Archive for the ‘Other News Articles’ Category

It’s curtain time for Woodward’s

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Paint may not be dry, but show will go on and a whole lot more besides

Glen Schaefer
Province

Artistic director Michael Boucher sees the theatre as an umbrella for the artistic community. Photograph by: Mark Van Manen, PNG, The Province

It’s apt on several levels that the leadoff production at SFU Woodward’s new theatre is called The Show Must Go On.

The Fei and Milton Wong Experimental Theatre, named for the philanthropist and former Simon Fraser University chancellor, was still surrounded by construction fencing and peopled with hard hats when we met the theatre’s cultural director Michael Boucher at a nearby coffee shop.

He’s the guy tasked with filling the 430 theatre seats which, when we talked last week, hadn’t yet been installed. The paint will likely still be drying when the theatre opens today for a two-night architectural salon but it will open because, you know, the show must go on.

Cheap wordplay on the title aside, this dance work by French choreographer Jerome Bel wittily captures what Boucher and the theatre aim to do in the long term — provide a link between artists (SFU is moving its 1,800-student contemporary arts school from Burnaby Mountain to 125,000 square feet of classrooms at Woodward’s) and the community they live in.

Bel’s work, previously staged throughout Europe and North America, plays with audience notions of where performance ends and begins by blending a cast of 22 dancers, actors and high-profile laypeople. Those latter cast members include critic Max Wyman and Heart of the City’s Savannah Walling in this production. The performance opens Jan. 20

“It’s in a way inspired by the average person, their sensibility of what dance is about,” says Boucher. “It’s very personalized, they move to their own rhythm. It’s set to contemporary music and they move in ways where there’s a narrative that unfolds. There’s a street sensibility to it.”

The Show Must Go On is part of the Push Festival, founded by SFU alumnus Norman Armour. The new theatre’s six-month inaugural program is a homecoming of sorts — past SFU students on the program also include actor-director James Sanders, starring this March in the play SPINE, about reinventing the body through technology. That mixed-media play is a joint production with the Cultural Olympiad, and Boucher sees such external partnerships as a way of getting the most out of the theatre.

For most of February, the theatre will be home to writer-director-actor Robert Lepage’s international hit play The Blue Dragon, also part of the Cultural Olympiad.

The Wong will feature about 100 student-driven productions a year after the contemporary arts school moves in this September. In addition to the below-ground 430-seat theatre, the facility includes two 125-seat studio theatres, an orchestra studio, a 350-seat theatre equipped to screen films and host lectures and the ground-level Audain Gallery.

“We’ve been waiting for a building for 30 years,” says Martin Gotfrit, the school’s director, adding the school aims to be more visible after years on the mountain. “The building itself is very porous. To walk into the plaza from Hastings Street you have to walk through our lobby. We hope there’ll be a sense of people feeling welcome.”

Aside from the student productions, groups outside the university will be able to use the space.

“The inaugural program is a model of how we want to work with the community,” says Boucher. “A lot of it will be driven by cultural partnerships. The city needs more venues and this building addresses that need.

“When you have a venue with multiple studios in it, a state of the art theatre, it allows for smaller companies to step up. We’re looking at ways to make it workable and affordable to well-recognized smaller and mid-sized companies to come in and use this space, animate it.”

The benefit to the university is that students will be amid the outside professionals as well. “It will motivate this cycle of students wanting to go out and become professionals, and coming back in.”

The theatre opens its doors Thursday and Friday with a two-night onstage dialogue among members of Vancouver’s architecture and design communities. Tonight, architects Bing Thom and James K.M. Cheng will talk about the late Arthur Erickson’s architectural legacy. Friday night will feature a discussion of the art and architecture of the new Woodward’s housing, theatre and commercial complex itself, including the inauguration of a huge photographic installation by artist Stan Douglas and the re-lighting of the restored Woodward’s “W.”

The free multimedia exhibition Vancouverism: Architecture Builds the City will be staged in the Woodward’s atrium, showing until Feb. 27, and it will serve as the starting point for the two City Salon dialogues. [email protected]

© Copyright (c) The Province

Eight tips for feud-free estate plans

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Time for the ‘talk’

James Pasternak
Sun

Successful family gatherings are those in which family members know what not to say. Family restraint, after all, leads to civility. But in matters of estate and financial planning, silence and delay may not be golden.

“You want [a conversation] when the parents are healthy and still able to articulate their own wishes and desires and are still comfortable in having this type of conversation with their own adult children,” says Lee Anne Davies, head of Royal Bank of Canada’s retirement strategies.

