Park Board Heritage "A"
at 2099 Beach Avenue
From top: The Park Board office at
2099 Beach Avenue, present day;
the Park Superintendent's house at
Beach Avenue, circa 1920-30; inside
front lobby of the building in 1961
- showcasing custom light shades.
July 11, 2005 - Vancouver's diverse and world-respected parks
and recreation system gives rise to numerous daily inquiries at the
2099 Beach Avenue hub of central operations. Stanley Park history ranks
high on the list of most frequently asked questions followed by the
widest variety of "asks" you could possibly imagine, from
recreation programs to horticultural requests to architectural details,
combining recent events with, what seems at times, ancient history.
A Beautiful Building
The Park Board main administration
office located at the Beach Avenue entrance to Stanley
Park is a Class A Heritage Building with an interesting back story.
Starting with its construction in 1911, the Stanley Park Pavilion's
second floor served as the central command post for the Park Board Administration
with the nearby Stanley Park Service Yard and nurseries located just
off Pipeline Road. At the time, housing for the Park Board Superintendent
and Assistant Superintendent were provided within Stanley Park allowing
quick access by these civil servants to their worksites especially during
a crisis. This housing compensation was reflected in their remuneration.
The Site History
By 1960 it had become abundantly clear that the Pavilion facility
was bursting at its seams with administration staff as the park system
burgeoned in all directions.
Park Superintendent Phil Stroyan (1943-1961) was due to retire in
April 1961 so he suggested a bold move. Always mindful of keeping Stanley
Park as undeveloped as possible, Stroyan proposed that the Park Board
Commissioners resolve to demolish (his) the Superintendent's arts &
crafts house at the park's Beach Avenue entrance and there build a new
Park Board Administration office spacious enough to readily accommodate
public meetings and a large staff. The idea was approved and in December
1961 the new offices were officially opened.
The Building Design
This post & beam style building designed (along with its subsequent
additions) by the architectural firm Underwood McKinley Cameron Wilson
and Smith is an elegant example of building melding into landscape,
both inside and out. It is over 20,000 square feet and is a low, two
story structure. Its exterior is granite clad at the base with the upper
wooden facades painted forest green and black thereby giving a natural
counterpoint to the beautiful trees and shrubs that would anchor it
in the landscape. Inside, the designers employed clear grain cedar panelling
echoing the relationship with that of the forest located just steps
away. All furnishings for the building, including the large Board Room
leather - topped circular table and cut metal lobby light shades, were
unique designs for this project and gave the open surrounds the feeling
of space and air – two commodities that all Park Commissioners,
past and present, continue to hold dear.
The Tree on the Front of the Building
Park Board Deputy Superintendent and Landscape Designer William "Bill"
Livingstone got to work shrubing up the exterior of the new building
immediately employing a lovely collection of specimen native maples
and, the office's most distinguishing feature, an espalier Atlantic
Cedar tree (Cedrus atlantica glauca) whose limbs and leader
are kept in check by continual pruning throughout the year. In the wild
this is one of the world's "giants" with bluish foliage, wide
girth and reaching 80 – 100 feet in height. The tree was planted
in 1961, the year the new administration building opened for business.