Archive for the ‘Other News Articles’ Category

Plans underway for Surrey Public Market property

Friday, March 9th, 2012

Amy Reid
Other

SURREY – The Surrey Public Market property, which has been sitting empty for over a decade, is getting a new lease on life.

A numbered company purchased the property at King George Boulevard and 64th Avenue for $7.3 million earlier this year and the new owners have plans to revitalize the corner.

Many Newton residents say the property should be home to a community space.

Jude Hannah, who started a “ReNewton” group on Facebook last November, which stands for Revitalize Newton, has been fighting to get another public market going on the site.

When Hannah purchased her Newton home in 1986, she said the public market was part of what drew her to the area.

“It was a really bustling, funky market,” she said, adding that new tenants would come and go, until finally, it became vacant in the late ’90s, and has been that way ever since.

Hannah said revitalizing the corner at 64th Avenue and King George Boulevard is the first step to revitalizing the area.

“I see the revitalization of this corner as a jumpstart to getting Newton back on track,” she said. “We need a place that can be used and enjoyed by all segments of the community. All cultures, all socio-economic groups, all ages. A public market is a place that brings people together, no matter who they are.”

Hannah said the corner is an eyesore, which is particularly concerning for her, as it’s what people see as they head into South Surrey.

“The unappealing corner unintentionally calls out a very visual ‘Welcome to Surrey,'” Hannah said.

Another Newton resident, Jen Robbins, who runs the website NotQuiteSouthSurrey.com, would like to see the property turned into a community gathering place. Robbins said people from the area often head into South Surrey or Cloverdale to shop, because there aren’t a lot of options nearby. Creating something community-oriented on this corner would allow residents to shop in their own backyard, she added.

Hannah, Robbins and another dozen Newton residents took part in a Newton community meeting at Surrey city hall Thursday night, facilitated by Coun. Barinder Rasode. MLA Harry Bains also attended the meeting to show his support for the new group.

Rasode saw what Hannah was doing with her ReNewton initiative, and thought it would be a good time to look at forming an official community association.

“Historically, most of Surrey’s 38 community associations started around an issue in the community, often relating to development, and grew from there,” Rasode said.

During the meeting, the Newton community group formed, and members voted Hannah and Robbins as co-chairs. The group hasn’t confirmed what their exact boundaries will be, but have decided they will start with southeast Newton.

The group’s first order of business is having its say in what happens with the Surrey Public Market site.

In discussing the 64th Avenue and King George Boulevard site with the Newton group, Rasode said she doesn’t see the viability of having the site be solely dedicated as a public market, but added that having something like the Surrey Urban Market on a portion of the site would be a great idea.

Rasode also told the group she doesn’t support a social service agency on the property, because Newton is already “carrying the brunt of them” for the rest of the city.

But for now, the property still sits vacant.

The numbered company that purchased the property is run by Daisy da Silva.

Her husband, Manuel da Silva, who is helping develop the property, said the company has plans to have the northern portion of the property developed.

The City of Surrey’s planning department has received an application to rezone the north side of the property to allow for a combination of retail and commercial development.

As for the vacant building on the site, the owners hope to keep it and fix it up, which is expected to cost between $500,000 and $1 million.

The structure is just five feet short of being a full-sized ice rink, the owners pointed out, an idea they would be open to.

The 40,000-square-foot building, with 30-foot ceilings, and 134 underground parking stalls, is up for lease at $12 per square foot.

Todd Bohn, with Frontline Real Estate Services, said his phone lit up like a pinball machine after the “For Lease” sign went up.

Some retailers have approached the owners, as have some assembly groups, such as church groups and schools.

“It’s not very often we see a property that so many types of people are interested in,” Bohn said. “Everyone seems excited to see something on the site. It’s a fun one to be working on.”

© Copyright (c) Surrey Now

2012 BC Budget Highlights

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012

Other

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Mega mall approved for Tsawwassen band lands

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Other

A bid to build Metro Vancouver’s largest shopping mall on former Agricultural Land Reserve near the Tsawwassen ferry terminal in South Delta appears a done deal after members of the Tsawwassen First Nations voted last week to proceed.

