{"id":826,"date":"2010-06-21T22:30:54","date_gmt":"2010-06-22T05:30:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spacingvancouver.ca\/?p=826"},"modified":"2013-02-26T13:24:36","modified_gmt":"2013-02-26T21:24:36","slug":"a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1974","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/vancouver\/2010\/06\/21\/a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1974\/","title":{"rendered":"A Year in Five Minutes: Vancouver 1974"},"content":{"rendered":"<h1><\/h1>\n<div id=\"attachment_9032\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"400hornby_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/06\/400hornby_archives.jpg\" alt=\"The Credit Foncier Building, photographed in 1974, was designated this year as a Heritage Building. Item # CVA 778-212.\" width=\"290\" height=\"199\" \/>The Credit Foncier Building, photographed in 1974, was designated this year as a Heritage Building. Item # CVA 778-212.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>In 1974, the Whitecaps hit the field for the first time, important  structures were protected as Heritage Buildings and Vancouver finally  had its first neighbourhood pub.<\/p>\n<p><strong>By Chuck Davis, <\/strong><strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.vancouverhistory.ca\/index.htm\" target=\"_blank\">The         History of Vancouver<\/a><br \/>\nPhotos courtesy of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.city.vancouver.bc.ca\/ctyclerk\/archives\/\" target=\"_blank\">Vancouver Archives<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><!--more--><strong>Knight Street Bridge<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On January 15, 1974 the Knight Street Bridge opened. It replaced the  Fraser Street Bridge, 1.6 km to the west, which would close February 10.  Knight Street became a more distinct dividing point between the western  Sunset and eastern Victoria\/Fraserview districts after the building of  the bridge in 1974. This is now one of the busiest stretches of road in  the city, with hundreds of trucks using it daily.<\/p>\n<p>Innovations included the extensive use of semi-lightweight concrete,  and electric heating cables in the deck to minimize the use of de-icing  salt in the winter. Construction took five years. The cost, including  approaches, was about $15 million.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Granville Mall<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On January 22 Granville Street north of Nelson closed to automobile  traffic for conversion to a pedestrian mall. It would open August 22.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Whitecaps<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>On May 5, 1974 the Vancouver Whitecaps played their first game. They  debuted for a crowd of 18,000 people at Empire Stadium against the San  Jose Earthquakes, losing 2-1 in a shootout. One of the players was Bobby  Lenarduzzi, who had turned 19 four days earlier. He would become one of  the best soccer players Canada has ever produced, and would eventually  appear in more NASL games than any other player. Born in Vancouver May  1, 1955, Lenarduzzi started playing for Reading Football Club in England  at age 16, eventually appearing in 67 Football League games and scoring  two goals. He made his International debut for Canada against Poland in  Toronto in 1973.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Heritage Buildings<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>In December Vancouver began a program of designating \u201cHeritage  Buildings.\u201d These were structures that, for various reasons (historical,  architectural, aesthetic), were protected from demolition or exterior  change.<\/p>\n<p>The first 20 buildings so designated, with their location and year of construction, were:<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_9035\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"holyrosary_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/06\/holyrosary_archives.jpg\" alt=\"Holy Rosary Cathedral on Richards Street, in 1974. Item # CVA 778-384.\" width=\"320\" height=\"219\" \/>Holy Rosary Cathedral on Richards Street, in 1974. Item # CVA 778-384.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>1.       Hastings Mill Store (1865) 1575 Alma<br \/>\n2.       Christ Church Cathedral (1889-95) 690 Burrard<br \/>\n3.       St. James Church (1935-37) 303 East Cordova<br \/>\n4.       