Every Place Has a Story

Vancouver’s Regent Hotel

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I was standing on the 7th floor of the Regent Hotel a few weeks back when a rat the size of my miniature schnauzer blew past. I just managed to stop myself from vaulting on top of John Atkin’s shoulders (the tallest structure in the hallway). John, it turns out, doesn’t just know buildings and neighbourhoods, he also knows rats. As he explained, because they are near blind, rats don’t run around things (like people), they stick to the wall and let their whiskers help them navigate.

At the Regent Hotel with John Atkin, Tom Carter and Judy Graves. Eve Lazarus photo, 2014

These days the Regent Hotel is a step up from living on the street, but only barely—residents fight a losing daily battle with rats, mice, cockroaches and bed bugs.

Just before the rat dashed by, we’d been discussing how the Regent Hotel was quite a ritzy place back when it opened in 1913, situated as it was in the heart of the theatre district. You can still see remnants—the wood floors and the marble staircase, which in the old days would have swept patrons down to the lobby where they could wait for their show to start.

Regent Hotel brochure courtesy Glen Mofford

 

As the Regent’s first brochure boasts, the hotel was five minutes walking distance of all theatres, a half block from the Carnegie Library and one block from the City Hall. It had a café that offered the “choicest that the management can procure,” 160 rooms “all light and airy,” 75 with a private bath and a telephone in every room.

The Regent Hotel, 1923 courtesy Vancouver Archives

The eight-storey hotel at 162 East Hastings Street, was designed by Emil Guenther and built for Arthur Clemes, who also owned the Pantages Theatre next door.

Regent Hotel in 2014

For more about our tour of the DTES:

The Main Street Barber Shop

The Smilin Buddha Cabaret

© All rights reserved. Unless otherwise indicated, all blog content copyright Eve Lazarus.

 

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8 comments on “Vancouver’s Regent Hotel”

I specifically like it when you write about the historic hotels and drinking establishments of Vancouver as this is where my interests are when researching and writing history. The social history of Vancouver, especially the social history of the beer parlours and pubs, and the saloons before that; a topic barely researched or written about to date.

My husband’s great grandfather, H.M. Cottingham, was the proprietor shown on the 1913 brochure. Do you have anymore details about him?

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