The two malls would total more than 2.3 million square feet. This would be larger than the Metrotown Mall complex in Burnaby, the largest shopping centre in the Metro region. The Tsawwassen First Nation voted more than 95 per cent approval on the two proposals, which don’t require Delta’s approval, on January 18.

The First Nation’s economic development corporation announced last year it had entered into a memorandum of agreement with Ivanhoe Cambridge and Property Development Group to develop 1.8 million square feet of shopping and office space just off Highway 17 at 52nd Street.
The 180-acre site had been part of the Agricultural Land Reserve but was pulled out when it became part of the First Nation’s treaty settlement lands.
Ivanhoe Cambridge’s project would comprise 1.2 million square feet of destination retail and entertainment space. Named Tsawwassen Mills, it would follow the model of the huge CrossIron Mills mall north of Calgary and Vaughan Mills north of Toronto.
Property Development Group, meanwhile, is proposing to develop an outdoor retail mall called Tsawwassen Commons. This 550,000-square-foot centre would have approximately 17 “major retailers” and more than 175 smaller retail shops, a food court, and retail kiosks. Plans call for the mall to be designed “around B.C. themes, including a distinct Coast Salish component.”
There have been rumours big-box outlets such as Walmart locating on the First Nation. But in a recent interview, John Scott, vice-president of new development at Ivanhoe Cambridge, said it’s too early to make any announcements regarding tenants.