“You could leave it too late. And then it becomes impossible to have because someone has become ill.”

And even when health holds out, increasingly complex family arrangements, sibling rivalries, second marriages, car accidents, among a host of other curve balls, can make a mess out of a retirement and financial-planning strategy that seemed so simple just months before. There are countless strategies and options that parents and their children should discuss to reduce the risk of turning retirement into a nightmare and estate planning into a fiasco. But following are eight things every family should discuss sooner rather than later.

1. WHERE TO NEXT, MOM AND DAD?

Just the hint that a parent should consider a retirement facility can sour any family gathering. But absence of a game plan can result in the depletion of an estate and cause deep acrimony among siblings.

Sons and daughters of aging parents should consider the scenario of Stephen Smith, a financial advisor with Port Hope, Ont.-based Yorkminster Insurance Brokers. Mr. Smith and his wife purchased long-term care insurance in 1997, paying a premium of about $400 per month. In declining health, Mrs. Smith had to be institutionalized in 2006 due to Alzheimer’s disease. Mr. Smith is no longer paying premiums and is now receiving a $6,000 cheque each month from their insurance carrier for the $4,000-per-month cost of his wife’s institutional care.

Nevertheless, many parents balk at long-term care insurance, so sons and daughters could suggest a plan that includes the kids paying the premiums. And why not? This is a great hedge against depleting an estate and most plans have a “return of premium” provision if a claim is never made.

2. HOME CARE INSTEAD

If the discussion about long-term institutional care doesn’t go very well, there’s always the less expensive option of home care and home-care insurance. Some long-term care plans have a built-in home-care option and dad can stay parked in his La-Z-Boy. Home-care plans provide services ranging from registered nursing care to visits from an in-home personal companion. One need not be disabled or critically ill to be eligible for benefits.

But while home-care insurance is less expensive than long-term care insurance, a home-care policy holder who is transferred into a nursing facility would not be able to carry any unused benefit.

3. END OF EARNINGS

By choice or necessity, more and more Canadians are working into their late 60s and 70s. Disability insurance replaces about 60% of lost income due to injury or illness.

Disability can occur at any age, but the best time to consider buying this insurance is when someone is at their earning peak as a salaried employee.

A weakness in disability insurance is that one can have a life-threatening illness and not be disabled. That’s when critical-care insurance comes up. The bad news with critical-care insurance is that to qualify you have to be stricken with one or more illnesses, such as cancer, kidney failure, heart attack or stroke.

The good news is that you’ll receive a tax-free lump sum.

Toronto-based insurance broker and financial advisor Yirmi Cohen delivered a $300,000 cheque to a policy holder who had a benign brain tumour.

Not only did the client receive a windfall, he recovered, went on a vacation and went back to work.

4. WHO GETS THE COTTAGE?

No family wants the last memory of the cottage to be of a brother and sister hitting each other over the head with a fishing pole. Ms. Davies says that clearing the air early is essential: “What you might find is that some children are not interested in a certain property because they live somewhere else or it doesn’t fit their lifestyle.”

Bruce Gilboord, a Toronto-based Sun Life retirement income specialist, says the most efficient way to buy out family members — and settle any estate taxes — is through the purchase of a permanent life-insurance policy. And to make sure this solution runs smoothly, sons and daughters should consider sharing the cost of the premiums.

5. FAMILY REFEREE

There are few easier, cheaper and effective financial planning options than getting all family members to execute a power of attorney for property. Estates and wills lawyers Barry Fish and Les Kotzer urge families who have not executed a power of attorney to visit www.familyfight.comand read the horror stories. In the absence of a power of attorney, the public guardian might step in. Not a good move.

The 2004 Annual Report of the Office of the Provincial Auditor of Ontario found that there were numerous examples of poor investments and the draining of estates in that province’s Office of the Public Guardian and Trustee. Fish and Associates sell power-of-attorney kits for $50.

6. LOOKING OUT FOR NO. 1

Designating a power of attorney for personal care reduces the guesswork and arguments that arise when a parent is incapacitated. It assigns someone the power to express wishes, values, religious beliefs or preferences toward medical inter vention and long-term care.

7. YOUR WILL IS MY COMMAND

“Creating a will isn’t the most enjoyable thing you do with your time,” says RBC’s Ms. Davies. However, the consequences of the absence of a will are far more serious.

