I’ve been to Jericho Beach dozens of times over the years and often bike along the path that snakes through Spanish Banks, Jericho and spits out onto Point Grey Road. It wasn’t until recently that I found out the area was once part of the largest military training base in Western Canada.
Flying Boats:
The base was built for flying boats and seaplanes in 1920 and included four large hangars and a military storage building.
Up until the outbreak of WW2, the flying boats were used mostly to head off rum runners, curtail illegal immigration and map the coastlines. From 1939 to 1947 the base functioned mostly as a training unit and repair depot. After the war, the land and base were used by the army for the next couple of decades until the City of Vancouver took it over in 1969 (and handed it over to the Parks Board).
1969 was the start of a particularly egregious round of demolitions in Vancouver. In the downtown core which included heritage buildings such as the Vancouver Opera House, Granville Mansions, the York Hotel, the Colonial Theatre, the Strand, and five years later, the gorgeous Birks Building were all being cleared to make way for bland, boring high rises and underground shopping malls.
Habitat ’76:
Likely, the Jericho buildings would have met the same fate, but then along came the United Nations Conference on Human Settlement, Habitat ’76 and Alan Clapp. Clapp was the force behind Granville Island and the Dewdney Trunk Road Pleasure Faire in Mission, which was turned into a 60-acre village in September 1971 using deconstructed barns.
Clapp organized thousands of volunteers and transformed the Air Force hangars into two amphitheatres, a social centre, and a hall for exhibits primarily using driftwood from the beach and milled on site. Bill Reid created a huge mural on Hangar #3, which had been repurposed into a longhouse.
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Habitat ’76 was a very big deal. It ran at Jericho Beach Park from May 27 to June 11, 1976. Pierre and Margaret Trudeau were there, and so were Mother Theresa, Margaret Mead and Buckminster Fuller.
For more posts like this one check out Vancouver Exposed: Searching for the City’s Hidden History.
Repurposing old buildings:
It demonstrated to the world how aging buildings and unused land could be saved and repurposed.
For over 6,800 digitized photos of Habitat 76 take a stroll through Vancouver Archives.
After it was finished there were various proposals on how to use the hangars and the land including an athletes training camp, an aviation museum, an arts centre and student housing.
And, then in the face of all this common sense and despite public outcry, the Parks Board tore it down. Two of the hangars were bulldozed in 1978 including the one with the gorgeous Bill Reid Mural.
In October 1979 hangar #7 burned to the ground. That was followed just over a month later by the destruction of hangar #5. Arson was suspected in both.
A few buildings have survived. The former Marine and Stores Building became the Jericho Sailing Centre. The recreation hall, and at one time a military gym, became the Jericho Arts Centre, and the former army barracks is the Jericho Beach Hostel.
Less than two years after suspected arson rid the Parks Board of some problem aircraft hangars, flames ripped through another Parks Board eyesore – the much loved Englesea Lodge at Stanley Park.
The Jericho Wharf built in the 1930s, came down in 2011.
With thanks to Carolyn Affleck who sent me her photo of the burning hangar from 1979 which inspired this post.
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19 comments on “The Base at Jericho Beach”
One of my friends friends died there while playing. He fell from one of the rafters in the abandoned buildings. So the buildings were probably seen as more of a liability. I do remember exploring there. When I was little and imagining what the base was like when it was an Air Force base.
I know whom you’re speaking about. That was really tragic.
Habitat 76 was a lot of fun, I was in my early 20s when the hangars were converted for the Forum and it was a total treat for my friends and I to drink way too much beer at the world’s longest bar.
My parents met at the Jericho military base in 1954. They were both civilian employees of DND.
How about features on the street car and trolley bus barns? The street cars left for elsewhere in ca. 1951/52 from the depot at 14th and Main. The trolley bus barns took over the old army camp at 41st and Oak. I remember wandering through the camp in 1949/1950. The bush on the south side of 41st at Oak Street had the remains of a pig farm. As a boy, Cambie Street only came as far as 41st Avenue. From there a power line road went through to 49th and further to 54th.
Thanks for this, reading about all the destruction of so much heritage in this frontier city makes my blood boil every time…
Both my parents worked at the Jericho
Base in the ‘50’s
Both my parents worked at the Jericho Base in the ‘50s. That’s how they met
Oh, more sad stuff about Vancouver’s past… Of course change must come, but from at least the second Hotel Vancouver on, surely it could have been more judicious, and what would have been a rich heritage would still be treasured and enjoyed today. Still saddens me.
My uncle from England flew a plane into Jericho Hangars during the war and he came back to Vancouver back in the early70s and we visited the site very memorable.( not exactly sure at what point he flew a RAF plane here I’m assuming during the war)
My grandfather came to Jericho from England as an aircraft engineer after WW1. He worked for various airlines in his career.
My dad started his training in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He was offered additional training either in Halifax or Vancouver, he chose Vancouver. His living quarters were in the building, later the Hostel. During his training (RCAF) in Vancouver and up the coast, he attended dances put on by the Catholic Charities, CYO. That is where he met my mother, after the war they married and eventually had 6 children. We often spent time walking the beach at Jericho. Lots of fond memories. Great article, thanks.
Thanks for printing my photo and for writing this whole post! I really had no idea of the history of the base. But I did have fun there as a kid at Habitat ’76, and still have some mementos from that event. The buildings certainly had more life left in them if given some TLC, but I think it’s a really beautiful park without them.
the destruction of many of the old buildings in and around Vancouver didn’t do anything to improve the city. Perhaps some made money, but it would be ever so nice to have the old Birks building around today. Vancouver was good at destroying its past and it didn’t improve the city one bit.
Remember Jericho and its buildings well.
Thank you for all the reminds of my misspent youth.
My mother enlisted at the end of the war in Winnipeg and was stationed there. I have a lovely group photo of all the staff. My Father worked there from about 1965 to 1970. He was an officer in the Canadian Army and was involved in Officer training courses
My mom Hanelore Evans did the batiks hanging on the wall in the old hanger 7. After Habitat was over they went missing, not sure where they ended up…..Has anyone seen them around?
I actually worked the bar there with a friend of mine Paul. I worked a (4) hour day shift and then went to my other job at the Fraser Arms. I remember my dad and I going going there and asking permission to take some of the light fixtures. Go ahead. They worked just fine in our new basement It was fun to work. Nobody wanted day shifts so that’s fine. A bunch of us said we can do it. Met some very nice people and lots of people that were just curios also
Bernard Thor my father is the artist that carved those two sculptures that are all that remain of Habitat ’76.
You’ve reminded me about a post I did on the float planes carrying pigeons to be released back to Jericho.