Western Investor

Marihuana Grow Operations – British Columbia

Friday, October 28th, 2011

Other

Address

City

Prov

Location Type

Quantity & Type

Date

18974 92 Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

730 marihuana plants

2010-10-05

8945 Harvie Rd

Surrey

BC

Residence

317 marihuana plants

2010-10-19

8577 165 St

Surrey

BC

Residence

544 marihuana plants

2010-10-26

5993 Holstein St

Surrey

BC

Residence

1145 marihuana plants

2010-10-28

7677 Berkeley Pl

Surrey

BC

Residence

502 marihuana plants

2010-11-03

9409 132 St

Surrey

BC

Outbuilding

294 marihuana plants

2010-12-09

23491 16 Ave

Langley

BC

Outbuilding

546 marihuana plants

2011-01-06

12422 53 Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

1010 marihuana plants

2011-01-19

13079 109 Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

315 marihuana plants

2011-02-01

12079 99 Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

2446 marihuana plants

2011-02-10

16426 85 Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

759 marihuana plants

2011-02-24

105-9488 189 St

Surrey

BC

Business

145 marihuana plants

2011-03-15

5904 144 St

Surrey

BC

Residence

2431 marihuana plants

2011-03-23

11309 Lansdowne Dr

Surrey

BC

Residence

334 marihuana plants

2011-03-30

11337 Lansdowne Dr

Surrey

BC

Residence

629 marihuana plants

2011-03-30

8976 187 St

Surrey

BC

Residence

651 marihuana plants

2011-03-31

7976 170A St

Surrey

BC

Residence

30 marihuana plants

2011-04-05

13720 111 Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

822 marihuana plants

2011-04-09

12458 53 Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

264 marihuana plants

2011-05-11

20035 97 Hwy

Prince George

BC

Residence

1708 marihuana plants

2011-05-24

13839 58 Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

720 marihuana plants

2011-05-26

10124 156 St

Surrey

BC

Residence

233 marihuana plants

2011-06-08

12255 102A Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

212 marihuana plants

2011-07-21

18274 60 Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

982 marihuana plants

2011-07-27

1417 194 St

Surrey

BC

Outbuilding

939 marihuana plants

2011-08-09

1668 Eagle Rock Rd

Spallumcheen

BC

Residence

1600 marihuana plants

2011-03-09

20 Bigg Rd

Lumby

BC

Outbuilding

1544 marihuana plants

2011-07-26

2095 Eagle Creek Rd

100 Mile House

BC

Outbuilding

2451 marihuana plants

2011-09-08

3475 Muermann Rd

Prince George

BC

Outbuilding

704 marihuana plants

2011-08-18

6204 Garrett Rd

100 Mile House

BC

Residence

871 marihuana plants

2011-07-20

6136 Likely Rd

Likely

BC

Outbuilding

2632 marihuana plants

2011-07-13

22770 Chamberlain Rd

Prince George

BC

Residence

321 marihuana plants

2011-06-20

39690 Chief Lake Rd

Prince George

BC

Residence

1185 marihuana plants

2011-07-06

8330 Christina Rd

Prince George

BC

Outbuilding

1039 marihuana plants

2011-06-28

38139 Lucas Rd

Prince George

BC

Residence

1456 marihuana plants

2011-06-17

4608 Crocus Rd

Prince George

BC

Residence

113 marihuana plants

2011-05-31

6211 Keithley Creek Rd

Likely

BC

Residence

1336 marihuana plants

2011-05-20

Block A, Sec 21, Township 26

Lac La Hache

BC

Outbuilding

1336 marihuana plants

2011-08-25

5017 Anderson Rd

Kelowna

BC

Residence

768 marihuana plants

2011-07-28

6084 Marine Dr

Burnaby

BC

Residence

140 marihuana plants

2010-12-02

128 Glynde Ave

Burnaby

BC

Residence

38 marihuana plants

2011-05-06

3765 Wakefield Crt

Burnaby

BC

Residence

633 marihuana plants

2011-05-31

6875 Burlington Ave

Burnaby

BC

Residence

18 marihuana plants

2011-08-31

7033 MacPherson Ave

Burnaby

BC

Business

1298 marihuana plants

2011-01-11

3063 Astor Dr

Burnaby

BC

Residence

476 marihuana plants

2011-04-14

6537 Portland St

Burnaby

BC

Residence

592 marihuana plants

2011-05-26

1633 Taralawn Crt

Burnaby

BC

Residence

538 marihuana plants

2011-07-20

4330 Charles St

Burnaby

BC

Residence

152 marihuana plants

2011-01-19

3356 Garibaldi Dr

North Vancouver

BC

Residence

883 marihuana plants

2011-06-30

529 Linton St

Coquitlam

BC

Residence

951 marihuana plants

2011-08-20

160-12588 Clarke Pl

Richmond

BC

Business

378 marihuana plants

2011-08-31

13882 Dome Creek Rd

Dome Creek

BC

Residence

884 marihuana plants

2011-08-03

236 Murtle Rd

Clearwater

BC

Residence

860 marihuana plants

2011-06-30

1370 North Rd

Gibsons

BC

Residence

500 marihuana plants

2010-11-17

20280 Kettle Valley Rd

Hope

BC

Residence & Outbuildings

6496 marihuana plants

2011-06-08

26781 112 Ave

Maple Ridge

BC

Outbuilding

1490 marihuana plants

2011-05-26

2483 97 Hwy

Princeton

BC

Quonset

1100 marihuana plants

2011-05-17

6251 Gibbons Dr

Richmond

BC

Residence

Methamphetamine Lab

2011-07-21

5105 Erie Ross Spur Rd

Salmo

BC

Residence

239 marihuana plants

2011-06-02

5396 Burnett Rd

Sechelt

BC

Outbuilding

445 marihuana plants

2011-06-15

5814 Marine Way

Sechelt

BC

Residence

860 marihuana plants

2010-11-26

14996 91A Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

1286 marihuana plants

2011-05-05

12501 53 Ave

Surrey

BC

Residence

559 marihuana plants

2011-05-11

14246 Hyland Rd

Surrey

BC

Residence

1223 marihuana plants

2011-05-04

3214 Vimy Crescent

Vancouver

BC

Residence

Chemicals and unknown substances

2011-04-04

3414 Mcginnis Rd

West Kelowna

BC

Residence

770 marihuana plants

2011-04-27

4324 3A Hwy

Wynndel

BC

Residence

438 marihuana plants

2011-06-10

1533 Elinor Crescent

Port Coquitlam

BC

Residence

268 marihuana plants

2011-08-25

TO BE USED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY

The addresses posted may have, at one time, been the address at which a marijuana grow operation and/or a clandestine laboratory may have been located. While the RCMP has made all reasonable efforts to be accurate, this information is not warrantied. Some addresses may have been erroneously included in this list. If there is an address which has been erroneously included on this list, please advise the site administrator as soon as possible so that the issue may be addressed.

