Individual Costs Associated with Each Piece of Public Art Identified As Being Owned by the City of Vancouver on the City's P

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Individual Costs Associated with Each Piece of Public Art Identified As Being Owned by the City of Vancouver on the City's P YOF. CITY CLERK'S DEPARTMENT VANCOUVER · Access to Information & Privacy File No.: 04-1000-20-2018-473 October 30, 2018 s.22 1 Dear 522 Re: Request for Access to Records under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (the "Act") I am responding to your request of September 5, 2018 for: Total costs paid by the City for each individual piece of public art identified as being owned by the City of Vancouver on the City's Public Art Registry available at https:1/covapp.vancouver.ca/publicartregistry from January 1, 1991 to September 5, 2018. All responsive records are attached. Please be aware that there is an explanatory note on the final page of the re.cords which provides furtherinformation. Under section 52 of the Act you may ask the Information & Privacy Commissioner to review any matter related to the City's response to your request. The Act allows you 30 business days from the date you receive this notice to request a review by writing to: Office of the Information & Privacy Commissioner, [email protected] or by phoning 250-387-5629. If you request a review, please provide the Commissioner's office with: 1) the request number assigned to your request (#04-1000-20-2018-473); 2) a copy of this letter; 3) a copy of your original request for information sent to the City of Vancouver; and 4) detailed reasons or grounds on which you are seeking the review. Please do not hesitate to contact the Freedom of Information Office at [email protected] if you have any questions. City Hall 453 West 12th Avenue Vancouver BC V5Y 1 V4 vancouver.ca City Clerk's Department tel: 604.873.7276 fax: 604.873.7419 Yours truly, Barbara J. Van Fraassen, BA Director, Access to Information & Privacy Barbara. [email protected] 453 W 12th Avenue Vancouver BC VSY 1V4 Phone: 604.873.7999 Fax: 604.873.7419 Encl. :kt Page 2 of 2 Inventory of Permanently Placed Artworks Listed as Owned by the City of Vancouver in the Public Art Registry (January 1, 1991 - September 5, 2018) Registry Title Of Work Year Of Type Artist Name Ownership Sponsor Donor Program Project Name Site Name Site Address City External Total Installation Contribution Contribution Budget 531 SeeSawSeat 2018 Site Work Germaine Koh; City of Vancouver This artwork is part of a transit and corridor improvement Civic 88 BLOCKS on Main N/A Main Street and 51st Avenue East $21,000 $42,000 $63,000 project and funding partnership between Translink, the City of Vancouver and the Federal Government 727 Listening. On. Waking Terrain. 2017 Mural Bracken Hanuse Corlett; City of Vancouver VAHA (Vancouver Affordable Housing Agency) Civic N/A N/A 220 Terminal Avenue $5,000 unknown unknown 741 Spirits of he Realms 2017 Mural Haisla Collins; Jerry Whitehead; City of Vancouver COV Engineering Services; Government of Canada Civic Canada 150+ 600 block of Beatty Street N/A $33,400 $1,600 $35,000 Mehren Razmpoosh; Richard (Canada 150 Fund) Shorty; Sharifah Marsden; Vanessa Walterson; 740 Time Immemorial 2017 Banners Ryan McKenna City of Vancouver COV Engineering Services; Government of Canada Civic Canada 150+ Vancouver Public Library 350 West Georgia $18,400 $1,600 $20,000 (Canada 150 Fund) (Central Branch) 736 All My Favourite People Are Animals 2017 Site Work Erica Stocking; City of Vancouver VPL nəə́ c̓ aʔmat ct Strathcona Branch Library Civic N/A VPL nəə́ c̓ aʔmat ct Strathcona 730 East Has ings Street $100,000 $0 $100,000 Branch Library 759 Should I Be Worried? 