Di Blasio said.

New maritime centre may replace Vancouver museum

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

Facility on shipyard site to include retail and commercial development

Gerry Bellett
Sun

National Maritime Centre for the Pacific and Arctic plans were announced Wednesday at Lonsdale Quay by North Vancouver City Mayor Darrell Mussatto. Proponents hope to locate the facility on the old shipyard site and combine it with residential and hotel projects. Photograph by : Ian Lindsay, Vancouver Sun

A $32-million National Maritime Centre that might eventually replace Vancouver’s Maritime Museum is being proposed for the former Burrard Shipyards site near Lonsdale Quay in North Vancouver.

North Vancouver City Mayor Darrell Mussatto announced the proposal Wednesday, saying it could be completed in time for the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics.

“The location is ideal from a historical and heritage standpoint,” said the mayor.

“It would be located at the centre of Canada’s largest and busiest port and within clear view of downtown Vancouver –the nation’s gateway to the Pacific and Asia.”

He said the site is important because a significant part of B.C.’s shipbuilding industry was once located there and historic ships such as the RCMP vessel St. Roch — now the centrepiece of the Vancouver Maritime Museum — was constructed at the shipyard.

The National Maritime Centre for the Pacific and Arctic would be a major addition to the waterfront, and a prime attraction, said the mayor.

The city is prepared to put up $10 million in land and services to back the proposal and would seek financing from the provincial and federal governments and private industry.

The announcement was made in front of a crowd of more than 100 people, including federal and provincial politicians, officials from the three North Shore municipalities, the shipping industry and such agencies as the Vancouver Port Authority.

Hotel, retail, and commercial development would also be available on the 80,000 square foot site, which would have deep-water moorage and 213 metres of public pier space for the centre and visiting vessels.

Mussatto said the next step is to compile a business plan for the development to show it would be economically viable and able to turn a profit after two years’ operation.

“We have to do a proper business plan to make sure it will be self-funding, then we’ll be working with government and private industry to bring it about,” he said.

“We think it will cost about $32 million and we’re looking at a one third-one third-one third split between us, government and private industry,” he said.

“This will bring business and tourism to the area and will be a real jewel in the crown, having it in North Vancouver.”

What it all means for the future of the Vancouver Maritime Museum “remains to be seen,” said museum executive director James Delgado, who supports the proposal.

“The museum will remain open. This is an exciting project. It’s not the relocation of the Vancouver Maritime Museum — this is something completely new,” he said.

The present site of the museum at Kitsilano Point doesn’t provide sufficient space to display its collection, he said, and the site suffers from lack of access because it is in a park surrounded by a residential area.

A City of Vancouver study done in 1997 recommended a new site be found and a major rebuild be undertaken to meet the public’s expectations.

As for repatriating St. Roch, the first vessel to travel the Northwest Passage in both directions, Delgado said that is a question that would need to be decided by Vancouver.

“The St. Roch and the large collection of material in the museum all belong to the City of Vancouver,” he said.

© The Vancouver Sun 2

Telus, Shaw roll out new digital services

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

Shaw launches VoIP phones, Telus TV will arrive this year

Jim Jamieson
Province

Shaw Communications’ Jim Shaw (left) and Peter Bissonnette in Vancouver yesterday. Photograph by : Jon Murray, The Province

The smorgasbord of telephone, television and the Internet on one platter is intriguing the technology world these days, and two of western Canada’s large communications companies announced moves yesterday to enhance their respective abilities to eat the other’s lunch.

Telus Corp., Canada’s second-biggest phone operator and the incumbent in B.C. and Alberta, said it is building a $15-million satellite and content-distribution centre in a remote location at the northern end of the Fraser Valley as a major building block in the launching of its much-anticipated digital-television product, expected to be available in the Vancouver area by midyear.

Meanwhile, Shaw Communications Inc., western Canada’s largest cable-TV operator, launched its digital residential-telephone service in Vancouver. Shaw said it expected the company’s phone business (already in Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton and Victoria) to grow from its current 90,000 subscribers to 200,000 by year end.

Shaw’s phone service uses Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP) technology, which packages voice calls as data and sends them over broadband connections — opening up a whole new range of features.

Fred Di Blasio, Telus vice-president of consumer product marketing, said his company would be combining VoIP telephony and digital TV to offer customers innovative products.

“We have over 100 years experience on the phone side,” he said. “When I look at the competitors’ offerings today on telephony, these are basic services.”

Di Blasio said Telus TV — currently being rolled out on a limited basis in Alberta — will incorporate such features as visual caller ID that appears on a customer’s TV screen when the phone rings. He said Telus TV will launch here with more than 200 video and audio channels and will have more than 300 by year end.

Telus’s basic TV service will start at $22 per month for 23 channels.

Shaw CEO Jim Shaw said he didn’t think there had to be winner or loser in the telephone market — although investment firm Merrill Lynch has estimated Telus will lose about 150,000 lines to the cable provider in 2006.

“There’s lots of market for everyone here,” Shaw said. “There is a lot of demand for flat-rate calling and for consumer competition in the local phone market. Hopefully, it makes the other provider improve and the consumer wins.”

Shaw’s service includes a local residential phone line, unlimited long-distance calling anywhere in North America and several features. The cost is $55 a month for current Shaw customers.

The company also introduced a new direct-dial long-distance plan.

Telus’s basic monthly phone service in the Lower Mainland is about $25, but long-distance service includes an administration fee of $4.95 a month. Other features are extra.

Shaw said his company will look at adding a phone product for the business market by the end of this year and may offer a wireless-phone option as part of a bundle in 2007.

