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Granville Island is a peninsula and shopping district in the Fairview neighborhood of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It is located across False Creek from Downtown Vancouver under the south end of the Granville Street Bridge. The peninsula was an industrial manufacturing area in the 20th century. The area was named after Granville Leveson-Gower, 2nd Earl Granville.

Granville Island
Snauq (Squamish)[1]
Northwest Granville Island in 2005. The large complex in the centre is the popular Granville Island Public Market.
Granville Island
Location south of Downtown Vancouver across False Creek.
Geography
LocationVancouver
Coordinates49°16′15″N 123°08′03″W
Archipelagopeninsula
Adjacent toFalse Creek
Area14 ha (35 acres)
Administration
Canada
Additional information
Official websitegranvilleisland.com

Granville Island includes a public market, a marina, a hotel, the False Creek Community Centre, as well as various performing arts theatres including the Arts Club Theatre Company and Carousel Theatre.

Granville Island Public Market
Granville Island Public Market
Apples and calabash geese, Granville Island Public Market, 2011.
Apples and calabash "geese", Granville Island Public Market, 2011.

Granville Island was used as the finale of the film Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol (2011).

The Vancouver International Children's Festival, the Vancouver Fringe Festival, and the Vancouver Writers Fest are all located here.


Transportation


False Creek Ferries and Aquabus provide ferry service from Granville Island to Downtown Vancouver, Yaletown, False Creek, the West End, and Vanier Park. Other water transportation options include a water taxi service to Bowen Island provided by English Bay Launch.

WESTCOAST Sightseeing and Vancouver Trolley Hop-On, Hop-Off services both have stops located at Granville Island.

Between 1998 and 2011, the Vancouver Downtown Historic Railway operated between Granville Island and Science World. The streetcar is now permanently shut down. [citation needed]


History


The peninsula was originally used by the Musqueam Indian Band and the Squamish people as a fishing area.[2]

The city of Vancouver was called Granville until it was renamed in 1886, but the former name was kept and given to Granville Street, which spanned the small inlet known as False Creek. False Creek in the late 19th century was more than twice today's size, and its tidal flats included a large permanent sandbar over which spanned the original, rickety, wooden Granville Street bridge. This sandbar, which would eventually become Granville Island, was first mapped by Captain George Henry Richards in the British Boundary Commission's naval expedition in 1858–59, and the island today conforms roughly to the size and shape documented at that time.[3] A British Admiralty Chart of 1893 shows the island in greater detail and conforming even more accurately to today's Granville Island.[4]

The first attempt to stabilize the sandbar by driving piles around the perimeter was an unofficial attempt to create some free real estate shortly after the creation of the original Granville Street bridge in 1889.[5] The Federal government put a stop to the work as a menace to navigation, but the piles are still visible in a photo taken in 1891.[4]

In 1915, with the port of Vancouver growing, the newly formed Vancouver Harbour Commission approved a reclamation project in False Creek for an industrial area. A 14-hectare (35-acre) island, connected to the mainland by a combined road and rail bridge at its south end, was to be built. Almost 760,000 cubic metres (1,000,000 cu yd) of fill was dredged largely by a man named Alvin Kingston, from the surrounding waters of False Creek to create the island under the Granville Street Bridge. The total cost for the reclamation was $342,000. It was originally called Industrial Island, but Granville Island, named after the bridge that ran directly overhead, was the name that stuck.

The very first tenant, B.C. Equipment Ltd., set the standard by building a wood-framed machine shop, clad on all sides in corrugated tin, at the Island's western end. (Today the same structure houses part of the Granville Island Public Market.) The company repaired and assembled heavy equipment for mining and forestry industries and used barges for shipping.

By 1923, virtually every lot on the Island was occupied, mostly by similar corrugated-tin factories.

During the Great Depression, one of Vancouver's several hobo jungles sprang up on the False Creek flats opposite Granville Island's north shore.[6] "Shackers" lived on the island, in town, or in floathouses, and survived by fishing and beachcombing and sold salmon, smelt, and wood door to door or at the public market on Main Street.[7] They were basically self-sufficient and were left alone.

During the Second World War, Wright's Canadian Ropes on the island was Canada's biggest manufacturer of heavy-duty wire rope. Their Green Heart product was supplied to forestry and mining industries. A fire in 1953 gutted their Granville Island factory so they moved to south Vancouver in 1956. In 1972, a federal order-in-council assigned management of the 14-hectare site to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC).[8] The federal government invested $24.7 million there between 1973 and 1982.[8] In 1979, the federal and provincial governments converted a 50,000 square foot building to the Public Market. In 1980, the Emily Carr University of Art & Design was added to the island.