2017 Site Work Justin Langlois; City of Vancouver This project is supported by the City of Vancouver through Civic Artist-in-Residence program N/A Southeast False Creek seawall, east of the $65,000 $0 $65,000 the Public Art Program and he Sustainability Group with Cambie Bridge assistance from Engineering Services, Utilities, Streets and Electrical Design and Operations. 745 Pick-up S icks 2017 Site Work art.site; City of Vancouver Pinnacle Private N/A Maple and West 10th N/A $0 $212,000 $212,000 development 713 Un itled 2016 Painting Jody Broomfield; City of Vancouver City of Vancouver, Office of the City Manager Civic N/A Vancouver City Hall 453 W 12th Avenue $20,000 $0 $20,000 657 United 2016 Relief Jordan Gallie; City of Vancouver City of Vancouver, Office of the City Manager Civic N/A Vancouver City Hall 453 West 12th Avenue $20,000 $0 $20,000 665 Salish Sea Waters 2016 Relief Chrystal Sparrow; City of Vancouver City of Vancouver, Office of the City Manager Civic N/A Vancouver City Hall 453 West 12th Avenue $20,000 $0 $20,000 655 Golden Tree 2016 Sculpture Douglas Coupland; City of Vancouver Intracorp Private N/A N/A 8018 - 8198 Cambie $0 $735,958 $735,959 development 627 Kapok Flower Sculpture 2015 Sculpture Li Ming; City of Vancouver City of Guangzhou, China Gift N/A Vancouver City Hall 453 West 12th Avenue $0 $100,000 $100,000 596 Shore to Shore 2015 Sculpture Luke Marston; City of Vancouver Portuguese Joe Memorial Society Gift N/A Brockton Point Stanley Park $0 $700,000 $700,000 555 Nike 2014 Sculpture Pavlos Angelos Kougioumtzis; City of Vancouver City of Ancient Olympia, Greece Gift N/A Median on east side of West Cordova & Thurlow Street $100,000 $500,000 $600,000 Cordova at Thurlow 565 Dude Chilling Park 2014 Site Work Viktor Briestensky; City of Vancouver unknown Gift N/A Guelph Park 2300 Block of Brunswick Street $0 unknown unknown Page 1 of 8 Inventory of Permanently Placed Artworks Listed as Owned by the City of Vancouver in the Public Art Registry (January 1, 1991 - September 5, 2018) 583 Rain Bench 2014 Site Work Heather Mitchell; City of Vancouver David Suzuki Foundation Gift N/A Trillium Park Trillium Park $0 $25,000 $25,000 589 Fusion 2014 Sculpture Susan A. Point; City of Vancouver Westbank Private N/A Granville at 70th 70th Avenue & Cornish Street $0 $150,000 $150,000 development 546 Ironclad Art: Sanitary Sewer Cover 2013 Relief Andrew Dexel; City of Vancouver N/A Civic Ironclad Art Manhole Cover Design Challenge Various Various $2,500 $0 $2,500 Design 547 Ironclad Art: Storm Sewer Cover 2013 Relief Nigel Dembicki; City of Vancouver N/A Civic Ironclad Art Manhole Cover Design Challenge Various Various $3,800 $0 $3,800 Design 559 Komagata Maru 2013 Memorial Lees + Associates; City of Vancouver Khalsa Diwan Society Gift N/A Coal Harbour N/A $0 unknown unknown 528 Mind Crystal 2012 Sculpture Cameron Kerr; City of Vancouver N/A Civic Changing Times, Celebrate Vancouver 125 š x ʷ ƛ̓ exən Xwtl’a7shn Georgia & Hamilton $50,000 $0 $50,000 530 Memento (Poodle) 2012 Sculpture Gisele Amantea; City of Vancouver This artwork is part of a transit and corridor improvement Civic 88 BLOCKS Art on Main N/A 3333 Main Street $28,713 $68,887 $97,600 project and funding partnership between Translink, the City of Vancouver and the Federal Government 519 A False Creek 2012 Site Work Rhonda Weppler; Trevor City of Vancouver N/A Civic Changing Times, Celebrate Vancouver 125 Cambie Bridge N/A $49,000 $0 $49,000 Mahovsky; 529 Geyser for