Kitsilano.ca has been following the saga of the Hollywood Theatre since 2011. And we’re glad the hear the most recent plot update. The movie theatre has been functioning as a church and was supposed to transition (awkwardly) into a two-stoery fitness centre.
But on Wednesday, the Vancouver City Council voted unanimously to protect Kitsilano’s Hollywood Theatre from demolition for 75 days and to expedite a staff report on saving Vancouver’s heritage.
From The Courier:
The Vancouver Hollywood Theatre Coalition recently formed and launched an online petition to save the theatre, which had collected 3,100 supporters as of Wednesday afternoon. “I don’t live in your neighbourhood, but I read the Courier,” Meggs told community members. He noted it was reported two years ago that the Hollywood was closing its doors, so why hadn’t the community organized around preserving it earlier?
Gail Davidson, a member of the coalition and a longtime resident of Kitsilano, said the community was pleased when the Church at the Hollywood resurrected the cultural use of the theatre. The coalition formed only when neighbours learned the church had been given notice and a redevelopment plan for a fitness centre has been proposed.
The community members say saving the exterior of the building is not enough — they want the cultural gathering place that can host performances preserved. Heritage Vancouver says the city has lost too many theatres and neighbourhood landmarks in recent years. Davidson noted a documentary by Michele Smolkin chronicling Vancouver’s vanishing cultural spaces premiered at the Hollywood last May. Smolkin started the petition to save the Hollywood.
Green Coun. Adriane Carr brought the fate of the Hollywood to council Tuesday with a motion to protect the cultural venue for 90 days. She wanted council to direct staff to explore upgrading the theatre’s heritage designation and retaining its heritage features and community and theatre use through discussions with the property owner, area residents and business owners. Only NPA Coun. George Affleck favoured her motion over Vision Vancouver
Coun. Geoff Meggs’ amended motion, which was passed by the Vision-dominated council.
Carr thanked the handful of passionate residents who petitioned council at the planning, transportation and environment meeting to save the 78-year-old theatre. They sat through a meeting that started at 9:30 a.m., focused on the Hollywood after lunch, with the decision reached at 5 p.m.
“Don’t give up hope,” she told them.
Meggs initially proposed a protection period of 60 days, but on NPA Coun. Elizabeth Ball’s suggestion the period was lengthened to 75 to account for the Christmas break.
Last modified: November 8, 2013
“the Church at the Hollywood resurrected the cultural use of the theatre”?!
Church, a cultural use? You better say uncultural. There’s nothing cultural about religion.
^you, sir, are a moron.