Sunday, September 9, 2012

sleuthing through finn slough...



A few minutes south from the glitzy hustle-bustle of Richmond central flows a murky narrow slough off the Fraser River into a falling-down rustic clump of a fishing village more than a century old...
A few kilometers from the end of the towering concrete pylons of the Canada line skytrain is sited a marshy block of patchwork cabins and rusting boats that is a world and a half away from the big box chains, the asian megamalls, the multi-glut of restaurants, and the monstrous maxi-mansions...


But here, on a sun-drenched late summer's day, the micro community of Finn Slough chills to the ebb and flow of the tide, the soft whirring of swallow wings, the gentle swishing of boats tied up, the creaking of worn boardwalks across muddy stretches...


Here, too, the wary inhabitants tolerate dog walkers, excursion cyclists, curious history buffs, enthusiastic sketching artists, over-excited photographers tired of urban scenes, the odd blackberry picker, and first-time sleuths from the sympathetic republic of East Van...


And here, this picturesque mucky strip of a historical Finnish settlement is now threatened by encroaching development and the "raze the rotting pile" mentality of short-sighted, quick-buck, bottom-line feeders with complete disregard of history or ecology or conservation, and obviously a most insensitive lack of appreciation for its rusticated nordic-riverine splendour...
























This Dyke Road flopdollhouse comes complete with a dirty mattress on the floor, miniature bottles and syringes strewn about, streaky walls, an unused bird's nest in a corner and billowing lace curtains...and also, a proud canadian flag tucked above the front door...

Finn Slough along Dyke Road at the south end of No. 4 Road, Richmond

Sunday, August 26, 2012

the Del Mar unmarred...


George Riste RESISTED THE DIVIDE at all costs and his building still stands today in david-defiance of the BC HYDRO dam of a goliath menacing from behind...
Old altruistic George has since moved on to the Great Beyond but his noble and stubborn stance against corporate behemoths will ensure that this centenarian house of clean and happy tenants lives on undisturbed till time immemorial...UNLIMITED GROWTH be damned!




*NOTICE*
This property is
not for sale and it
has not been sold.
Thank you.
The Owner.

DEL MAR Inn [SRO housing]
553 Hamilton Street
OR Gallery [non-profit art gallery]
555 Hamilton Street

[more info on the DEL MAR on blog.ounodesign.com ]

Sunday, August 19, 2012

shedding still...


yes-today commiserates no-morrow...
and to pre-borrow is to re-borrow
from the next time for the this time,
from yesterday ever to the morrow...

Monday, August 6, 2012

the last quiet notes...


 When I heard that the Mansion was slated for re-development and its end days are drawing near, I felt that I should find a way in to record a little of its brief history as a communal house for some of East Vancouver's cool musicians...
I was let in on a couple of days when the house was quiet, resting between gigs and practices, and when most of the occupants were preoccupied elsewhere...










I found this bright orange satin cushion half hidden in the over-grown back garden - a pumpkin pretender tossed nonchalantly from a house where all that music will soon fade away...

[thank you, Marita, for letting me in]
[and thank you, Greg Girard and Emily Carr, for the assignment]


Saturday, July 21, 2012

kingsway long lived...[vancouver stretch]

On a recent Saturday evening when the sun was less intense, I biked a length of Kingsway from Victoria Drive all the way to Boundary - going south east along the north sidewalk and back north west on the south sidewalk [it was dinner hour and the sidewalks were mostly deserted] - and found a long street more than a little lost in time despite being a fairly busy thoroughfare connecting Vancouver center [at Main Street] diagonally to the Burnaby- New Westminster border... [It was known as Westminster Road when it was first constructed and renamed Kingsway in 1913]
The blocks are comprised of mostly low rise modestly nondescript commercial buildings, some with apartments above, and the businesses are still small family run shops and simple restaurants of various asian flavours...

a disco flashy torso in a closed for the night beauty parlour draws the eye...

while next door, an empty restaurant waits serenely for customers...

an upholstery shop so left over from another era...

and a signage post from the 1960's for a fast food restaurant remains standing...

the meticulously kept cluster of bungalows that constitutes the 2400 Court Motel exudes a mid-century wholesomeness that has somehow defied the marks of time and evolving tastes...

unlike the corner grocery store that has succumbed to the changes in buying habits and the neglect of neighbourhood support...

the Dream has died with this ex-wedding shop...

and Kimmy's desperately needs a face-lift!

Monday, July 16, 2012

marking my clark park:: part V


We could hear the eaglet's shrill cries from our house and we had spotted his parents soaring high above the park - our modest little park!  This is the first time Clark Park has hosted a bald eagle family and a few days ago our older son found the tree that they had set up home in...



The nest is quite hidden amongst the branches but daddy eagle keeps watch nearby, and every once in a while, an obnoxious crow would dare to taunt him and he would have to chase it away...


Around the base of the tree [mysteriously labelled WPC], there was scattered a small offering of flowers for the birth of a majestic but now sadly urbanized bird of prey...



Saturday, July 7, 2012

industrial grace



"You want a picture of that ugly building?!" asked the old guy dismissively as he climbed into his car parked near to where I was standing to take my shot.
Without lowering my camera, I smiled at him and nodded yes. He didn't wait for an explanation.
If he had been really interested, I would have told him that I frequently sought out old industrial buildings particularly for their disheveled and dilapidated state - that I find a certain solemn aesthetic quality in their decrepitude and the worn integrity of the utilitarian materials used, and that often the cubistic massing of structural forms resulted in an overall unexpected architectural grace...blah, blah, blah...
And he would have laughed in my face and gone away wondering about my sanity - but without a second thought to that monumentally humble temple of industry again...




GRACE Canada, Inc.
460 Industrial Avenue

Friday, June 29, 2012

windowlessness


""Keep your eyes open!
You're seeing this for the last time!""*



*selected lines from 'The Open Window' by Tomas TRANSTROMER, 1970 [translated from the Swedish by Robert Bly]

[this house has since been demolished]

Monday, June 25, 2012

unwindowed


Norman is a friendly guy and his produce is as cheap as they come on the Drive, but you have to wonder about the concatenated neurosis that goes on behind this graphically barricaded window on the side wall of his building... 
the chains of light squeezing through the bars of nondescript darkness dangle in casual defiance of a blinded quarry...

Sunday, June 3, 2012

door no more


 "Ara baixare les escales que donen a l'exterior i no penso defraudar."*
[Now I'll descend the stairs that lead outside and not worry about letting anybody down.]

*the last line from "Stairway, 1949" by Ernest FARRES, translated from the Catalan by Lawrence Venuti, 2009 [from Edward Hopper: Cinquanta poemes sobre la seva obra pictorica (Fifty poems on his pictorial work; Barcelona: Viena, 2006)]