Hillcrest Park 2012 Site Work Erica Stocking; Vanessa Kwan; City of Vancouver N/A Civic N/A Hillcrest Park N/A $328,000 $0 $328,000 532 Kingsway Trail 2012 Site Work Sonny Assu; City of Vancouver N/A Civic Celebrate Vancouver 125 - Shared History N/A N/A $40,000 $0 $40,000 Markers 608 Transformation Plant 2012 Site Work Chris Booth; City of Vancouver unknown Gift Earth Art 2012 VanDusen Botanical Gardens 5251 Oak Street $0 unknown unknown 499 Portal 2011 Mural Chris ina Gray; Jon Reed; City of Vancouver Department of Canadian Heritage (Cultural Capitals of Civic Platforms, Celebrate Vancouver 125 Mural Second Beach Concession 8501 Stanley Park Drive, Vancouver, BC $5,360 $2,640 $8,000 Canada Program); Commissioned by the City of Program Stand, Stanley Park Vancouver Public Art Program with the support of Vancouver 125 and the participation of the Government of Canada. 517 Abundance Fenced 2011 Sculpture Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas; City of Vancouver N/A Civic N/A Kensington Park 4900 Knight Street, Vancouver BC $225,000 $0 $225,000 441 Monument for East Vancouver 2010 Sculpture Ken Lum; City of Vancouver The Vancouver Olympic Committee (VANOC) Civic Olympic and Paralympic Public Art Program, N/A Clark Drive at East 6th Avenue $224,000 $0 $224,000 Mapping and Marking: Artist-Initiated Public Art Projects, Vancouver 2010 442 The Solar Bike Tree 2010 Sculpture Spring Gillard; City of Vancouver unknown Civic N/A Science World (Creekside Quebec and Terminal unknown unknown $42,619 Park) 445 Aerodynamic Forms in Space 2010 Sculpture Rodney Graham; City of Vancouver The Vancouver Olympic Committee (VANOC) Civic Olympic and Paralympic Public Art Program, Stanley Park Georgia Street entrance $500,000 $0 $500,000 Legacy Sites, Vancouver 2010 Page 2 of 8 Inventory of Permanently Placed Artworks Listed as Owned by the City of Vancouver in the Public Art Registry (January 1, 1991 - September 5, 2018) 450 THE WORDS DON’T FIT THE 2010 Sculpture Ron Terada; City of Vancouver The Vancouver Olympic Committee (VANOC) Civic Olympic and Paralympic Public Art Program, Vancouver Public Library, 350 West Georgia Street, Vancouver BC V6B $200,000 $0 $200,000 PICTURE Legacy Sites, Vancouver 2010 Main Branch 6B1 456 The Birds 2010 Sculpture Myfanwy MacLeod; City of Vancouver Millennium Development Corp. Civic Olympic and Paralympic Public Art Program, Southeast False Creek Plaza 1 Athletes Way $0 $450,000 $450,000 Legacy Sites, Vancouver 2010 (Olympic Village) 453 Ice Light 2010 Site Work Gunda Förster; City of Vancouver The Vancouver Olympic Committee (VANOC) Civic Olympic and Paralympic Public Art Program, City Hall 453 West
Recommended publications
  • 2876 West 33Rd Avenue
    CITY OF VANCOUVER BRITISH COLUMBIA 2010 WINTER GAMES SIGN DESIGNATION AND RELAXATION BY-LAW NO. 9697 This By-law is printed under and by authority of the Council of the City of Vancouver (Consolidated for convenience only to July 8, 2008) TABLE OF CONTENTS PREAMBLE SECTION 1 INTERPRETATION 1.1 Name of By-law 1.2 Definitions 1.3 Table of contents 1.4 Schedules 1.5 Severability SECTION 2 DESIGNATION AND AUTHORIZATION 2.1 Designation 2.2 Authorization SECTION 3 TIME LIMITS AND CONDITIONS 3.1 Restriction on relaxation 3.2 Compliance with Sign By-law 3.3 Electrical and construction requirements 3.4 Time limits for signs at venues or sites 3.5 Time limits for celebratory signs 3.6 Time limits for wayfinding signs 3.7 Sign removal 3.8 Conditions for signs at venues or sites 3.9 Conditions for celebratory signs 3.10 Conditions for wayfinding signs SECTION 4 OFFENCES AND PENALTIES AND