Heritage preservationists are dismayed to see one of
the most recognizable landmarks on the North Vancouver waterfront being
scrapped.
Workers are in the process of dismantling the stern
end of the Flamborough Head, the Victory ship that has adorned Lot 5 of the
city waterfront since 2001. The ship was built at North Vancouver's Burrard Dry
Dock and launched in 1944. "Any remnants of the maritime history of that
area seem to be disappearing fast and furiously," said Jennifer Clay,
vicepresident of the North Shore Heritage Preservation Society.
Clay recently signed a letter to the city on behalf of
the preservation society asking council to clarify what will happen with the Flamborough
Head, as well as the PGE railway station building and yellow crane, and confirm
that all three will remain on the waterfront.
"Not only do these structures honour the
important and unique shipbuilding and wartime past of North Vancouver, but their
retention and integration into the development of the Lower Lonsdale area would
have many positive consequences ... creating an area with real identity and
'sense of place,' rather than just another generic shopping and eating
area," the letter urged.
After a behind-closed doors meeting on Sept. 9,
however, the City of North Vancouver council voted to spend up to $250,000 to
dispose of the Flamborough Head.
The stern was not only out of place, it was putting
the city out of pocket, according to Barbara Pearce, the city's director of
special projects who is overseeing the revisioning of the waterfront.
The stern isn't just a relic of North Vancouver's
history, it has become a sad reminder of what was envisaged as an anchor for
the redeveloped waterfront: a National Maritime Museum.
The city put the stern on a temporary cradle after
receiving it as a donation from the Artificial Reef Society of B.C. in 2001,
but when a lack of senior government funding killed the museum plans in 2007,
the stern was left to sit on its cradle, which is now reaching the end of its
life.
"It basically needs a whole new structure (and)
that would be a significant sum," Pearce said. "We asked council: 'Do
you want to invest more on the cradle? Do you see a vision of this on the site?
Or would you prefer we dispose of it?' "
The $250,000 set aside to decontaminate and scrap the
Flamborough Head may sound like a lot, but it was cheaper than moving it a
third time and finding another spot for it, Pearce said.
"Frankly, it's full of hazardous materials.
There's asbestos. Believe it or not, pigeon carcasses and pigeon poop are
considered hazardous materials and there's a lot inside," Pearce said.
"All of these things that we're doing now, the hazardous materials cleanup,
would have had to proceed and any kind of future structure to keep this on site
would have cost considerably more than what it's costing to dispose of
it."
The stern should be fully removed within six weeks,
Pearce said.
While the preservation society and citizen group North
Van Urban Forum have lamented that the discussion happened in camera, Mayor
Darrell Mussatto said council had no choice.
"When we discuss liability issues and any
potential legal action, they're held in camera," he said. "The
liability issue is the cradle."
Source: the province. 3 December 2013
http://www.theprovince.com/History+buffs+bemoan+scrapping+historic+Victory+ship/9239786/story.html
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