This is also not intended to be an exhaustive list of all addresses at which the RCMP is aware that marijuana grow operations and/or clandestine laboratories have been located. This list should not be relied upon for such purposes. It is always best to independently verify the accuracy of such information and to not rely on the information provided.

It is important to be aware that the linking of an address to a possible marijuana grow operation and/or a clandestine laboratory does not necessarily impute knowledge by either the occupants or the owner of the dwelling.

This list is for information purposes only and is not intended to be relied upon by any individuals. The RCMP will accept neither liability nor damages by any person who rely upon this information to their detriment.

Marihuana Grow Operations – British Columbia

Friday, October 28th, 2011

Other

Stadium retrofit most expensive in nation’s history

Thursday, September 29th, 2011

Bob MacKin
Van. Courier

Imagine if B.C. Place Stadium had been built where the Bridge Studios are or near the north side of the Port Mann Bridge.

Downtown Vancouver would not be the city of today. Expo 86, Molson Indy and the 2010 Winter Olympics probably would have gone somewhere else and the clusters of office and condo towers would be shorter and thinner. Instead of SkyTrain stations downtown, railway tracks and a barrel factory might still dominate the north shore of False Creek. The Burnaby and Port Coquitlam sites were among numerous proposals former journalist and one-time federal Liberal candidate Paul Manning studied in 1980 on behalf of Premier Bill Bennett. Gordon Campbell, before running for city council, was part of the Downtown Stadium for Vancouver Association that successfully campaigned for the site east of the Cambie Bridge.

Almost 32 years later, the 1983-opened building has undergone what is arguably the most complex retrofit of any sports venue in the world and the mostexpensive renovation in Canadian. It reopens for the B.C. Lions tonight and Vancouver Whitecaps on Sunday afternoon. The stadium has historically relied on winter and spring trade shows and government subsidies to pay the bills, but it has paid off in other ways. It spurred a dramatic makeover of downtown Vancouver in the 1980s and 1990s and is intended to stimulate the completion of northeast False Creek.

“It’s the biggest place in B.C. for British Columbians to gather together,” Manning said. “You have the events that happen, then you have the transit, the post-Expo development, the population of the downtown peninsula has doubled since B.C. Place.”

S uch a stadium was the brainchild of Erwin Swangard, the Pacific National Exhibition president. He proposed a $163.5 million open-air Multiplex in 1978 to succeed Empire Stadium, the aging legacy of the 1954 British Empire Games.

Mayor Jack Volrich supported the Multiplex, but paying for it was the challenge. The city couldn’t afford to do it alone. When Manning pitched Bennett on the study, he told him, “The stadium’s going to end up in your lap, Empire’s dead, no municipality is going to be able to fund it, the feds aren’t going to fund it.”

Manning gauged proposals from politicians and citizens around the Lower Mainland and took a whirlwind tour of the continent’s biggest stadiums, including the concrete Houston Astrodome, Montreal Olympic Stadium and Seattle Kingdome. The Pontiac Silverdome near Detroit and the under-construction Metrodome in Minneapolis boasted a lightweight, inflatable roof technology using Teflon-coated fibreglass invented by New York engineer David Geiger. Manning said facility managers advised him to build more women’s washrooms, because of changing event demographics. The new wave of indoor stadiums contained elements of convenience and comfort driven by media trends.

“One of the things we were conscious of was the competition coming from television,” he said. “In many ways you were building a theatre as much as a stadium.”

The government bought the site from Canadian Pacific Railway’s Marathon Realty for $60 million and went to work on the concrete donut that was eventually topped by a puffy, white roof when it was inflated on the second Saturday morning of November 1982.

Construction paused for Queen Elizabeth II’s March 1983 visit and Canada’s first indoor stadium – with the world’s biggest air supported roof-opened on-time for $126 million on June 19 with a televised Sunday afternoon pageant. The first full-house was the next night when the Vancouver Whitecaps beat the Seattle Sounders 2-1.

The Rolling Stones, The Who, U2 and Pink Floyd made multiple appearances.