CPR Station (1912-14) 601 West Cordova<br \/>\n5.       Gabriola (1901) 1531 Davie<br \/>\n6.       National Harbours Board (1905) 50 Dunlevy<br \/>\n7.       Court House (1906-13) 800 West Georgia<br \/>\n8.       Orpheum Theatre (1927) 884 Granville<br \/>\n9.       Shannon (1912-13) 7255 Granville<br \/>\n10.     Bank of Commerce (1906-08) 640-698 West Hastings<br \/>\n11.     Old Post Office Building (1905-10) 757 West Hastings<br \/>\n12.     Credit Foncier Building (1913-14) 850 West Hastings<br \/>\n13.     Hycroft (1909) 1489 McRae<br \/>\n14.     Heritage Hall (1914) 3102 Main<br \/>\n15.     Glen Brae (1910) 1690 Matthews<br \/>\n16.     St. Andrew\u2019s Wesley Church (1931-33) 1012 Nelson<br \/>\n17.     Sun Tower (1912) 100 West Pender<br \/>\n18.     Holy Rosary Cathedral (1899-1900) 646 Richards<br \/>\n19.     Aberthau (1909) 4397 West 2nd<br \/>\n20.     Hudson Bay Co. Store (1913 &amp; 1926) 640 Granville<\/p>\n<p><strong>Pauline Jewett<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Pauline Jewett, 51, became president of Simon Fraser University  September 1, 1974, the first female president of a major Canadian  university. She would hold that post until October 9, 1978. During her  tenure women\u2019s studies, a seniors program, distance education into  B.C.\u2019s interior, and an innovative child-care centre were established.<\/p>\n<p><strong> <\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_9036\"><strong><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"stroch_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/06\/stroch_archives.jpg\" alt=\"The St. Roch, locked in ice in the Northwest Territories, in 1942. Item # Bo P305.\" width=\"320\" height=\"246\" \/><\/strong>The St. Roch, locked in ice in the Northwest Territories, in 1942. Item # Bo P305.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>St. Roch<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>October 16 was the official opening of the St. Roch National Historic  Site. It was 30 years to the day after its return from its historic  voyage through the Northwest Passage, and some of the former crew were  on hand for the ceremonies. An RCMP vessel, the St. Roch became the  centrepiece of a major display in its own building beside Vancouver\u2019s  Maritime Museum. The ship is unique because she was the first ship to  traverse the Northwest Passage in both directions, and the first ship to  circumnavigate North America.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Royal Hudson<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>BC Rail refurbished its famous 2860 steam engine, known as the Royal  Hudson, and placed it in excursion service between North Vancouver and  Squamish. The inaugural run was June 21, 1974. Each summer, from mid-May  through mid-September, the Royal Hudson hauled 1940s-style passenger  coaches, baggage cars and a dining car through some of the most  picturesque mountain and ocean scenery in Canada. This popular, historic  excursion was enjoyed by as many as 70,000 passengers each season and  became a feature of British Columbia\u2019s booming tourism industry.  Unfortunately, because of cutbacks at BC Rail, and maintenance required  on the locomotive, the excursions have come to an end. The big,  beautiful locomotive\u2014restored at a cost of many thousands\u2014is still  occasionally pressed into service for chartered excursions.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Asian Centre<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Construction began on the Asian Centre at UBC on January 8, 1974. It  would not officially open until  June 5, 1981. The Centre has an unusual  history: a UBC Religious Studies Professor, Shotaro Iida, who had gone  to Expo 70 in Osaka, Japan thought the Sanyo Electric Company\u2019s pavilion  would make a great Asian Centre for UBC once the fair was over. He  asked Sanyo for the donation of the building, and succeeded! The  building was donated to the people of the province of British Columbia  in honor of B.C.\u2019s Centennial. In addition to the Sanyo Corporation,  sponsors for the Asian Centre included the Canadian and Japanese  governments, business, industry and private individuals, many from  Japan.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Also in 1974<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The car insurance provisions of the Insurance Corporation of British  Columbia came into force on March 1. From this date, all motor vehicles  in BC were required to have ICBC insurance. The new corporation got off  to a robust start with one million policies.