Vancouver’s Chinatown provides a shifting backdrop for divisive condo proposal
VANCOUVER — The nondescript parking lot at the centre of debate about the future of Vancouver’s historic Chinatown is unchanged in the six years since plans to build a condo tower there were shot down by the city’s development permit board.
But the landscape surrounding 105 Keefer Street is now much different.
Businesses ravaged by the pandemic have shut down, including Goldstone Bakery, a nearby landmark that would refund customers who paid to park on the site. Concerns about street crime and security in Chinatown have spiked. Vancouver, meanwhile, elected a new mayor and council that promised a law-and-order focus for the neighbourhood.
It is against this shifting backdrop that some groups that once rejected the development plans of Beedie Living now say they support the condo project that is back before the city’s permit board. They frame their new positions as a response to threats of urban decay and business decline, even as unmoved critics continue their years-long campaign against the project.