ENFORCEMENT 4.1 Offences under By-law 4.2 Notice or order of violation 4.3 Service of notice or order 4.4 Fine for offence 4.5 Fine for continuing offence SECTION 5 ENACTMENT 5. Force and effect i SCHEDULES Schedule A - Description of Venues Schedule B - Description of Sites ii BY-LAW NO. 9697 A By-law regarding designation of a special event and relaxations of the Sign By-law for the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games [Consolidated for convenience effective July 8, 2008] ______________________________________ THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF VANCOUVER, in public meeting, enacts as follows: SECTION 1 INTERPRETATION Name of By-law 1.1 The name of this By-law, for citation, is the “2010 Winter Games Sign Designation and Relaxation By-law”.
    [Show full text]
  • For Transit Information, Including Real-Time Next Bus, Please Call 604.953.3333 Or Visit Translink.Ca
    Metro Vancouver Transit Map Effective Until Dec. 19, 2016 259 to Lions Bay Ferries to Vancouver Island, C12 to Brunswick Beach Bowen Island and Sunshine Coast Downtown Vancouver Transit Services £ m C Grouse Mountain Skyride minute walk SkyTrain Horseshoe Bay COAL HARBOUR C West End Coal Harbour C WEST Community Community High frequency rail service. Canada Line Centre Centre Waterfront END Early morning to late Vancouver Convention evening. £ Centre C Canada Expo Line Burrard Tourism Place Vancouver Millennium Line C Capilano Salmon Millennium Line Hatchery C Evergreen Extension Caulfeild ROBSON C SFU Harbour Evelyne Capilano Buses Vancouver Centre Suspension GASTOWN Saller City Centre BCIT Centre Bridge Vancouver £ Lynn Canyon Frequent bus service, with SFU Ecology Centre Art Gallery B-Line Woodward's limited stops. UBC Robson Sq £ VFS £ C Regular Bus Service Library Municipal St Paul's Vancouver Carnegie Service at least once an hour Law Edgemont Hall Community Centre CHINATOWN Lynn Hospital Courts during the daytime (or College Village Westview Valley Queen
    [Show full text]
  • Hockey Arenas: Canada's Secular Shrines
    Hockey Arenas: Canada's Secular Shrines IRWIN SHUBERT, SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY he importance of the hockey arena to Canadian society when a fundraising dinner was held to kick-off Radisson's T is best summed up by a statistical curiosity published arena campaign, 420 of the community's 434 people attended. recently in Harper's Magazine : The ratio of ice rinks to hospi­ This kind of dedication to the cause was repeated time and tals in Canada - 3:1. Now, this may say more about the state time again over the course of the campaign. But the most of health care in this country than it does about Canadians' love amazing aspect of this story, and the one that perhaps best for the game of hockey, but there is no denying that hockey illustrates the importance of hockey to Canadian culture and holds a special place in the hearts and minds of many Canadians. community, is the now legendary story of Joe T utt. T utt, a It has been referred to as "our game," "the Canadian specific," twenty-five-year-old driveway contractor who heard about "our common passion," "the language that pervades Canada," Radisson's situation through a national media campaign spon­ and "the game of our lives." It is part sport, part spectacle, sored by the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, decided part religion, and as a religion it has its places of worship. to cycle more than 3,000 kilometres from Milton, Ontario, to Hockey arenas in this country come in all shapes and sizes, Radisson to raise funds for the arena.