<\/p>\n<p>The Dover Arms, Vancouver\u2019s first neighborhood pub, opened March 8,  1974 in the West End. Legislation had been passed allowing the  establishment of pubs, an astonishing example of common sense.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver City Council voted March 19 to buy the Orpheum Theatre at  884 Granville Street, for use as a new concert hall, after Famous  Players had revealed plans to transform the heritage building into a  multiplex cinema. The largest theatre in Canada (2,780 seats) when it  opened as a vaudeville house called the New Orpheum in 1927 at a cost of  $500,000, the Orpheum cost the city $3.9 million and was then renovated  for an additional $3.2 million.<\/p>\n<p><em>Vancouver Leisure Magazine<\/em> was in dire straits in April of 1974. It had started in 1967 as Dick MacLean\u2019s <em>Greater Vancouver Greeter Guide<\/em>.  MacLean, who was still at the helm, was fired by owner Agency Press,  and new editor Malcolm (Mac) Parry hired. The first issue under his  guidance featured five by-lines\u2014all of them Parry, in various disguises,  including golfer\/author Driver T. Niblick. By the second issue,  journalist Sean Rossiter had joined Parry and, for the next two years,  they produced most of the magazine\u2019s articles. Today, as <em>Vancouver Magazine<\/em>, it\u2019s thriving.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver\u2019s Aquatic Centre, built to replace Crystal Pool, was  officially opened May 3, 1974. Swimmers would start using it May 6, and  the first paying swimmer to use the pool was 18-year-old Jeff Veniot.<\/p>\n<p>In July, Simma Holt, a well-known <em>Vancouver Sun<\/em> reporter and  author, was elected member for Vancouver-Kingsway, becoming the first  Jewish woman to serve in the Canadian parliament.<\/p>\n<p>Canadian Pacific ended its ferry service to Seattle September 30.<\/p>\n<p>Arbutus Village Square opened November 12 in Vancouver. Construction  had started in 1972. The 30-acre, $20 million complex at 4255 Arbutus,  built by Marathon Realty, included 450 housing units, a park and a  30-store shopping centre. The project had a rocky beginning, with its  neighbors almost exactly evenly divided over whether they wanted it or  not.<\/p>\n<p>In November Harbour Publishing produced a book titled <em>Raincoast Chronicles First Five<\/em>, a collection by publisher Howard White of the first issues of the magazine <em>Raincoast Chronicles<\/em>. It was a smash.<\/p>\n<p>Vicki Gabereau, latterly a Vancouver TV talk show personality, ran for mayor of Toronto as a character named Rosie the Clown.<\/p>\n<p>Popular Steve Woodman, \u201cthe man of 1,000 voices,\u201d was badly injured  when, driving home after appearing on a telethon, his car hit black ice,  went over an embankment and rolled out of control. He sustained severe  head injuries, was in a coma for a long time, and did not regain his  voice. The accident ended an outstanding career in which his voice  skills had been called on often. He eventually emerged from the coma,  was even able to play a bit of golf, but he never worked again. He died  in his sleep March 13, 1990.<\/p>\n<p>CKNW Radio\u2019s Norm Grohmann joined the cast of CBC Radio\u2019s <em>Dr. Bundolo\u2019s Pandemonium Medicine Show<\/em>,   replacing Steve Woodman. Other cast members at this time included  Marla Gropper, Bill Buck and Bill Reiter. Bundolo was produced by Don  Kowalchuk, written by Jeffrey Groberman and Dan Thatchuk (now known as  Colin Yardley) and ran from 1972 to 1980.<\/p>\n<p>Australia-born (September 29, 1930) Richard Bonynge (bonning) took  over from Irving Guttman as artistic director of Vancouver Opera. Some  of the operas Bonynge would conduct from now until 1978 would feature  his wife, the great soprano Joan Sutherland, \u2018La Stupenda.\u2019<\/p>\n<p>A huge rock attraction was born when Bachman Turner Overdrive,  managed by Bruce Allen, exploded out of Vancouver. Their first LP had  been released May 17, 1973, but it was the 1974 release of <em>Not Fragile<\/em> that made them internationally known. Their biggest hit single, <em>Takin\u2019 Care of Business<\/em>, is still being heard more than 30 years after it was released.<\/p>\n<p>Advertising agency Griffiths Gibson Ramsay Productions and Western  International Broadcasting Co. invested $500,000 to open Little Mountain  Studio. Among the celebrated groups that recorded there before the  studio\u2019s demise in 1994: Aerosmith, Bon Jovi and AC\/DC.