Major League Baseball didn’t expand to Vancouver, the original Whitecaps and North American Soccer League were gone after the 1984 season and the B.C. Lions struggled through the 1990s, after the big stadium novelty wore off. There were too many light blue seats, the acoustics were lousy and the lack of air conditioning kept fans away on hot July and August nights.

The roof was supposed to be the biggest asset, but it became a liability. The 1996 Christmastime snowstorms nearly brought it down. Workers frantically shoveled and sprayed hot water, two days before the 3 Tenors concert on new year’s eve. In 1997, B.C. Pavilion Corporation considered converting the stadium into a two-level facility to accommodate smaller sports crowds while hosting conventions. The $235 million estimate was too much.

Olga Ilich, the Liberal minister responsible for PavCo, insisted in May 2006 that the roof had another 15 to 20 years of life. But an internal June 2006 government report recommended a major overhaul “to bring it up to standards expected by clients and spectators at events” because the building had “worn-out assets which are critical to basic tenant operations.” The specific assets and costs were censored from the copy released to the media.

The turning point was Jan. 5, 2007. As snow and sleet fell throughout the morning, alarms sounded at least five times but nobody activated the steam-infused roof heating system. A last-ditch, noon-hour air pressure spike caused an avalanche that tore open a panel on the west side. YouTube videos of air escaping the flapping, gashed roof at the future Olympic stadium went viral. It was patched up and reinflated in two weeks. Engineer Kris Hamilton eventually debunked the myth of high winds attacking the roof. It was preventable.

“Successive provincial governments thought they could starve the upkeep,” Manning says. “The stadium was beaten up and old. They thoughtfully dressed up where they could for the Olympics… The easy answer would have been to put another of the same roofs on it.”

By then, Campbell was six years into his Premiership and he enlisted Concert Properties president David Podmore at $1 a year to reorganize B.C. Pavilion Corporation in April 2007. They appeared together at the May 2008 renovation announcement, touting a lightweight fabric, Germany-devised retractable system reinforced by heavy steel. It would be done after the Olympics, but they kept mum on the cost.

Behind the scenes, PavCo-hired experts estimated it would cost $253 million but be completed only two weeks before the Olympics’ Feb. 12, 2010 opening ceremony.

The all-in cost was finally disclosed at $365 million in January 2009 but ballooned to $563 million by October of that year. Podmore still insists it’s on-budget.

Crown corporation PavCo has until 2049 to repay the provincial treasury, assuming increased revenue from more events, more advertising and sponsorship and lease royalties from adjacent property. City council quashed Paragon Gaming’s controversial bid to expand Edgewater Casino, but the door remains open for a new casino and hotel complex to be attached to the stadium’s west end.

The full business case has been shrouded in cabinet secrecy and the expenditure never debated in the Legislature or put to voters, the ultimate financiers.

Some background information was eventually released in September 2010 via Freedom of Information. If there was a cost-benefit analysis or detailed site study, it could have been among the 243 censored pages of the 324 set of documents. Without disclosing a cost estimate, a real estate appraiser frowned on the only downtown alternative for a new stadium, north of Pacific Central Station on the so-called Esperanza lands. Central Park in Burnaby and the PacificLink property in Surrey were both unsuitable.

The air-supported, fabric roof technology was obsolete and deemed the biggest barrier to summertime bookings. Conversely, going roofless and moving lucrative winter trade and consumer shows to the Vancouver Convention Centre was impractical because it would displace “higher economic impact, non-resident events” that PavCo wanted at its $883.2 million Coal Harbour facility.

“Trade and consumer shows comprise the largest portion of building revenues, while sports and spectator events are the driving factors for sponsorship and food service revenues,” said the reports.

Enter Schlaich Bergermann and Partner. The Stuttgart, Germany engineering firm pioneered a new generation retractable roof system at Commerzbank Arena in Frankfurt, which was rebuilt for $200 million a year before Germany hosted the 2006 FIFA World Cup.

“It’s the only solution that can be used for an existing stadium as B.C. Place,” says SBP managing partner Knut Göppert.

