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2014 Top Ten Endangered Sites

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#4/ Morrisette Farm House (1912) –
Historic Vancouver farms: A disappearing breed

Image - Morrisette Farm House, 5503 Blenheim Street, Vancouver

Photo: Morrisette Farm House (1912); 5503 Blenheim Street, Vancouver, BC

 

There is an immediate threat to two identified historic farmhouses, the Morrisette Farm house (1912) in Dunbar, a designated heritage building, and the Avalon Dairy in Killarney. The threat to these two early farm buildings, and the continuing demolition of others, demonstrates the necessity of identifying historic farmhouses that still survive. Hopefully, more of these reminders of Vancouver’s agricultural past can be added to the Heritage Register, saved and restored.

 

What is the threat to Farm Houses?

Two farmhouses that have been recognized as significant and worthy of preservation are immediately threatened. The Morrisette Farm house (1912) at 5503 Blenheim Street in Dunbar was originally on ten acres. In 1998 the City permitted reconfiguration of the two lots on which it sits, allowing three units in the restored house, and a separate lot to the south. The house was designated, and a Heritage Revitalization Agreement completed.

The development appears to have stalled, and the historic house is now standing empty and deteriorating.

Avalon Dairy, 5109 Wales Street in Killarney was sold following cessation of its dairy operations in 2011. It sits on eight single-family lots, undeveloped except for the farmhouse. An application has been filed with the City that proposes retention of the farmhouse and construction of multiple family infill buildings around it. The original proposed design was not well received since it crowded close to the house and obscured its view from the street.

A revised scheme has finally been submitted that appears to be much more sympathetic to the context of the original farmhouse.

In addition to these two specific challenges there is a broader overall problem. There is no specific inventory of surviving farmhouses and they tend to be identified only by local anecdote and frequently too late to preserve them.

Recently in Kerrisdale, 2065 West 43rd and 2405 West 51st were identified shortly before they were demolished. Fortunately, in Marpole both 8010 Osler Street and 749 West 64th Avenue were both identified by community members during the recent development of the Marpole Community Plan, and were suggested as additions to the Heritage Register.

These examples illustrate the threat, but also the opportunity to develop possible solutions.

 

Why are Farm Houses significant?

As illustrated in Bruce Macdonald's ‘Vancouver: A Visual History,’ in the early 1900s most of what is now the City of Vancouver consisted of undeveloped land. South of King Edward (25th) Avenue, only Kerrisdale, Hillcrest on Main Street, Cedar Cottage, Collingwood and Eburne (Marpole) were populated villages.

The land east of Nanaimo Street was similarly undeveloped. Some of the original forest had been cleared and had become farmland. Orchards, dairy and produce farms, some as small as 1.5 acres, provided food for the expanding city. The owners of these farms usually built their own homes, now surrounded by the urban growth of the city. 

Most are relatively modest, but have historical significance as a record of Vancouver’s early agricultural and social history. There is no record of the continually declining number of these early farmhouses.

It is interesting to note that other municipalities do celebrate their agricultural past. The London Farm house in Richmond and the Stewart Farm House in Surrey are both owned by their municipalities and operate as Museums and as programmed centres of community activity.

 

Heritage Vancouver’s position

Heritage Vancouver strongly supports the identification, documentation and retention, wherever possible, of Vancouver’s existing historic farmhouses.

We strongly encourage the City of Vancouver to:

  1. Use the imminent updating of the City of Vancouver’s Heritage Register as an opportunity to conduct the research necessary to identify Vancouver's surviving farmhouses, with assistance sought from the community. This process itself provides a further opportunity for additions to the Register, enhancing eligibility for preservation incentives.

 

What you can do

We strongly encourage the citizens of Vancouver to:

  1. Contact Heritage Vancouver Society (us!) if you have photos or historic information or stories about current or past houses you suspect might have been farmhouses. info@heritagevancouver.org
  2. Call the City at 3-1-1 to report neglect and request a case number
  3. Contact the City of Vancouver Councillors, to uphold Clause 593 (d) from the Vancouver Charter, clearly states that the owner of a designated property (such as the Morrisette Farmhouse) must not take any action that would damage the interior. Leaving the windows open displays willful neglect of this legally protected property. Contacts: vancouver.ca/your-government/city-councillors.aspx

 

 

 

Resources/Updates

December 2015
The Morisette farmhouse continues to sit, boarded up and vacant, and recently the upper windows have been left open in this unoccupied house, letting in the wind, rain, and who knows what else. Demolition by neglect underway? See the “What you can do” tab.

Clause 593 (d) from the Vancouver Charter, clearly states that the owner of a designated property (such as the Morrisette Farmhouse) must not take any action that would damage the interior. Leaving the windows open displays willful neglect of this legally protected property.

VANCOUVER CHARTER
[SBC 1953] CHAPTER 55
Part XXVIII — Heritage Conservation

Division (1) — General

Heritage designation protection
593. (1) Except as authorized by a heritage alteration permit or allowed under subsection (3) (f), a person must not do any of the following:

(a) alter the exterior of a building protected under this section;
(b) make a structural change to a building protected under this section;
(c) move a building protected under this section;
(d) alter, remove or take an action that would damage an interior feature or fixture that is identified under subsection (3) (c);

(3) A heritage designation by-law may do one or more of the following:
(c) apply to affixed interior building features or fixtures identified in the by-law;

 

 


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