    [Show full text]
  • Price Tagstagstags Issue 100 February 4, 2008 A-Z Issues/Contents
    PricePricePrice TagsTagsTags Issue 100 February 4, 2008 A-Z Issues/Contents Click on “Contents” anywhere to go to Contents this page. Click on any letter to go to that page. A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z 2 Issues/Contents Click on “Issues” anywhere to go to Issues this page. Click on any number to download that issue. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 7a 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 3 Wel-com: How Price Tags Evolved Issues/Contents PricePricePrice TagsTagsTags … began as a simple Word document in October, 2003 - two pages of typewritten text and a couple of links. The first link went to ‘Surreal Estate,’ an online column in the San Francisco Chronicle by Carol Lloyd. The article - "Blame It on Canada“ - is still active. PT was a bit of self-promotion. The Chronicle column featured an interview with me, but mainly as a foil for Carol's observations on the Vancouver Style and what it might mean for San Francisco.
    [Show full text]
  • Ancient Greek Myth and Drama in Greek Cinema (1930–2012): an Overall Approach
    Konstantinos KyriaKos ANCIENT GREEK MYTH AND DRAMA IN GREEK CINEMA (1930–2012): AN OVERALL APPROACH Ι. Introduction he purpose of the present article is to outline the relationship between TGreek cinema and themes from Ancient Greek mythology, in a period stretching from 1930 to 2012. This discourse is initiated by examining mov- ies dated before WW II (Prometheus Bound, 1930, Dimitris Meravidis)1 till recent important ones such as Strella. A Woman’s Way (2009, Panos Ch. Koutras).2 Moreover, movies involving ancient drama adaptations are co-ex- amined with the ones referring to ancient mythology in general. This is due to a particularity of the perception of ancient drama by script writers and di- rectors of Greek cinema: in ancient tragedy and comedy film adaptations,3 ancient drama was typically employed as a source for myth. * I wish to express my gratitude to S. Tsitsiridis, A. Marinis and G. Sakallieros for their succinct remarks upon this article. 1. The ideologically interesting endeavours — expressed through filming the Delphic Cel- ebrations Prometheus Bound by Eva Palmer-Sikelianos and Angelos Sikelianos (1930, Dimitris Meravidis) and the Longus romance in Daphnis and Chloë (1931, Orestis Laskos) — belong to the origins of Greek cinema. What the viewers behold, in the first fiction film of the Greek Cinema (The Adventures of Villar, 1924, Joseph Hepp), is a wedding reception at the hill of Acropolis. Then, during the interwar period, film pro- duction comprises of documentaries depicting the “Celebrations of the Third Greek Civilisation”, romances from late antiquity (where the beauty of the lovers refers to An- cient Greek statues), and, finally, the first filmings of a theatrical performance, Del- phic Celebrations.
    [Show full text]
  • Meet Randy Sihota, Root Crop Vegetable Grower
    the skinny on carrots Carrots are a type of root Vegetable called A taproot. they grow down into the soil and come in many sizes and shapes—and every one a WhAt did one snowman sAy to goldmine of nutrients. the other snowman? do you smell carrots? The Double Scoop on this Week’s Snack! meet randy sihoTa, root crop vegetable grower... Our family farm, Canadian Farms Produce, is located in the picturesque Fraser Valley where we grow a variety of vegetables—from carrots to pumpkins. The sandier soils of the Fraser Valley are perfect for producing the most flavourful carrot that is the right length, bright orange and clean in appearance. We grow carrots for 3 specific markets: baby Randy Sihota, Canadian Farms Produce peeled carrots, carrots for packaging and jumbo carrots for the food service industry. Our baby carrot varieties (Sweet-Bites and Sugar Snacks) are not actually ‘babies’ but cut and peeled mature carrots. These varieties are stars for their consistent orange colour, uniform length and sweeter flavor. Do growers just plant seeds? That’s just where we start. From mid- March to early July we use precision seeders to plant the tiny, black carrot seeds in rows in our fields. The seeds take 6 to 21 days to germinate and 70 to 100 days to mature fully. We harvest the ripe carrots with machinery which pulls them up by their tops, cuts the tops off, then drops them onto a conveyor leading to a truck. The carrots are then unloaded onto a line where they are hyrdro-cooled, graded and packaged.