An out-of-date will can be worse. First and second marriages, step children and common-law arrangements can make for some complex inheritance situations. “Family structures change and as they change you want to make sure the right people are getting the right information so your intentions are well understood,” says Ms. Davies.

8. HANGING UP THE CAR KEYS

“Other than a death in the family or being evicted from your home, there are few life events more upsetting than hanging up your car keys for the last time,” says Bob Paterson, a retired sergeant with the Ontario Provincial Police. But a low-speed collision involving a senior driver can result in medical bills, litigation and loss of income.

When a parent just won’t let go of the keys, suggest a third-party diagnostician such as DriveAble.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Economist warns of new, global ‘bubbles’

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Principal danger is with emerging economies such as China, where equity and housing asset prices are soaring

Peter O’Neil
Sun

Canadian William White, who is believed to be the only senior economist within the world of central bankers who warned publicly about pending economic disaster before the 2008 global meltdown, said Tuesday that new “bubbles” in the financial system are emerging–and could burst.

White says he shares the concerns highlighted in this week’s edition of the influential British newsmagazine The Economist, which declared: “Bubble Warning: Why Assets are Overvalued.”

“I don’t think it’s alarmist or premature,” he told Canwest News Service.

White, a northern Ontario native who now lives in Switzerland, retired in 2008 from his role as chief economist at the Switzerland-based Bank for International Settlements, an international institution that advises the world’s central bankers.

For more than a decade, White and one of his senior researchers warned in BIS annual reports and at public events that the global economy was facing growing risk because of speculative bubbles, particularly in areas, such as the overpriced U.S. housing market.

While they weren’t alone in expressing concern about weak government regulations covering the lending practices of financial institutions, they took the provocative position that central bankers should play a far more active role by raising interest rates to contain speculative excesses–even during periods of low inflation.

Among those who dismissed White’s concerns were Alan (The Maestro) Greenspan — the once-revered chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve who held the position from 1987 to 2006 — and current chair Ben Bernanke.

White says he agrees with The Economist’s argument that the principal danger of speculative bubbles forming and exploding are in emerging economies such as China, where equity and housing asset prices are soaring.

On Tuesday, the Chinese government took action to cool its overheating economy by raising the proportion of deposits held in reserve by banks.

White said equity prices in major industrialized countries, such the U.S., appear overpriced by historical standards, though that factor isn’t yet accompanied by two other factors associated with bubbles: a decline in savings rates and a rapid credit expansion.

“In a certain sense, all of that points in the direction of ‘don’t worry too much about the industrialized countries,’ ” he said.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

SFU Woodward’s Campus School Information

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Sun

Download Document

Dealing with inheritances

Monday, January 11th, 2010

best uses: Start by getting professional advice to minimize tax

Keith and Kevin Greenard

Los Cabos turtle nests usually found on beaches Sept-Dec every year

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

Setting turtles off on a great journey

Sarah Treleaven
Province

No matter how cute they are, you’re not allowed to toss Olive Ridley turtles into the sea.

On a Thursday evening in September, close to sunset on a silky beach in Mexico, about 30 resort guests stood around in bare feet, some holding glasses of chilled white wine. As the sky warmed to peachy pink tones darted by deep purple clouds, we waited patiently to make a small contribution to the natural world from which we so liberally take. Who knew liberating baby turtles would be so romantic?

Every year, Olive Ridley, or Golfina, sea turtles lay hundreds of eggs in multiple nests on the beach in front of Marquis Los Cabos, an oceanfront resort on the tip of the Baja California peninsula, where the Sea of Cortez meets the Pacific Ocean. The resort is state-certified as a sea turtle watch and rescue site, and the eggs are protected from the time they’re laid until they hatch in late September through mid-October.

The gestation period is approximately 45 days, and just before they’re due, Marquis employees take them inside to protect them from predators.

Eighty-day-old turtles arrived on the beach that night in a small blue cooler, the kind more typically filled with beer on a hot summer day. The golf-ball-size turtles appeared highly motivated to answer the call of the sea, flapping their arms in anticipation.

After some initial reluctance and light squealing from children and adults alike, we picked up the turtles by the sides of their shells, carried them to the sand, gently deposited them on the ground and pointed them toward the ocean.

Watching them struggle into the sea, being knocked back time and again by the sizable waves that crashed on the beach, I wondered why we couldn’t do the turtles a favour by wading out several metres to dump the contents of the cooler into the sea; or lightly toss each of the turtles into the water?