<\/p>\n<p>Mushroom Records was founded by brothers Wink and Dick Vogel. An early Mushroom LP, <em>Dreamboat Annie<\/em> by Heart, sold four million copies. The label would declare bankruptcy  in 1980, a year after the death of its vice-president and creative  sparkplug, Shelly Siegel.<\/p>\n<p>A young Vancouver lawyer and alderman, Michael Harcourt, criticized  Vancouver police for their \u201cEliot Ness-style raids\u201d on gay bars and  bathhouses.<\/p>\n<p><em>The<\/em> <em>Red Book<\/em> first appeared. This was an initiative  of the Community Information Service (known today as Information  Services Vancouver), and had actually begun back in 1957, when they  realized their comprehensive card catalogue of community services in the  Lower Mainland would be useful to many other agencies and services.  They began to publish it every two years. This year the directory was  published in a red, three-ring binder and thus was born <em>The Red Book<\/em>.  In 1977 it would begin to be published annually because of rapid  changes in the information. (70 per cent of the listings change each  year.) In June 1996 a computerized version would begin. It is used by  doctors, lawyers, educators, clergy, human resources staff, emergency  services workers and others. More than 5,000 social, community and  government agencies and services are in the data base.<\/p>\n<p>Raymond Hull and publisher Gordon Soules and his wife Christine  collaborated on \u201can extensive sociological and economic study\u201d titled <em>Vancouver\u2019s Past<\/em>. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.abcbookworld.com\/view_author.php?id=4355\" target=\"_blank\">Read more here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Chief Dan George\u2019s book <em>My Hearts Soars<\/em> appeared.<\/p>\n<p>Fort Langley lawyer John Cherrington produced his first book <em>Mission On The Fraser<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Five book publishers cooperated to found the <a href=\"http:\/\/books.bc.ca\/\" target=\"_blank\">Association of Book Publishers of B.C.<\/a> In 2005, out of more than 50 members, 18 based in the Greater Vancouver  area cover every type of book publishing including literary, poetry,  educational, scholarly and a full range of trade books.<\/p>\n<p>Several publications debuted in 1974. They include: <em>Canadian Journal of Botany \u2014 Revue Canadienne de Botanique<\/em> A monthly bilingual academic journal on research in botany, published  under the auspices of the National Research Council Research Journals. <em>Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering \u2014 Revue Canadienne de Genie Civil<\/em> A bimonthly bilingual academic journal on research in research in civil  engineering, published under the auspices of the National Research  Council Research Journals. <em>Canadian Journal of Communication<\/em> A  quarterly, issued by Communications, Harbour Centre, Simon Fraser  University. It was an academic journal on communications and  telecommunications. <em>East Side Revue<\/em>, a community bi-weekly, distributed free to households in the area, and free at various drop points. <em>Westbridge Art Market Report: The Newsletter for Fine Art Collectors and Investors<\/em>, a bi-monthly from Westbridge Publications Ltd.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver Taped Books began. It was a project funded by a federal  Local Initiatives Project grant. Now named Audiobooks, another 250 or so  titles are added each year to the more than 5,000 released so far. The  Library Services Branch signed an agreement in the later 1990s with the  Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency to record work by well-known  Canadian authors,   including Alice Munro, Margaret Atwood, Robertson  Davies and Bill Richardson. Nearly 6,000 people throughout British  Columbia use the service yearly.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. David Suzuki began as host of CBC-TV\u2019s <em>The Nature of Things<\/em>. He\u2019s still doing it!<\/p>\n<p>The movie <em>The Wolfpen Principle<\/em> was released. Written and  directed by Jack Darcus, the film tells the story of a holocaust  survivor (Vladimir Valenta) who joins a young Coast Salish mystic  (Laurence Brown) in a plot to free the wolves in the Stanley Park zoo.