Home | About HV | Top Ten Lists | Newsletters | Events of Interest | Links


2007 Top Ten Endangered Sites

Top 10 2007 | < Back

 

10. Old Japantown: Powell, Alexander & Vicinity (Updated)

ImageIt seems as if Japantown is fading away — without anyone caring or noticing. This distinctive area, centred on the 300-400 blocks of Powell Street, was the community’s historical centre.

Thriving businesses lined these blocks. One landmark, the Tamura Building, also known as the New World Hotel, 394-396 Powell Street (Townsend & Townsend, architects, 1912-14), with its graceful sheet metal ornamentation, anchors one corner of Oppenheimer Park.

Other, more modest buildings — with distinctive setback upper-floor balconies — were common in the area.

Still remaining in the 400-block Powell is a remarkable stand — and highly vulnerable — of two-storey wood 'boomtown' frontages reminiscent of early Gastown and Chinatown before the great fire.

The green space, originally called the Powell Street Grounds and later renamed Oppenheimer Park, has always been the focal point. During the Depression, the Vancouver Park Board declared Oppenheimer the only park where political, religious or other views could be publicly voiced.

In the 200-block Jackson, a cluster of early houses still borders the east side of the park, and on the south-west corner of the park at 385 E. Cordova, the Sisters of Atonement occupy a house reputed by some to be the oldest in the city.

In 1942, Japantown was devastated when the federal government interned the Japanese and expropriated, and later sold, their property. Businesses and assets were either closed or confiscated. The formerly bustling enclave never recovered from the treatment it received during WWII. Perhaps the last building still used by the community, Japanese Hall, at 475 Alexander Street, is also the only designated heritage building on Alexander.

The general lack of protection is worrisome, as vestiges of the street's 'other' history — at one time, Alexander was home to a number of 'houses of ill-repute' — still survive in the 500 block.

Numbers 502 (a 'C' on the Register) and 514 Alexander are long, narrow turn-of-the-century structures with flat roofs, brick façades and bay windows. They are an oddity in Vancouver — a strange cross between house and apartment.

Although the other 'houses' have been replaced by social housing or industrial buildings, other unusual structures still provide company, such as the Edwardian apartment buildings at 504 and 666 Alexander.

Over the past two decades, the accelerating decline of the Downtown East Side has hit Japantown particularly hard. The years of neglect have taken their toll and recently there has been a noticeable erosion of the building stock. If something isn’t done — and fast — there will be nothing left. With heritage incentives available for Gastown, Chinatown, Hastings Street and Victory Square, we ask: "Why not Japantown?"

Updated 17 January 2008: The City of Vancouver has issued a Request for Proposal (PDF, 424k) for an Historical and Cultural Review of the Powell Street area known as Japantown, from the point of the evolution of the area, and its historical and cultural significance.

i   i
January 2006 ; Early residential bldg, Alexander Street; Heritage Vancouver photo   January 2006 ; Early residential bldg, 500 Alexander Street at Jackson; Heritage Vancouver photo
i   i
January 2006 ; Tamura Building (New World Hotel) 390 Powell Street, from 1912-1914 with it's sheet metal ornamentation; Heritage Vancouver photo   Detail of the Tamura Bldg ; Showing metal ornamentation of pilasters and corbels; Heritage Vancouver photo
i   i
January 2006 ; Early home on E. Cordova Street; Heritage Vancouver photo   January 2006 ; Edwardian apartment bldg, 666 Alexander St; Heritage Vancouver photo

i
January 2006 ; Japanese Hall at 475 Alexander Street (Designated) fron 1928; Heritage Vancouver photo  
i
January 2006 ; 400 Block of Powell, showing intact early 'boomtown" facades; Heritage Vancouver photo  
i
January 2007 ; Possibly the oldest still standing house in Vancouver - the Sisters of Atonement at 385 E. Cordova, dating from 1887; Heritage Vancouver photo  
i

January 2007 ; Early houses on Alexander Street; Left - Dales House, 414 Alexander dating from 1889, originally present with large amounts of ornamentation; Right - Harris House, 412 Alexander from 1898; Heritage Vancouver photo

 

 
i
January 2007 ; Houses on the 500 Block of East Cordova Street; Heritage Vancouver photo  

 


> top of page