“Oh, no,” said Ella Messerli, general manager of Marquis. “They have to make their own way into the ocean. If they aren’t strong enough, that’s nature’s way . . . only one of 1,000 actually make it to adulthood.”

Despite that bleak prognosis, brides marrying at Marquis have recently taken to turtle liberation as part of their ceremony, a local take on the tradition of releasing white doves. Guests follow suit, each gingerly holding a squirming amphibian, wishing the bride and groom future luck as they set the turtle down on the sand.

Sarah Treleaven was a guest of Marquis Los Cabos.

© Copyright (c) The Province

Live GPS “US Fleet Tracking” company to monitor Olympic Vehicles

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

Company owner says officials don’t want a repeat of the Munich attack

Damian Inwood
Province

U.S. Fleet’s tracking devices will monitor equipped vehicles using satellites to create real-time pictures like this. Photograph by: Handout, U.S. Fleet Tracking

An Oklahoma company is shipping 830 vehicle-tracking devices to the Vancouver 2010 Olympics to help prevent terrorist hijackings of athletes’ buses or VIPs’ limousines.

“For the Olympics, we’ll be able to update the vehicles’ positions every three seconds,” said Jerry Hunter, CEO of U.S. Fleet Tracking.

“They haven’t told me what their primary purpose is, but I’m reasonably certain it’s to make sure they don’t have a repeat of Munich — or don’t have a bus full of athletes commandeered or something like that.”

At the Munich Olympics in 1972, 11 Israeli athletes and coaches and one police officer died after a hostage-taking by Black September, a Palestinian militant group. Five terrorists were slain in the rescue attempt.

The system uses up to 16 satellites to triangulate the device’s location, giving latitude, longitude, heading and velocity, Hunter said.

It takes six-tenths of a second for the tracking device to send the data by wireless transmission to an Oklahoma server and make it available on-screen.

The system gives the speed and direction of the vehicle and options include locking the doors, disabling the starter or honking the horn.

“It gives Olympic organizers the ability to follow those vehicles and make sure they’re where they’re supposed to be,” said Hunter.

Hunter said that there are three different devices available: a hard-wired version, a portable version and a navigation device that can send messages to drivers and direct them to their destinations.

Hunter said about half the devices will be the portable ones, which are the size of a razor phone, can clip on a belt and cost $399 US.

Monitoring costs about $1 a day, he added.

“We’ve got 830 units going to Vancouver and Whistler and they will be on buses, on security vehicles, limousines and dignitaries’ vehicles,” Hunter said. “We set up virtual fences and every time the vehicle enters or leaves the fence, it sends us text messages and emails.”

He said the maps showing the vehicles’ locations will be monitored by the RCMP, Vancouver city police and provincial officials.

“They’ll have screens up with all these vehicles, but if a vehicle deviates from its assigned route, it can send messages the minute that vehicle veers off route,” he said.

Hunter said it’s not just mega-events like the Olympics or emergency and police services that use the system.

“We’ve got small businesses using it, husbands tracking cheating wives, wives tracking cheating husbands and we’ve got parents tracking their teenage drivers,” he said. “A gentleman in San Antonio decided to put tracking on his vehicles after he came around the corner and saw four of his plumbing trucks, all lined up with their logos showing, in the parking lot of a topless club.”

He said drug-enforcement agencies have used the portable tracking device in bags of cocaine during sting operations.

“Eighty per cent of our business is commercial, seven per cent is parents tracking teens and seven per cent is cheating spouses,” he added. “The remainder is law enforcement and ambulance services.”

He said while the majority of the company’s business is in North America, the tracking system is also used in Bahrain, Abu Dhabi, Bangalore, New Zealand and Europe.

U.S. Tracking is sending six software engineers to Vancouver to help run the system.

© Copyright (c) The Province

SFU School for Contemporary Art comes off the mountain and moves into new downtown digs

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

New downtown Simon Fraser University campus will be a landmark arts complex for the city

Peter Birnie
Sun

Former SFU chancellor Milton Wong and his wife Fei Wong donated $3 million to the school and are lending their names to an innovative performance space at the heart of the arts complex. Wong also spearheaded the school’s fundraising campaign for the new downtown campus. Arlen Redekop/PNG

An artist’s rendering of the ‘extraordinary’ Fei and Milton Wong Experimental Theatre at SFU’s new downtown campus.

Jay Dodge of Boca del Lupo, an SFU grad, sees great potential for innovative work in the new theatre.