<\/p>\n<p>Byron Black\u2019s movie <em>The Holy Assassin<\/em> was released. \u201cAdding a  science-fictional twist to his visual experimentation,\u201d reviewer  Michael Walsh wrote, \u201cdirector Black\u2019s second feature involves a  metaphysical criminal from another dimension hiding out in a local  hippie commune.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>And, of director Paul Krasny\u2019s film <em>Christina<\/em>, Walsh wrote:  \u201cPlanning to make his home here, producer Trevor (Groundstar Conspiracy)  Wallace found backers for this mystery romance, a vehicle for  Vancouver-born actress Barbara Parkins.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A big untitled metal sculpture by George Norris (whose more famous <em>Crab<\/em> fountain is a visual highlight in front of the Museum of Vancouver) was  erected in front of the Eaton\u2019s store at Granville and Georgia. In a  1981 guide book, Terry Noble described the piece as \u201ca majestic,  glistening, glinting dragonfly, bowing gracefully to all who pass.\u201d It  would be removed in 1987 and is currently stored in Surrey\u2019s works yard.<\/p>\n<p>The BC Cancer Institute changed its name to the Cancer Control Agency of BC.<\/p>\n<p>Johnny Carson came to Vancouver to plug his new restaurant chain.<\/p>\n<p>Minneapolis entrepreneur Tom Scallen, owner of the Vancouver Canucks  since 1970, found himself in financial and legal trouble, and sold the  team for $9 million to Frank Griffith\u2019s Vancouver based  telecommunications company, Western Broadcasting.<\/p>\n<p>The Jericho Sailing Centre began operating at Jericho Beach. It\u2019s a  non-profit, self-supporting association, under the aegis of the city  Parks Board. They call themselves \u201cVancouver\u2019s Ocean Access Community  Centre.\u201d Completely land-based, the centre has 3,000 members, 13  affiliated clubs, four schools, and is a site for thousands of  launchings of kayaks, canoes, sailboards and sailboats. A unique  affiliate is the Disabled Sailing Association whose members take to the  water in specially modified boats. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.jsca.bc.ca\/\" target=\"_blank\">Read more here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_9037\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"pointatkinson_archives\" src=\"http:\/\/regardingplace.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/06\/pointatkinson_archives.jpg\" alt=\"Point Atkinson Lighthouse in the 1940s. Item # Out N140.\" width=\"330\" height=\"213\" \/>Point Atkinson Lighthouse in the 1940s. Item # Out N140.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>The original, bellows-operated diaphone foghorn at the Point Atkinson  Lighthouse in West Vancouver was replaced by diesel-powered airchimes,  the sound of which carried eight to 16 kilometres. It came to be called  \u201cOld Wahoo,\u201d and there would be unhappiness in 1996 when it was in turn  replaced by a solar-powered electronic signal rated for two miles\u2014\u201clike  replacing an oboe with a penny whistle,\u201d said one old salt. The  lighthouse was designated a National Historic Site this year.<\/p>\n<p>Pacific Princess, famous as TV\u2019s \u2018Love Boat,\u2019 and her sister ship  Island Princess began sailing out of Vancouver\u2019s harbor in the Alaska  cruise trade. They would carry on in that trade until 1991.  They  \u201cstarred\u201d in the series, which ran on ABC-TV from 1977 to 1986. The  20,000-ton vessels, owned by P&amp;O\u2019s Princess Cruises, were built in  Germany.<\/p>\n<p>In May, 1985 the series began using the 45,000-ton Royal Princess of  the English Princess Cruise Lines as the regular ship on the series.<\/p>\n<p>B.C. Ferries bought a ferry for $13.8 million and named it the Queen  of Surrey. She would be retired after just two years, but then put on  the Queen Charlotte run in 1980. More than $10 million was spent  refurbishing her to serve as the Queen of the North. Under that name,  the ship\u2014with 99 passengers and crew aboard\u2014would sink after hitting a  rock about 135 kilometres south of Prince Rupert on March 22, 2006. All  aboard were rescued.<\/p>\n<p>Construction began on Robson Square in the 800 block Robson Street.  