© The Vancouver Province 2006

No Olympic gold for local housing market

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

But some short-term help from infrastructure development is possible

Paul Luke
Province

Patricia Croft says first-time home buyers may want to hold off. WAYNE LEIDENFROST — THE PROVINCE

Don’t bank on your patch of dirt grabbing gold at the 2010 Winter Olympics, says Patricia Croft.

Lower Mainland house prices may get a short-term boost from Olympic infrastructure projects but the Games will do little to lift long-term values, the chief economist with Vancouver-based Phillips, Hager & North Investment Management said.

Phillips, Hager & North has studied the impact of earlier Olympics around the globe on house prices and found host cities get only a fleeting boost, Croft told the Vancouver Board of Trade’s economic outlook meeting yesterday.

“If you think about it, why would the influx of 300,000 people in two weeks really provide an underpinning for the real-estate market?

“But to be fair, if you do see the infrastructure developments . . . that could help the real-estate market, at least in the short term,” Croft said.

It’s not as if the Lower Mainland’s housing market needs an Olympic boost. The Vancouver housing market is “the most over-valued market in Canada,” Croft said.

Asked if it’s a good time to buy a house in the Lower Mainland, Croft suggested people might want to delay making their first plunge into real estate. “With interest rates on the rise and house prices now in real terms at a new record high in Vancouver, perhaps the answer [is] maybe time to rent for a little longer,” she said.

Still, Canada has so far resisted developing the housing bubbles that have infected the United Kingdom, Australia and the U.S., she said.

As interest rates rise, the U.S. housing bubble — which has seen free-spending consumers treat their homes as multi-bedroom ATMS — is more likely to fizzle out than pop, Croft said. But even a mere levelling off of U.S. house prices will create a headwind to consumer spending, she cautioned.

Helmut Pastrick, chief economist with Credit Union Central of B.C., said average B.C. house prices should rise about nine per cent in 2006, down from an estimated 15 per cent last year. Led by the mining and construction industries, B.C.’s economy will grow by a robust 3.7 per cent in 2006, compared with 3.9 per cent in 2005, Pastrick said.

“Overall, it’s going to be another good year and B.C.’s economy will continue to be one of the growth leaders in Canada,” Pastrick said.

Retail sales should grow by about seven per cent this year, mining output should rise by more than 10 per cent, and construction should maintain GDP growth of about seven per cent, he said.

Tourism, however, will show weakness as the stronger loon and higher gas prices discourage U.S. visitors.

Growth in the crucial forest industry will slow in 2006 as the pulp-and-paper sector weakens, he said.

Vancouver Regional Construction Association president Keith Sashaw said continued cost and labour-supply pressures may force companies to delay projects.

Construction costs are rising by about 12 to 15 per cent in the Vancouver market, Sashaw said.

Separately, a survey of B.C.’s chartered accountants shows 48.8 per cent of CAs believe the provincial economy will improve further over the next five years.

© The Vancouver Province 2006

Plans for maritime centre unveiled

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

City hopes to have complex built by 2009

John Colebourn
Province

Architect’s rendering of the national maritime centre planned for the Lonsdale Quay area.

The City of North Vancouver has unveiled plans for a $30-million national maritime centre on the former Versatile-Burrard Shipyards property to the east of Lonsdale Quay.

North Vancouver Mayor Darrell Mussatto said yesterday he’s optimistic that both Ottawa and Victoria will each agree to contribute about a third of the cost. The final third will come from the city.

“This really is an exciting day for North Vancouver,” the newly elected Mussatto told reporters. “It is truly a great location for the facility — and it is the site where the St. Roch and other famous ships were built.”

The St. Roch, the RCMP schooner that in the 1940s became the first vessel to sail the Northwest Passage in both directions, is now housed at the Vancouver Maritime Museum in Kitsilano.

Mussatto predicted the maritime centre would be self-sufficient by its third year of operation.

In December, North Vancouver councillors approved the proposal for the state-of-the-art, 7,400-square-metre facility dedicated to Canada’s rich nautical heritage.

Instead of calling it a maritime museum, city planners — noting that it will include a wide range of educational programs and events — have dubbed it the National Maritime Centre for the Pacific and the Arctic.

Plans include deep-water berths, a deep-water moorage, a 213-metre public pier and the capability of hosting an event the size of a tall-ships festival.

“It is very important the centre is self-sustaining,” said Isabel Gordon, the city’s waterfront project manager. “Its a concept that includes a lot of other things, like retail and commercial areas.”

Plans call for an interactive educational centre with a library, retail and restaurant space and a variety of historical exhibits.

The city also hopes the St. Roch can be moved from its Vanier Park location to the site where it was built.

If funding does come through as hoped, Gordon said, the maritime centre could open by the spring of 2009.

“Leading up to the Olympics, Vancouver will be on the world’s stage, and we need to be open,” she said. “We have a lot of work to do.”

Gordon Houston, head of the Vancouver Port Authority, lauded the idea of a well-planned maritime centre in the active port.

“It’s a very exciting thing for us, and we will definitely be part of this project,” Houston said. “There’s a lot of work to do.”

Ian Rokeby, speaking for the Vancouver Maritime Museum, also applauded the plan.

“In this day, we’re competing with so many other attractions,” he said. “So go big or go home.”

Rokeby said it is unclear what will eventually happen to the Vancouver Maritime Museum, which is short on space and has been contemplating an expansion or move of its own.

© The Vancouver Province 2006

Shaw tower opens with a big bang

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

Province

Fireworks lit up Coal Harbour last night. Photograph by : Gerry Kahrmann, The Province

An impressive fireworks display marked the formal opening of the 42-storey Shaw residential tower at the northern foot of Hornby Street last night. The 15-minute display, which was approved by the Vancouver Fire Department, finalized work on the $150 million project.

© The Vancouver Province 2006

 

Identity theft surges; insurance now available

Wednesday, January 11th, 2006

Michael Kane
Sun

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