At the heart of the School for the Contemporary Arts, Simon Fraser University’s bold new downtown campus in the Woodward’s complex, sits the boldest thing of all — the Fei and Milton Wong Experimental Theatre. Milton Wong notes that some people felt the name was too long.

“They said we should just call it the Fei and Milton Wong Theatre, but I beg to differ,” Wong says. “I truly think that, from this point on, we have to be open to experiments for the fusion of all the different disciplines, from dance to film to technology, because that’s what’s going to make the centre work, and give Vancouver a cultural precinct that will become a cornerstone for keeping us pre-eminent in terms of creativity.”

The former SFU chancellor credits current university president Michael Stevenson for shepherding the school’s move into Canada’s most troubled neighbourhood.

“It takes vision,” Wong says, “to go into one of the most deplorable areas and go, ‘Hey, we should send our institution down there because it’s the best way of revitalizing the Downtown Eastside.’”

Wong and his wife donated $3 million to the school and were honoured with having their name appear on a truly revolutionary multidisciplinary venue. State-of-the-art doesn’t begin to describe how this three-storey black-box theatre has been configured to make it infinitely adaptable and then equipped with the latest in technological bells and whistles.

Wong is the eighth of nine children. His father came to Canada in 1908 and lived in Chinatown; Wong and his wife raised three daughters in a world far removed from the racism of old.

“When I travel across the country, I see that the city of Vancouver is very special. I think this fusion of all the different cultures is quite remarkable — very few elbows are out.”

Among his many accomplishments — fundraiser for Science World, catalyst for the Dragon Boat Festival, founder of the cultural-diversity nonprofit Laurier Institution — Wong is especially proud of having helped Hank Bull create Centre A.

“We needed something to begin the recognition of Asian culture impacting on our city,” Wong explains, “and it’s fascinating that Hank had the foresight to champion that.”

With what he describes as “a very big soft spot” for SFU, Wong agreed to head a fundraising campaign for the School for the Contemporary Arts. Yet even this successful business leader is finding the current economic climate a tough go as the campaign is about halfway to its goal of $30 million — “It’s really been tough, but we’ll just have to keep on plugging.”

Wong was at an art biennale in Shanghai a few years ago, and was amazed at the way the world’s creative communities are being linked.

“ Interactions of new media are causing us to change how we look at things,” he notes. “Look at your newspaper, the use of blogs and all that; it all has a material impact on how the arts are moving.”

While a full transfer to the new downtown home won’t take place until the summer, Wong is delighted that the debut of the Fei and Milton Wong Experimental Theatre comes early next month with Robert Lepage’s The Blue Dragon, which has been heavily influenced by modern Asian art.

“The mix of the theatre, professional groups like that coming in as well as being open to the community, is going to be a very good interplay,” says Wong, “to infuse what I hope to be a magical condition where the arts in Vancouver can find new boundaries. It has a lot to do with the economic well-being of the city. I know people see arts as off the table, but it’s core.”

 

Something wonderful blooms on Hastings

Coordinated chaos is the order of the day at the new downtown campus of Simon Fraser University’s School for the Contemporary Arts. In a scramble to meet looming deadlines for completion of key components of the new building at the north end of the Woodward’s complex, construction workers have very few working days left to finish a mountain of tasks.

That’s appropriate, given the school’s move off its own mountain in Burnaby. While the Downtown Eastside won’t see 1,800 students descend on the neighbourhood until September, many of the facilities must be ready for such looming events as Jerome Bel’s The Show Must Go On (part of the PuSh International Performing Arts Festival) and Robert Lepage’s The Blue Dragon/ Le Dragon Bleu (part of the Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad).

A recent hard-hat tour certainly proven the necessity of hard-hats, with no shortage of hazards on offer, but there’s also plenty of evidence that something wonderful is about to bloom on Hastings Street. Not only will students in dance, theatre, music, film and other disciplines be taking a huge leap forward from the huddle of huts they populated up on the hill at SFU, but many facets of their new downtown digs will be made available, when possible, to serve communities beyond the school.

The jewel in the crown of the complex is a three-storey space so cool that it left at least one former student drooling at the prospect of returning to use it. Jay Dodge is an SFU alumnus whose theatre company, Boca del Lupo, is famous for hanging around — Dodge led the way into Stanley Park for much-lauded site-specific shows, including The Last Stand, Lagoon of Lost Tales and Vasily the Luckless, where cast members were often found dangling from trees, and he sees great potential for equally innovative work inside the Fei and Milton Wong Experimental Theatre.