    [Show full text]
  • Visitors'choice
    attractions | Dining | shopping | events | MAPS Visitors’ ChoiCe Vancouver British Columbia Spring 2016 visitorschoice.com complimentary Vancouver vvisitorschoice.comc Visitors’ ChoiCe VanCouVer is created and published five times annually by Visitors’ EvEnts Choice (Vancouver) Inc. as part of a series of visitor map books produced for What’s happening? 12 communities across British Columbia. For further information on Visitors’ Choice, please visit us online at visitorschoice.com FEATUREs or email us at [email protected] publisher: Randy Vannatter highlights 6 Sales: Katharine Wilson travellers’ tips 11 editor & Designer: Annette Spreeuw president & CEO: Randy Vannatter Arts & Culture 16 chairman: Rick Fisher Get outside! 42 editorial contributors: Parks & Gardens Guide 45 Al Harvey, Annette Spreeuw, Artisan Sake Maker, Brad Kasselman, Capilano Suspension Family Fun 46 Bridge Park, Claire Baxter, Clayton Perry, PLAY Vancouver 49 Coast Mountain Photography, Commercial Drive Business Society, Cycle City Tours, Beyond Vancouver 57 Dannielle Hayes, Dasha Petrenko, Dominic Attractions & Activities Directory 58 Schaefer, Dragon Images, Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Garden, Downtown Vancouver Business Fun Facts 61 Improvement Society, FlyOver Canada / Jonathan Evans, Hamid Attie, Jeff Whyte, John Sinal, Lijuan Guo, Lissandra Melo, Maplewood Farm, Max Lindenthaler, Michael Maps Song, Muskoka Photos, Rogers Arena, Rupi Sood, Sam Chadwick, Sea Vancouver / B. Map 1 - Downtown Vancouver 32 Caissie, Shutterstock, Stephen Chung, Map 2 - Vancouver 34 Steve
    [Show full text]
  • Bcsfazine #507
    BCSFAzine The Newsletter of the British Columbia Science Fiction Association #507 $3.00/Issue August 2015 In This Issue: This and Next Month in BCSFA..........................................0 About BCSFA.......................................................................0 Letters of Comment............................................................1 Calendar...............................................................................6 News-Like Matter..............................................................15 Mini-Reviews (Julian Castle)............................................17 Art Credits..........................................................................17 BCSFAzine © August 2015, Volume 43, #8, Issue #507 is the monthly club newslet- ter published by the British Columbia Science Fiction Association, a social organiza- tion. ISSN 1490-6406. Please send comments, suggestions, and/or submissions to Felicity Walker (the editor), at felicity4711@ gmail .com or Apartment 601, Manhattan Tower, 6611 Coo- ney Road, Richmond, BC, Canada, V6Y 4C5 (new address). BCSFAzine is distributed monthly at White Dwarf Books, 3715 West 10th Aven- ue, Vancouver, BC, V6R 2G5; telephone 604-228-8223; e-mail whitedwarf@ deadwrite.com. Single copies C$3.00/US$2.00 each. Cheques should be made pay- able to “West Coast Science Fiction Association (WCSFA).” This and Next Month in BCSFA Friday 21 August: Submission deadline for September BCSFA- zine (ideally). Friday 28 August: September BCSFAzine production (theoretic- ally). Sunday 30 August
    [Show full text]
  • PARK DESIGN GUIDE 2018 Drafts 1 and 2 Prepared by Draft 3 and 4 Prepared By