The structure, not the foundation, was reinforced. “It remains a very efficient system with minimal bearing forces,” said Göppert, who is collaborating with Geiger Engineers, B.C. Place’s original structural engineering firm.

The roof is based on a hub-and-spoke system, like a giant bicycle wheel, with tension cables emanating from the hub to the outer ring, transferring the force and weight from the fabric to the cables and masts. The roof actually has three sections-a ring of glass separates the translucent fixed fabric from the gradually shaded retractable fabric.

B.C. Place’s roof will open or close in under 15 minutes, with the Gore Tex-like retractable material housed above the giant centre-hung scoreboard. It’ll remain closed in wintertime. Frankfurt’s stays open in winter, because it wasn’t built to withstand snow. It is most useful during the city’s rainy summers.

Göppert said B.C. Place’s roof will be able to carry up to 400 kilograms of snow per square metre. It won’t be melted off, but instead an inflatable roof layer will help the roof keep its shape and slough off excess snow.

“This is the first big project (in North America) we are really happy that we found a client who is interested in this technology,” Göppert said. “It’s not following the typical U.S. route with these huge, big monster structures.”

It’s a rare treat for architects to work in the same neighbourhood as a project they design. “I literally walk past this on my way home from work,” says Doug Hamming, the principal and project leader for Stantec Architecture. His firm is responsible for designing all things below the roof and is a key consultant on the roof itself.

“Anywhere that you touch the building is something we’re involved in, it’s a phenomenal opportunity,” Hamming says.

Concession stands, washrooms, suites and lounges were redone before the Olympics. The roof was spectacularly deflated on May 6, 2010 and removed panel-by-panel. A giant temporary tower mushroomed at the centre of the building and so did cranes to carefully install the 36 steel masts imported from Thailand. The 54-concrete columns were expanded to reinforce the structure so it could handle the weight. Earthquake dampers were installed throughout. A compression beam was built around the exterior and a tension beam inside to balance the spires, which hold the cables that support the fabric roof material. The roof system “moves around like a sea anemone” as much as two-feet for snow load or earthquakes, Hamming says.

“It’s as if we took Lions Gate Bridge out of the ground and suspended it in the air, 75 feet in the air.”

It hasn’t been easy. There were delays in 2008 and 2009 while the schedule, design and cost were reconsidered. Once it got the green light, customs red tape, time zones and cultural differences became challenges. For instance, cable strands started in Japan were sent to Europe for completion. Some components, including Volkswagen-sized connectors, were flawed at source or damaged in shipping and had to be repaired upon arrival or returned for replacement. Contractors were embedded in the source countries to monitor progress of components and materials and warn of any delays.

Structal, a division of Quebec-based steel supplier Canam Group, told shareholders in April it was stuck with a $25 million cost overrun because of the late erection of roof-support cables by French subcontractor Freyssinet. Structal was hired on a $100 million fixed-price contract to supply and instal steel for columns, compression beams, catwalks, arches and facades.

Some 5,000 construction workers came through during the life of the project and schedules were juggled while application of the roof material was delayed from winter to summer.

In the final days, Hamming’s group is working hand-in-hand with PavCo on safety exercises and system tests, “hardware by hardware, door by door,” Hamming says, to gain the necessary permits and certificates.

“Some things won’t be ready, but the building will be ready. Somebody who’s been familiar with the project and has a keen eye, it’s like where’s Waldo maybe, they might find a few things that should be working that aren’t,” Hamming says.

The building has new red and grey seats, including rows closer to the action, an improved sound system and a giant centre-hung, shoebox-style scoreboard. Wifi abounds and there is a new in-stadium cell site to ensure everyone can Tweet or email photos or video from their visit, even several blocks away.

© Copyright (c) Vancouver Courier

 

An Amazing Map of Mexico’s Drug Routes And Cartel Kingdom

Monday, August 8th, 2011

Robert Johnson
Other

Golf courses chalanging times as fewer players and competition lead to discounted rates

Friday, July 22nd, 2011

Other

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Vacation Checklist: What to do when your home’s alone

Tuesday, July 12th, 2011

Other

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Timber Towns – coming back to life

Friday, July 8th, 2011

Other

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