British Properties
British Properties | |
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![]() ![]() British Properties Location in Metro Vancouver | |
Coordinates: 49°21′00″N 123°08′00″W / 49.35000°N 123.13333°W | |
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The British Properties is a residential area in West Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.[1] The municipality of West Vancouver agreed to sell 4,000 acres to a syndicate controlled by the Guinness Brewing Company.[2]
The syndicate A.R. Guinness-Br. Pacific Properties developed the area as the Capilano Estates but Vancouverites nicknamed it as the British Properties.[3] The development is credited with starting West Vancouver's slow transformation from a ferry-access only, resort-style beachside enclave into a leafy suburban community with roads, parks, and shopping centres.[3] The development aided the design and construction of the Vancouver landmark Lions Gate Bridge which opened in 1938 and was partly financed by Guinness money.
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The original landscaping was designed by the prestigious Olmsted Brothers landscape architecture firm from Boston. Olmsted Brothers was founded by Frederick Law Olmsted - the father of North American landscape architecture and the creator of Central Park in Manhattan, Mount Royal in Montreal, and the innovative Riverside suburb in West Chicago.[3]
The neighbourhood was known for its strict whites-only policy. Property titles including covenants such as barring sales to “any person or persons of African or Asiatic race or of African or Asiatic descent."[4] Jewish people were also excluded although eventually the first synagogue in West Vancouver was built opposite the entrance to the British Properties.[5] In modern times, the resident population is diverse due to the property values and other factors attracting Asian and other international investors.[3] It is said that residents are just as likely to speak Persian or Mandarin.[5]
References
- ↑ "British Properties (community)". BCGNIS. Retrieved 8 May 2014.
- ↑ Davis, Chuck. "Brief History of Greater Vancouver". The History of Metropolitan Vancouver. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 "Project builds on storied history". Vancouver Sun. 17 December 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
- ↑ Hopper, Tristan (16 May 2014). "B.C. property titles bear reminders of a time when race-based covenants kept neighbourhoods white". National Post.
- 1 2 Ditmars, Hadani (27 Nov 2009). "In Vancouver, a Rancher revival". Globe & Mail. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
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Coordinates: 49°21′00″N 123°08′00″W / 49.35000°N 123.13333°W