Architectural historian Harold Kalman has written: \u201cThis extensive  complex combines the glass-roofed Law Courts, defined by the distinctive  bold shape of its steel space frame, with landscaped public spaces  (Cornelia Hahn Oberlander and Raoul Robillard, landscape architects)  that invite public activity on several levels, inside and out. The  rightist Social Credit provincial government of the early 1970s was  determined to build an aggressive 55-storey office tower here. The New  Democratic Party government that won the 1973 election dismissed the  proposed big-business image by changing architects and architectural  programmes, laying the tower on its side, and producing a low,  multi-block courthouse that is symbolically and physically more  accessible\u2014so accessible that we can walk on it! All this shows how  architecture can provide a powerful political symbol.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The North Vancouver Civic Centre, at 121 West 14th Street, opened.  The Centre housed the city\u2019s municipal hall and library. Designer was  Barry Downs of Downs Archambault. \u201cMost of the site,\u201d writes Harold  Kalman, \u201cis given over to park space, leaving the buildings so  understated\u2014perhaps a reflection of the talented architect\u2019s  modesty\u2014that some visitors have trouble finding them.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The handsome old terra cotta Birks Building, at the southeast corner  of Granville and Georgia since 1912, was demolished. This generated the  most anger and sadness for a lost building since the 1967 demolition of  the Pantages Theatre at 20 West Hastings Street.<\/p>\n<p>The Bentall III office building at 595 Burrard was built. With 32 storeys, it stands 122 metres high.<\/p>\n<p>John R. Fisk ended his term as Vancouver\u2019s Chief Constable (he had  begun in 1968) and was succeeded by Donald R. Winterton, who would serve  as the city\u2019s top cop to 1981.<\/p>\n<p>Mary Pack, arthritis campaigner, 69, was awarded the Order of Canada.  The \u201cangel of mobility\u201d had devoted her life to arthritis and  rheumatism care and research.<\/p>\n<p>Violet Pooley Sweeny, golfer, was inducted posthumously into the BC Sports Hall of Fame.<\/p>\n<p>The Greater Vancouver Housing Corporation was incorporated. Their web  site says: \u201cAs a wholly-owned subsidiary of the GVRD, the Greater  Vancouver Housing Corporation (GVHC) functions as a non-profit  organization, managing more than 3,600 rental units and providing  affordable housing for a mix of income levels.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Greek Day, an annual celebration by Vancouver\u2019s Greek community  began. It would happen\u2014largely centered on West Broadway between  MacDonald and Waterloo\u2014every year until 1988, when it would be replaced  by two smaller events, a Greek Summer Festival at St. Nicholas-Demetrios  Greek Orthodox Church on Boundary Road in East Vancouver and a similar  event at the Hellenic Community Centre in Kerrisdale.<\/p>\n<p>NITEP (the Native Indian Teacher Education Program) began at UBC in  1974. Seven students graduated in 1985 and the program admitted its  first Masters students in 1986.<\/p>\n<p>Vancouver City College became Vancouver Community College when it separated from the Vancouver School Board in 1974.<\/p>\n<p>***<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Chuck Davis<\/strong> is a Vancouver writer who has           written, co-written, or edited 15 books. Most of them are on local           history, and he describes his next book, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vancouverhistory.ca\/thebook.html\" target=\"_blank\">The          History of Metropolitan Vancouver<\/a>, as the capstone of his     career.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Credit Foncier Building, photographed in 1974, was designated this year as a Heritage Building. Item # CVA 778-212. In 1974, the Whitecaps hit the field for the first time, important structures were protected as Heritage Buildings and Vancouver finally had its first neighbourhood pub. By Chuck Davis, The History of Vancouver Photos courtesy of<a href=\"https:\/\/spacing.ca\/vancouver\/2010\/06\/21\/a-year-in-five-minutes-vancouver-1974\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"sr-only\">&#8220;A Year in Five Minutes: Vancouver 