    PARK DESIGN GUIDE 2018 Drafts 1 and 2 prepared by Draft 3 and 4 prepared by November 2017 January 2018 Draft Originated Checked Reviewed Authorised Date 1 for client review GW/RW/LD JR/GW NH HS 22/09/17 2 for final submission (for GW RW SJ HS 10/11/17 internal LLDC use) 3 for consultation AM/RH RH 24/11/17 4 final draft AM/RH RH LG 24/09/18 CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 4 USER GUIDE 6 STREET FURNITURE STRATEGIC GUIDANCE STREET FURNITURE OVERVIEW 54 SEATING 55 PLAY FURNITURE 64 VISION 8 BOUNDARY TREATMENTS 66 INCLUSIVE DESIGN 9 PLANTERS 69 RELEVANT POLICIES AND GUIDANCE 10 BOLLARDS 70 GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE AND BIODIVERSITY 12 LIGHTING 72 HERITAGE AND CONSERVATION 14 PUBLIC ART 74 VENUE MANAGEMENT 15 REFUSE AND RECYCLING FACILITIES 75 SAFETY AND SECURITY 16 WAYFINDING 76 TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE 17 CYCLE PARKING 80 TEMPORARY AND MOVEABLE FURNITURE 82 CHARACTER AREA DESIGN PRINCIPLES OTHER MISCELLANEOUS FURNITURE 84 QUEEN ELIZABETH OLYMPIC PARK 22 LANDSCAPE AND PLANTING NORTH PARK 23 SOUTH PARK 24 LANDSCAPE SPECIFICATION GUIDELINES 88 CANAL PARK 25 NORTH PARK 90 KEY DESIGN PRINCIPLES 26 SOUTH PARK 95 TREES 108 SURFACE MATERIALS SOIL AND EARTHWORKS 113 SUSTAINABLE DRAINAGE SYSTEMS (SUDS) 116 STANDARD MATERIALS PALETTE 30 WATERWAYS 120 PLAY SPACES 31 FOOTPATHS 34 CONSTRUCTION DESIGN AND MANAGEMENT FOOTWAYS 38 CARRIAGEWAYS 40 PARK OPERATIONS AND DESIGN MANAGEMENT 126 KERBS AND EDGING 42 RISK MANAGEMENT 127 SLOPES, RAMPS AND STEPS 45 CONSTRUCTION PLANNING AND MITIGATION 128 DRAINAGE 47 ASSET MANAGEMENT 129 PARKING AND LOADING 49 A PARK FOR THE FUTURE 130 UTILITIES 51 SURFACE MATERIALS MAINTENANCE 52 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS GLOSSARY REFERENCES QUEEN ELIZABETH OLYMPIC PARK DESIGN GUIDE INTRODUCTION CONTEXT Occupying more than 100ha, Queen Elizabeth Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park Estate is made Olympic Park lies across the border of four up of development plots which are defined East London boroughs: Hackney, Newham, by Legacy Communities Scheme (LCS).
    [Show full text]
  • APOLLO in ASIA MINOR and in the APOCALYPSE Abstract
    Title: CHAOS AND CLAIRVOYANCE: APOLLO IN ASIA MINOR AND IN THE APOCALYPSE Abstract: In the Apocalypse interpreters acknowledge several overt references to Apollo. Although one or two Apollo references have received consistent attention, no one has provided a sustained consideration of the references as a whole and why they are there. In fact, Apollo is more present across the Apocalypse than has been recognized. Typically, interpreters regard these overt instances as slights against the emperor. However, this view does not properly consider the Jewish/Christian perception of pagan gods as actual demons, Apollo’s role and prominence in the religion of Asia Minor, or the complexity of Apollo’s role in imperial propaganda and its influence where Greek religion was well-established. Using Critical Spatiality and Social Memory Theory, this study provides a more comprehensive religious interpretation of the presence of Apollo in the Apocalypse. I conclude that John progressively inverts popular religious and imperial conceptions of Apollo, portraying him as an agent of chaos and the Dragon. John strips Apollo of his positive associations, while assigning those to Christ. Additionally, John’s depiction of the god contributes to the invective against the Dragon and thus plays an important role to shape the social identity of the Christian audience away from the Dragon, the empire, and pagan religion and rather toward the one true God and the Lamb who conquers all. ASBURY THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY CHAOS AND CLAIRVOYANCE: APOLLO IN ASIA MINOR AND IN THE APOCALYPSE SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF ASBURY THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN BIBLICAL STUDIES BY ANDREW J.
