There is no disagreement that Vancouver’s DTES neighborhood is comprised of a high concentration of low-income families and individuals, homeless people, and drug addicts. There is little social diversity in the residents that call the area home and in this fact some envision a solution to addressing the issues plaguing this neighborhood.
Gregory Henriquez is an well known Vancouver architect known for the design of several community-based mixed-use, institutional and social housing projects in the DTES. He has stated that for architecture to be meaningful it must be a “poetic expression of social justice”. He has also stated that drug addiction is one of the issues at the root of the neighborhood’s problems and that gentrification must be avoided with the communities most disadvantaged being taken care of first. Henriquez is the managing partner of Henriquez Partners Architects and is behind the the socially inclusive Woodward’s Redevelopment- the largest mixed-use project in the history of Vancouver.
In 2003, the City of Vancouver purchased the original Woodward’s site from the province for $5 million, and began a public consultation process to ask the community what they wanted from the redevelopment. What would come of those consultations is what is being developed today- a mixed-income, socially inclusive community development. The 400 million dollar project, includes 536 market housing units, 125 singles non-market housing units to be operated by Portland Hotel Society Community Services, 75 family non-market housing units to be operated by Affordable Housing Society, and an array of service and stores including a new addition to Simon Fraser University’s Downtown campus. The oldest part of the complex (built 1903–1908) will be restored, and will serve as non-profit office and community space.
While Woodward’s project does little to directly treat drug addiction, I feel it is worth mentioning the idea presented regarding the power an inclusive community may have on a struggling neighborhood. It has been suggested that addiction in the DTES is aggravated by the other social problems in the area- homelessness, social dependency, and poverty. The DTES has been somewhat isolated for some time in terms of a broad socio-economic mix of residents and a development such as Woodwards may help to bring about some needed change to the area.
By encouraging an inclusive community through projects like this, the potential impact on the community is large. This can bring array of people together and create fundamental change in the way people think, behave, and interact. This type of change not only affect residents of the DTES and the new residents who may come to live in these inclusive communities, but also citizens across Vancouver can alter their negative outlook on the DTES which is so often the norm. In this way, socially inclusive communities have the potential to have very large impact on a very large scale, reaching out to the city as a whole and setting an example for other cities.
Although this solution’s trans-formative potential has yet to be seen, it has the potential to change many people’s ways of thinking and behavior in a fundamental way. The community itself is also designed in a sustainable and long lasting fashion incorporating groups and people from all facets of society; varying socio-economic circumstances, businesses, non-profits, social causes, universities, art, and community space. This type of collaboration and inclusiveness brings together different ways of thinking about social issues in the area, and this is the true novel solution.
Woodwards is an architectural marvel and a community inclusive solution to the problems in the DTES including addiction as well as its aggravating factors of homelessness, social dependency, and poverty. The idea is a novel solution to a long history of problems pursuing social change and innovation by changing the way people perceive the area in terms of its livability, safety, community, and inclusiveness.