“The Fei and Milton Wong is a pretty extraordinary theatre,” Dodge says. “I mean, for somebody with my inclination for rigging and vertical space, obviously that theatre is intriguing.”

The theatre’s deep well can accommodate any seating configuration for up to 450 people. Massive doors can seal off the stage area so it becomes a separate rehearsal hall, or another 125-seat performance space.

The floor is fully sprang and two overhead gantries allow endless configurations for the latest in lighting — as well as the chance for people like Dodge to do amazing things in the air above an audience. We’re likely to see the Wong first tested to its limits when Lepage moves in with his trademark orgy of effects.

There’s more. A pair of side-by-side 125-seat studio theatres, one configured for dance and the other for theatre, each features its own identical twin directly below. School for the Contemporary Arts director Martin Gotfrit explains why.

“Students need a long time to put a show in,” Gotfrit says, “and it seemed to make sense to have the rehearsal studios be exact duplicates of the performance spaces, so they can build and block and do all those things in a space that’s exactly like the one they’ll eventually perform in.”

“That really intrigued me as a creator of new work,” says Dodge. “It’s so great, the idea that you can essentially create in the same space as you perform — I thought that was a pretty smart design, and I’ve never seen it before.”

That clever copying is also true for another space, one which will house the school’s Indonesian gamelan orchestra and act as a focal point for world music.

A 350-seat lecture hall for film students is equally innovative, equipped to easily screen feature films, and Vancouver’s film and television community will be clamouring for the chance to book use of a professional-calibre sound stage with complete acoustic isolation.

The Audain Gallery on the main floor will present exhibitions in the visual arts.

A variety of studio spaces have been individually designed to match different disciplines, whether in the visual arts or dance or theatre or music, and hanging from the ceiling of every hallway are wire-mesh trays carrying all the wiring — no more pulling up the floors or gouging at the walls to replace outmoded technologies.

When Gotfrit is joined by Michael Boucher, SFU’s director of cultural development and programming, they’re asked if they received everything on their wish list for the move downtown. Both burst into laughter.

“We got caught up in that sweet moment when everybody was building everything,” Gotfrit explains, “and the cost of concrete was going up some huge amount every week. We were forced to reduce the size of the school, so some of the classes will be at Harbourfront Centre. Since it’s such a short walk, it hardly matters.”

Another crunch came when city planners demanded that the building’s northeast corner be cut off, reducing space even further.

Boucher and Gotfrit, though, relish the intimacy and attendant vibrancy to come, agreeing that what they’ve wound up with sure beats what will be happily left behind in Burnaby — and former student Dodge agrees.

“We essentially spent most of our time in portables,” he recalls.

“The black-box theatre up there was a portable, and we had raccoons coming out from underneath it.”

“Yes,” Gotfrit says with a chuckle, “we have all manners of creatures living in our space, which are ‘temporary’ structures built 30 years ago. Coyotes, raccoons, mice, mould — you name it, we’ve got it. We even have carpenter ants!”

Downtown, however, is clean as a whistle — or will be when they sweep up. Boucher has been hosting a steady stream of visitors keen to see the facilities; many groups have already expressed interest in partnering with the school.

“We’re early in the game on this,” he says, “but we definitely have been talking to various organizations about artistic outreach and crossovers. We’re going to reach out to the community in ways that make sense.”

And not just the community of artists such as Dodge and Boca del Lupo. Everyone at the School for the Contemporary Arts is keenly aware of their obligation to be good neighbours in the Downtown Eastside.

“We want to encourage and facilitate exchanges,” Boucher explains, “ where, for instance, significant artists visiting us might be invited to speak at the Carnegie Centre.”

Even supposed rivals, such as the fine-arts programs at the University of British Columbia, are on the guest list.

“The thing about Vancouver is that we all have to work together,” Boucher says.

SFU AT WOODWARD’S BY THE NUMBERS

– The school is designed to welcome more than 5,000 arts enthusiasts to music, film, theatre, dance and visual arts events throughout a year.

The facility of 125,000 square feet (more than 11,000 square metres) will include:

– The Fei and Milton Wong Experimental Theatre, which can accommodate staging configurations ranging from proscenium to arena and which can house audiences up to a maximum of 350 depending upon the size of performance area and the seating arrangement chosen. This space can be subdivided to create a separate 125-seat performance space. The full area of the floor will be sprang for dance or physical theatre.

– Two studio theatres capable of seating an audience of 125, one of which is optimized for dance, the other for theatre performance, but both of which could serve well for either form or for a variety of alternate performance forms.