    [Show full text]
  • Presentation to City Council July 23, 2014
    Maximizing Investment in PUBLIC ART Presentation to City Council July 23, 2014 1 COUNCIL MOTION February 28, 2012 Report back on: “…ways to structure the City Public Art Program to stimulate additional investment in public art in Vancouver” and consider: • Best practices in civic investment • Create a public art fund • Coordinate with Park Board • Identify sites throughout the city • Position Vancouver as a global leader 2 23-Jul-14 Achieving the Vision: Tools 1. Revise Developer Options 2. Create a Signature Projects Fund & Destination art site 3. Provide Core Civic Funding LightShed, 2004 Coal Harbour Seawall By Liz Magor 3 23-Jul-14 1. Revise Developer Options Developer Options Current Model Proposed Model A: On-site artwork 98% to artworks on site 90% to artwork on site 2% admin fee 10% to Public Art Program for civic priorities B: Cash-in-lieu 100% cash in lieu to Public 20% developer incentive Art Reserve 80% to Signature Projects Fund C: Combination of on-site 60% to art on site No longer available artwork AND cash-in-lieu 40% to Public Art Reserve 4 23-Jul-14 Estimated Total Annual Private-Sector Contribution Artworks on $ 2.45M Development Sites Funds to the City : 80% Cash-In-Lieu1 $ .38M 10% of all projects $ .65M to Civic Program $ .27M Average Annual Private- $3.1M2 Sector Contribution Based on 2008-2012 average of $3.2M, annual amounts vary 1Assumes 15% of developers choose to cash out to Signature Projects Fund 2Total is $.1M less than annual average due to 20% incentive 5 23-Jul-14 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Mount Pleasant's Newest Retail Strata Space
    2520 Guelph Street | Vancouver MOUNT PLEASANT’S NEWEST RETAIL STRATA SPACE. 2 PROJECT OVERVIEW Ideally positioned in the heart of Mount Pleasant with exterior frontage along East Broadway and Guelph Street, Habitat features nine retail strata units ranging from 684-1,872 SF with flexibility for much larger contiguous space, just steps away from Main Street. Exceptionally designed by FORMOSIS architecture, these small and efficient retail units are destined to become an architectural landmark for this area, averaging 1,161 SF per unit. Surrounded by flourishing residential developments in the Mount Pleasant neighbourhood and within 5 minute walking distance to top-tier amenities including Dude Chilling Park, Mount Pleasant Community Centre, Main Street and the future Mount Pleasant Skytrain Station. Features ≡ Ceiling heights up to 15 feet ≡ Expansive floor to ceiling glazing ≡ 15 underground commercial parking stalls and ample street parking ≡ Select units have base building provisions (venting and grease traps) for restaurant/eatery uses ≡ Patio opportunities for select retail units ≡ Activated laneway with retail and office opportunities fronting onto the lane providing a unique laneway culture CRU 1 interior rendering 4 This is an artist’s rendering only. Strata lot will be delivered as shell space and tenant is responsible for further improvements. 1A S t a n l e y P a r k S D t r a n le S y t a Beaver P n a l Lake r e k y D P r a P r i k p C e l a i u n s e e Stanley w R a d Park y Avison W ay 1A 99 ark Dr y P nle r ta n D S S goo ta La nl ey N P ar k Dr Lost Lagoon Burrard Inlet Devonian Coal Harbour Bates Harbour Park Park Slocan St W.
    [Show full text]