1974&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8116,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"_ef_editorial_meta_paragraph_assignment":"","_ef_editorial_meta_date_first-draft-date":"","_ef_editorial_meta_checkbox_needs-photo":"","_ef_editorial_meta_number_word-count":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[11233],"tags":[3888,3763,2988,3772,1351,675,3795,3815,816,2501,3821,2510,2906,2918,3792,1014,3774,3864,3014,3777,3853,3872,3861,3614,3836,3776,965,2492,3862,3855,792,3793,3782,3780,3881,2695,3450,1069,3817,2024,3860,401,3326,3775,3851,3331,3885,3867,1350,3807,3832,2949,3850,3826,1136,3834,3846,1835,3781,3845,3837,3887,3055,3813,814,3848,2775,3286,3820,3783,3819,3843,1416,3811,3839,767,1661,3831,3818,3816,3854,220,3626,3764,3225,3768,3770,1915,2470,3804,3796,2447,23,3802,1341,3766,3803,3828,3825,3784,517,3410,3868,3876,3327,3779,3100,3835,3856,3833,2808,3810,3858,2974,3799,3800,3871,3840,3857,3873,785,3844,3111,1261,3778,357,3765,3786,1362,3865,1106,3789,3874,3875,3785,3798,2350,3823,3761,3794,3841,3115,944,1068,3805,2983,924,1219,2078,3364,2494,1032,1600,3771,3859,3842,3788,3822,3267,3787,3829,625,2999,2961,3767,3808,3847,3827,2927,3869,931,3877,3886,3806,3882,3863,3809,350,2507,3884,3852,3801,1322,3880,3889,3878,3866,137,3879,3883,1210,214,3812,1329,3791,1472,2739,1970,3198,1330,2143,1899,3790,838,3814,3797,2358,3849,479,3838,3830,3824,1553,3769,3773,3762,3870,1347,271],"class_list":["post-826","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-history","tag-abc-tv","tag-acdc","tag-actress","tag-aerosmith","tag-alaska","tag-alice-munro","tag-andrews-wesley-church","tag-arbutus-village-square","tag-architect","tag-architectural-historian","tag-arthritis-campaigner","tag-artistic-director","tag-asian-centre","tag-asian-centre-for-ubc","tag-association-of-book-publishers-of-b-c-in","tag-australia","tag-b-c-ferries","tag-barbara-parkins","tag-barry-downs","tag-bc-cancer-institute","tag-bill-buck","tag-bill-reiter","tag-bill-richardson","tag-birks-building","tag-bobby-lenarduzzi","tag-bon-jovi","tag-british-columbia","tag-bruce-allen","tag-bundolo","tag-byron-black","tag-canada","tag-canadian-copyright-licensing-agency","tag-canadian-parliament","tag-cancer-control-agency-of-bc","tag-car-insurance-provisions","tag-cbc-radio","tag-cbc-tv","tag-chief","tag-chief-constable","tag-christ-church-cathedral","tag-christine","tag-chuck-davis","tag-cknw","tag-cknw-radio","tag-colin-yardley","tag-community-information-service","tag-community-services","tag-cornelia-hahn-oberlander","tag-cpr-station","tag-credit-foncier-building","tag-crystal-pool","tag-dan-george","tag-dan-thatchuk","tag-david-suzuki","tag-designer","tag-dick-maclean","tag-dick-vogel","tag-director","tag-disabled-sailing-association","tag-don-kowalchuk","tag-donald-r-winterton","tag-eastern-victoria","tag-eaton","tag-eatons-store","tag-editor","tag-eliot-ness-style","tag-empire-stadium","tag-entrepreneur","tag-first-paying-swimmer","tag-football-league","tag-fort-langley-lawyer","tag-frank-griffith","tag-fraser","tag-fraser-street-bridge","tag-george-norris","tag-georgia","tag-germany","tag-glen-brae","tag-golfer","tag-golfer-author-driver","tag-gordon-soules","tag-granville","tag-granville-mall","tag-greater-vancouver-housing-corporation","tag-greek-orthodox-church","tag-griffiths-gibson-ramsay-productions","tag-gvrd","tag-harbour-centre","tag-harold-kalman","tag-hastings-mill-store","tag-hellenic-community-centre","tag-heritage-hall","tag-historical","tag-holy-rosary-cathedral","tag-howard-white","tag-hudson-bay-co","tag-hudson-bay-co-store","tag-irving-guttman","tag-jack-darcus","tag-james-church","tag-japan","tag-jeff-veniot","tag-jeffrey-groberman","tag-jericho-beach","tag-jericho-missile","tag-jericho-sailing-centre","tag-joan-sutherland","tag-john-cherrington","tag-john-r-fisk","tag-johnny-carson","tag-journalist","tag-knight-street-bridge","tag-laurence-brown","tag-lawyer","tag-library-services-branch","tag-little-mountain-studio","tag-malcolm-mac-parry","tag-margaret-atwood","tag-marla-gropper","tag-mary-pack","tag-mayor","tag-michael-harcourt","tag-michael-walsh","tag-minneapolis","tag-mission-on-the-fraser","tag-museum-of-vancouver","tag-mushroom-lp","tag-national-harbours-board","tag-new-democratic-party","tag-norm-grohmann","tag-north-america","tag-north-vancouver-civic-centre","tag-northwest-territories","tag-not-fragile","tag-ocean-access-community-centre","tag-old-post-office-building","tag-osaka","tag-owner","tag-po","tag-parks-board","tag-paul-krasny","tag-pauline-jewett","tag-pence","tag-player","tag-point-atkinson-lighthouse","tag-poland","tag-post-office","tag-president","tag-prince","tag-princess","tag-producer","tag-professor","tag-queen","tag-raincoast-chronicles","tag-raoul-robillard","tag-raymond-hull","tag-reading-football-club-in-england","tag-reporter-and-author","tag-rich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