– The World Art Performance Studio will house the School’s Indonesian gamelan orchestra and have a decor to match -somewhat warmer and less neutral than the studio theatres. This space will be the home of several public performance series such as music, world music, world dance and shadow puppet theatre.

– A 350-seat cinema/lecture hall equipped to screen feature films and house lectures, panel discussions and large classes at SFU Vancouver.

– A teaching gallery on the ground floor to accommodate contemporary visual arts exhibitions, either in the street windows or in all or part of the room. There are six moving wall panels that can be arranged as display walls or which can be used to partition the gallery into three parts.

The facility will house the majority of the teaching and administrative functions of the School for the Contemporary Arts. Other teaching and research facilities include:

– A film sound stage with acoustic isolation for the shooting of interior sequences, a film classroom and two 25-seat screening rooms.

– Three additional dance studios, each slightly different in character and optimized for different dance forms.

– Two additional theatre studios with sprang floors for movement training.

– A principal music teaching studio to complement the World Art Studio as well as smaller studios and practise rooms for teaching and studio work in acoustic and electronic music.

– Two visual art and interdisciplinary studios.

– A two-level multidisciplinary complex incorporating two computer teaching labs and numerous smaller computer-based editing and composing suites for film, video, graphics and design, and electro-acoustic music as well as several traditional film editing suites.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Why I hope the False Creek streetcars stick around

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

Bob Ransford
Sun

The ‘Olympic Line’ streetcars came to town last month and will operate for two months. Photograph by: Ward Perrin, Vancouver Sun

One important project this year can trigger the kind of redevelopment that will shape sustainable urbanism and real livability in more than one Vancouver neighbourhood.

This one single project can clearly demonstrate a commitment to return to a time in Vancouver when public transit set the pattern for an urban fabric that made it easy for everyone to live in distinct neighbourhoods that are complete neighbourhoods and have easy access to jobs, services and recreation without having to drive a car.

This one project can be pointed to as a true Olympic legacy left behind after the Winter Games–a legacy that could be a powerful form-maker for Vancouver’s future growth. In fact, the promise of this project is being dangled right in front of Vancouverites, in a way teasing us all during the upcoming Olympics.

I am talking about the Olympic Line — Vancouver’s 2010 demonstration modern streetcar line showcasing for two months the potential to one day reintroduce the streetcar to Vancouver’s streets.

That one day could be soon if the city continues to take the lead and plan creatively to keep the streetcar running after the Olympic demonstration and quickly expand it by a few kilometres.

Interestingly, the Olympic Line doesn’t involve TransLink, the region’s cash-strapped, but all powerful transportation authority. Instead, it’s an innovative joint venture between the City of Vancouver, Bombardier Transportation and the federal government’s Granville Island.

Beginning in a couple of weeks and through to March 21, the Olympic Line demonstration streetcar project will run between the entrance to Granville Island and the new Canada Line Olympic Village Station at West Second and Cambie. As part of its partnership, Bombardier, a world leader in urban transit technology and a respected Canadian-born company, is providing two of its ultramodern Flexity-brand streetcars on loan from Belgium’s Brussels Transport Company. The city invested $8.5 million to upgrade the 1.8-kilometre portion of Downtown Historic Railway line on which the two low-floor streetcars will run. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., Granville Island’s administrator, provided an addition $500,000 to the project.

This project demonstrates that a streetcar, operating at grade on existing rights-of-way, is a relatively inexpensive form of public transit, especially when compared to tens of millions of dollars per kilometre it costs to build the neighbourhood-unfriendly elevated or subway SkyTrain.

The partnership between the city, Bombardier and Granville Island that made this project happen serves as an example of the kind of innovative partnership that can be forged to bypass the typical politically complicated mega-project structures that seem to take forever to get a project off the ground.

With very little effort and relatively few dollars, the Olympic Line could become permanent and expanded to achieve multiple objectives.

First, by extending the line east through the city’s Southeast False Creek lands–through the heart of the Olympic Village development–across Main Street and less than another 2.5 kilometres east to the Clark Drive Sky-Train Station, this streetcar line can effectively link all three main rail transit lines: the Canada Line, the Millennium Line and, through the Commercial and Broadway Station, the Expo Line.

Crossing Main Street means providing transit access to the False Creek flats, one of the city’s largest tracts of land ripe for redevelopment, and the logical area for a new form of expanded downtown.