Ron Basford, the Minister responsible for CMHC was, was referred to as Mr. Granville and was later recognized with the naming of Ron Basford Park on Granville Island.

In 2016, the federal government announced a commitment to develop a 2040 plan to redevelop the island, in part because the Emily Carr University was going to move off the island.[9][10]


Granville Island Public Market


The Granville Island Public Market was established in 1979 as a location where farmers and other food vendors could sell to consumers. It operates year-round in an enclosed facility where customers can purchase fresh produce, meat, fish and seafood, cheeses and other products, many locally sourced. There are generally 50 vendors in the market. The market includes retail food vendors, selling a range of items from Mexican, Asian, Greek and deli food to candy and snacks. The market attracts both local residents and tourists. The market includes a "kids market" designed for children.[11][12]


Other businesses


Granville Island Brewing Co. is the name of a beer company which originated on Granville Island in 1984, but whose main base of operations was moved to Kelowna, British Columbia, some time later. In 2009 it was purchased by Molson's Brewery and continues to brew small batches of its varieties at the Granville Island brewing original site, and offers beer tasting and tours of their brewing facilities.

Ocean Concrete is the longest-established tenant on the island, having set up shop there in 1917. In 2014, OSGEMEOS (Portuguese for THE TWINS), consisting of brother duo Gustavo and Otavio Pandolfo, revamped the concrete silos with their ongoing mural project, 'Giants'.[8]

Granville Island is home to several theatre companies such as the Arts Club Theatre Company, Arts Umbrella, Axis Theatre Company, Boca Del Lupo, Carousel Theatre for Young People, Ruby Slippers Production Company, and the Vancouver Theatre Sports League.[13]

Canada's only physical hammock shop, the Hamuhk Hangout Place, has been operating on Granville Island since 1995.[14]




Notable residents



References


  1. "The Insiders Guide to Granville Island". Archived from the original on October 17, 2012.
  2. "About Us". Granville Island. June 1, 2017. Retrieved August 15, 2022.
  3. Hayes, Derek. "Historical Atlas of Vancouver and the Lower Fraser Valley False", 2005. p. 30.
  4. Hayes, Derek. "Historical Atlas of Vancouver and the Lower Fraser Valley False", 2005. p. 104.
  5. "Granville Island History".
  6. Roddan, Andrew; Todd McCallum (2005) [1931]. Vancouver's Hoboes [God in the Jungles]. Vancouver: Subway Books. pp. ii–iii, 83–84. ISBN 0-9687163-9-3.
  7. Wade, Jill (March 1, 1997). "Home or Homelessness? Marginal housing in Vancouver, 1886–1950". Urban History Review. 25 (2): 19–29. doi:10.7202/1016068ar. Retrieved February 4, 2007.
  8. Stueck, Wendy (December 30, 2014). "Beloved Granville Island a landmark in transition". Globe & Mail. Retrieved May 7, 2016.
  9. Howell, Mike (May 6, 2016). "Feds launch plan to re-imagine Granville Island in 2040 : Revitalization of the public market among potential changes". Vancouver Courier.
  10. Bramham, Daphne (May 6, 2016). "A 'jewel' in need of polishing, Granville Island gets some needed attention". Vancouver Sun.
  11. "Granville Island Public Market". Project for Public Spaces.
  12. "Granville Island Public Market: Top 10 Places to Eat and Shop". The Eat Journal. February 28, 2012.
  13. "Theatre Companies". Granville Island.
  14. "Happy Hanging". CBC – Still Standing.
  15. McIntyre, Gordon (January 13, 2016). "Remembering peerless Province sports writer Jim Coleman". The Province. Retrieved June 27, 2020.



На других языках


[de] Granville Island

Granville Island ist eine kleine Halbinsel sowie ein Einkaufs- und Kulturviertel in der kanadischen Stadt Vancouver. Sie liegt im Meeresarm False Creek unter dem südlichen Ende der Granville Street Bridge. Granville Island entstand 1915 durch Landgewinnung, indem die Rinne zwischen zwei flachen Sandbänken aufgefüllt wurde. Die Halbinsel war einst ein Industriegebiet, das ab den 1950er Jahren mehr und mehr verfiel und schließlich in den 1970er Jahren neuen Nutzungen zugeführt wurde.
- [en] Granville Island



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