Planners have long fretted over the threat of losing this once-industrial district to another single-use residential neighbourhood. They know any sustainable city needs a service and light industrial district close to its downtown. They also know that the central business district eventually needs room to grow to maintain downtown jobs and those jobs need to be close to inner-city housing.

With neighbourhood-scale transit access that links the area to the region’s transit backbone, the False Creek flats could be transformed into an urban district that takes its cues from all that is good and has been good in the past in Vancouver.

The Vancouver of the distant past saw richly diverse mixed-use neighbourhoods originally form around key streetcar lines. The False Creek flats could become a district rich with a mix of light industrial, processing, service-commercial, retail, residential and recreational uses. The form of development could take its cue not from the highrises of the downtown peninsula, but from the midrise density of Southeast False Creek with European-style narrow streets in a grid pattern that provides form to a neighbourhood easily served by a linear at-grade streetcar line.

With a streetcar line effectively linking the three rail transit lines that bisect Vancouver and tying together a number of key bus lines, the justification for increased density around Vancouver’s transit stations and key transit intersection becomes even clearer. This holds the promise of the city moving toward a form of ecodensity that will provide the kind of housing supply needed to keep housing prices from continuing to skyrocket.

Finally, a permanent streetcar line terminating at Granville Island provides further justification for a continued public reinvestment in the island and its aging facilities. Granville Island is now more than 30 years old. Significant dollars need to be spent to maintain and renew the heavily used public place. By making it easier to access the Island, especially without the car, there will be a renewed focus on this world-renowned urban jewel.

Let’s hope, before the Olympics are over, a few bright minds sit down and figure out how to keep the Olympic Line running and realize the promise of the first phase of a real streetcar project to enhance Vancouver’s future urbanism.

Bob Ransford is a public affairs consultant with CounterPoint Communications Inc. He is a former real estate developer who specializes in urban land use issues. E-mail: [email protected]

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Cell phone (and MP3) law takes effect: Here’s the fine print

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Gillian Shaw
Sun

Step away from your cellphone — that is, if you are getting behind the wheel of a vehicle in British Columbia, where juggling the steering wheel in one hand while using the other to text or talk on your phone is now forbidden by law.

The ban applies to cellphones, personal digital assistants, MP3 players and other handheld devices.

But you don’t have to be totally cut off when you get behind the wheel. A number of hands-free solutions will keep you legal, from those that come built-in with higher-end autos to technology that reads your e-mail while you drive and wired or wireless headsets that start as low as $30.

However, if you are a learner or a new licence holder under B.C.’s graduated licence program (GLP), meaning you have a Class 7 or Class 7L licence, you can stop reading now. For you there are no hands-free exceptions to the law. GLP drivers are not allowed to use electronic devices that cover a long list, including: “hand-held cell phones, handheld devices capable of transmitting or receiving e-mail or other text-based messages, electronic devices that include a hands-free telephone function, global positioning systems, hand held devices that can compute data, hand held audio players, hand microphones and televisions,” according to the B.C. government’s advisory on the issue.

GLP drivers can listen to hand-held audio players but only through the vehicle’s speaker system, and they can’t hold or operate the player while driving. So plug in and program your iPod to play through your car stereo speakers before you turn on the ignition. The same applies for all drivers on that issue.

So, what’s allowed? An electronic device with a hands-free telephone function, as long as you don’t have to hold it in your hand to operate it and it is voice-activated or one touch is enough to make, accept or end a call. If it has an earpiece, it is one-ear only, unless you’re on a motorcycle, in which case a two-earpiece headset is okay. You have to be wearing the headset before you start to drive–digging around for it in your purse or pocket when the phone rings isn’t acceptable.

The electronic device has to be fixed securely in the vehicle or worn securely and within easy reach. It can’t obstruct your view or interfere with driving the car. Sending or receiving text or e-mail on any type of electronic devices while you’re driving is not allowed.

You can listen to an iPod or other hand-held player but only if it’s securely fixed to the vehicle or you, and the sound comes through the speakers of your vehicle’s sound system.TVscreens are still allowed but they

can’t be in the driver’s view unless they have photos, info or data designed for the safe operation of the vehicle. Options like the rear-view camera, therefore, are legal.

Hand microphones, used mostly by delivery companies and other commercial operations, are allowed if the unit is both a receiver and microphone, it operates by a push and hold to talk and allows for oral communications but not talking and receiving at the same time, according to the new legislation. It can’t be held in the hand and has to be within easy reach of the driver’s seat, securely fixed on the vehicle or worn by the driver.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun