West Vancouver

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West Vancouver
District municipality
The Corporation of the District of West Vancouver[1]
West Vancouver waterfront, with Burrard Inlet in foreground
West Vancouver waterfront, with Burrard Inlet in foreground
Flag of West Vancouver
Coat of arms of West Vancouver
Nickname(s): 
West Van
Location of West Vancouver in Metro Vancouver
Location of West Vancouver in Metro Vancouver
Coordinates: 49°22′0″N 123°10′0″W / 49.36667°N 123.16667°W / 49.36667; -123.16667Coordinates: 49°22′0″N 123°10′0″W / 49.36667°N 123.16667°W / 49.36667; -123.16667
CountryCanada
ProvinceBritish Columbia
Regional districtMetro Vancouver
IncorporatedMarch 15, 1912
Government
 • Governing bodyWest Vancouver District Council
 • MayorMary-Ann Booth
 • MLARalph Sultan (Capilano-Lib)
Jordan Sturdy (Garibaldi-Lib)
 • MPPatrick Weiler (Liberal)
Area
 • Total87.26 km2 (33.69 sq mi)
Highest elevation
1,224 m (4,016 ft)
Lowest elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2016)
 • Total42,473
 • Density486.8/km2 (1,261/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC-8 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-7 (PDT)
Forward sortation area
V7S - V7W
Area code(s)604, 778, 236, 672
Websitewestvancouver.ca

West Vancouver is a district municipality in the province of British Columbia, Canada. A member municipality of the Metro Vancouver Regional District, West Vancouver is to the northwest of the city of Vancouver on the northern side of English Bay and the southeast shore of Howe Sound, and is adjoined by the District of North Vancouver to its east. Together with the District of North Vancouver and the City of North Vancouver, it is part of a local regional grouping referred to as the North Shore municipalities, or simply "the North Shore".

West Vancouver is connected to the downtown city of Vancouver via Lions Gate Bridge. Originally named First Narrows Bridge, its completion in 1938 allowed the people of the North Shore municipalities to cross 1,823 metres (5,981 ft) of the Burrard Inlet to the city.[2]

Lions Gate Bridge and West Vancouver

West Vancouver has a population of 42,694 (2011 census).[3] Cypress Provincial Park, mostly located within the municipal boundaries, was one of the venues for the 2010 Winter Olympics. West Vancouver is also home of Canada's first shopping mall, Park Royal Shopping Centre,[4] and also of the Horseshoe Bay Ferry Terminal, one of the main connecting points between the British Columbia mainland and Vancouver Island.

History[]

A cabin at 15th St. and Ottawa Ave. in 1942. Photo by

The Municipality of West Vancouver was incorporated on March 15, 1912, after separating from the District of North Vancouver. The first municipal election was held on April 6, 1912. In November 1938, the Lions Gate Bridge was opened to traffic, allowing extensive growth of the semi-populated community, previously only accessible by ferry. Some homes in West Vancouver date back to the 1920s and 30s, though most of the currently existing dwellings were built in the 1970s and 80s, and mostly in British Pacific Properties' developments.

Timeline[]

  • 1792: Captain George Vancouver names Point Atkinson
  • 1872: James Blake preempted the first 65 hectares (160 acres) of land
  • 1875: First lighthouse at Point Atkinson
  • 1898: Mr. Francis Caulfeild was put ashore at Skunk Cove
  • 1903: Navvy Jack Thomas, a Welsh deserter from the Royal Navy,[citation needed] was the first Caucasian resident of West Vancouver, offered first ferry service to Vancouver in a rowboat. Their house still stands today at Ambleside and there is a Navvy Jack Point.[5] Thomas' nickname Navvy Jack today remains used in British Columbia English to mean washed pea gravel used in construction and landscaping trades, as he was the original supplier of the material to Vancouver and mined it from coves in West Vancouver.
  • 1905: John Lawson, a local leader settled at foot of 17th street
  • 1908: First pier, Hollyburn Pier
  • 1909: West Vancouver Transportation Company was formed, provides ferry service across harbour to Vancouver
  • 1909: "Real estate boom" lots sold for as little as $450 and as much as $4,500
  • 1910: Water systems started at Caulfeild and Ambleside
  • 1911: First primary school, Presbyterian Church at Dundarave
  • 1912: West Vancouver separated from the District Municipality of North Vancouver and incorporated on March 15, 1912.
  • 1912: Population was approximately 1,500 people
  • 1912: First Municipal election
  • 1912: Council appointed John Teare as the first police constable on May 17. F.H. Kettle was appointed the second constable on May 28
  • 1913: Hollyburn Elementary School structure built, facility of the longest existing school in West Vancouver
  • 1914: First known settlement, the Coast Salish village at Sandy Cove
  • 1914: Pacific Great Eastern Railway in service from North Vancouver to Caulfeild and Horseshoe Bay
  • 1914: Colonel Albert Whyte pressed for a spelling change from White Cliff City to Whytecliff
  • 1915: Dundarave Pier built
  • 1915: Marine Dr. was officially opened by Premier Richard McBride
  • 1916: West Vancouver Municipal Transport bus service started operation
  • 1922: British Columbia Electric Railway starts electrical service
  • 1923: Adopted STV for city elections (discontinued in 1930)[6]
  • 1924: House numbering scheme started
  • 1926: Marine Drive extended to Horseshoe Bay
  • 1926: Town Planning Act banned any new industry forming an exclusively residential community with minimum lot sizes
  • 1927: Inglewood High School built
  • 1928: Direct telephone service to Vancouver operational
  • 1930: Septic tanks are mandatory
  • 1930: Only 48 of West Vancouver's 100 kilometres of roads paved
  • 1931: Dan Sewell opened his marina and the Whytecliff Lodge
  • 1932: 650 hectares (1,600 acres) of land bought by A.R. Guinness-Br. Pacific Properties bought for $50 a hectare, they have been developed as the British Properties
  • 1934: First police car
  • 1936: Hollyburn Post Office built at 17th street and Marine Drive
  • 1938: Lions Gate Bridge finished, opened May 29. The bridge cost a total of $6 million to build. It was financed by the Guinness family, in conjunction with the development and marketing of the British Properties.
  • 1947: Ferry service stopped due to lack of demand after bridge constructed
  • 1950: West Vancouver Memorial Library opened on November 11 (Remembrance Day). The library lends more books per capita than any other library in Canada
  • 1950: Park Royal Shopping Centre, Canada's first shopping centre opened
  • 1951: Hollyburn Mountain opens first chairlift.<https://cypressmountain.com/our-history>
  • 1954: Public Safety Building opened. It housed the West Vancouver Police and Fire Departments
  • 1959: Rezoning allowed 78 apartment buildings in Ambleside
  • 1961: The Crescent Apartments, West Vancouver's first high rise apartment opened
  • 1963: Tolls on Lions Gate Bridge lifted on April 1
  • 1967: Fire hall was built and opened on November 22, 1967 at 16th and Fulton Ave. The Police Department remained in the Public Safety building
  • 1973: Clyde McRae completes a world record walk across Canada on Ambleside Beach.

Industry[]

West Vancouver (left side) as seen from Stanley Park

West Vancouver is mainly a residential district as many residents are retired, work at home, or take the short commute to downtown Vancouver. West Vancouver has no manufacturing industry by law.

A 25-block strip of Marine Drive serves as a commercial district, featuring shops, small offices, garages and gas stations, restaurants, banks, and other common amenities. This area is commonly known as 'Ambleside', with a one-block section separated from that area known as 'Dundarave'.

West Vancouver is also home to Park Royal Shopping Centre, Canada's first mall. Opened in the 1950s, it now consumes 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) of both sides of Marine Drive near North Vancouver. Park Royal is the second largest mall in British Columbia after Metrotown mall in Burnaby. It is also a major bus terminal for Blue Bus and North Vancouver TransLink buses.

Parks and recreation[]

West Vancouver Aquatic Centre.
West Vancouver Memorial Library.

Ambleside Park and the 15 block long West Vancouver Seawall are popular spots for families and outdoor enthusiasts. Whytecliff Park is regarded as one of the best scuba diving spots in Western Canada. The District also has many other small parks, as well as Lighthouse Park at Point Atkinson, which contains some old-growth forest and has with views of Vancouver from downtown to Point Grey and is the boundary-point between English Bay and the Strait of Georgia. John Lawson Park is also another popular area for families, it features a playground for children, an open grass field for families to picnic, and a view of Lions Gate Bridge and the downtown skyline which are both across the water.

West Vancouver has several public recreation facilities including an 18-hole par 3 golf course, a pool, an ice rink, basketball and tennis courts, skate parks and numerous public parks. The new West Vancouver Community Centre (or WVCC) has been rebuilt and opened Spring 2009. West Vancouver is also home to Cypress Provincial Park with mountain biking trails and a large ski and snowboard resort, which served as one of the venues for the 2010 Winter Olympics.

The West Vancouver Memorial Library, located in Ambleside, has a circulation rate of 21.32 per capita, the highest circulation rate per capita in Canada.[7]

Demographics[]

Lighthouse at Point Atkinson

Population[]

According to a Statistics Canada 2011 census, West Vancouver has a population of 42,694.[3] It has the second highest percentage of persons aged 65 or older in BC with 22% of persons fitting into the category, compared with 13% for the rest of the province. The top five professions in West Vancouver are professional science and technical services; retail trade; health care; finance and insurance; and educational services. A large portion of the population is involved in senior management in comparison with the rest of the province.[8]

Religions[]

  • No religion 29.3%
  • Anglican 17.5%
  • United Church 17.5%
  • Roman Catholic 13.7%
  • Muslim 5.8%
Source: 2001 Census Profile, BC Stats

Languages[]

As of 2006, the languages spoken in West Vancouver were:

By mother tongue:

By most commonly used household language:

Mother Languages as reported by each person: Source:[9]

Canada 2011 Census Population % of Total Population % of Non-official language Population
English 28,280 67.1 N/A
Persian 3,400 8.1 25.7
Chinese-Total
Chinese-n.o.s.
Chinese-Mandarin
2,750
1,415
1,335
6.6
3.4
3.2
20.8
10.7
10.1
German 1,015 2.4 7.7
Korean 915 2.2 6.9
French 545 1.3 N/A

Visible minorities and Aboriginals[]

Canada 2016 Census Population % of Total Population
Visible minority group
Source:[10]
South Asian 975 2.3%
Chinese 7,680 18.4%
Black 90 0.2%
Filipino 550 1.3%
Latin American 240 0.6%
Arab 220 0.5%
Southeast Asian 110 0.3%
West Asian 3,695 8.9%
Korean 910 2.2%
Japanese 380 0.9%
Other visible minority 65 0.2%
Mixed visible minority 245 0.6%
Total visible minority population 15,155 36.4%
Aboriginal group
Source:[11]
First Nations 65 0.2%
Métis 75 0.2%
Inuit 0 0%
Total Aboriginal population 155 0.4%
European 31,960 76.8%
Total population 41,625 100%

Transportation[]

West Vancouver is served by West Vancouver Municipal Transit, colloquially known as Blue Bus. It is Canada's longest running municipal transportation system and Canada's first 100% wheelchair accessible transit system.[citation needed] West Vancouver Municipal Transit is one of two bus companies in the Greater Vancouver region operating under contract for TransLink. Transfer is free between West Vancouver Municipal Transit buses and other TransLink buses.

The only freeway route within municipal limits is British Columbia Highway 1 (part of the Trans-Canada Highway), which begins in the community of Horseshoe Bay and continues east into the District of North Vancouver. Highway 99 also runs through West Vancouver, sharing the freeway alignment with Highway 1 between Horseshoe Bay and Taylor Way, and connects the municipality with Downtown Vancouver (via the Lions Gate Bridge) and Whistler (via the Sea-to-Sky Corridor).

The Lions Gate Bridge viewed from Ambleside Park.

Additionally, BC Ferries operates routes departing from Horseshoe Bay to Nanaimo, Bowen Island, and the Sunshine Coast.

Scenery[]

West Vancouver is known for its parks such as Cypress Provincial Park, which offers scenic views of Howe Sound and the Metro Vancouver area. Whytecliff Park and Lighthouse Park, near the community of Horseshoe Bay, at the continental terminus of the Trans-Canada Highway. All of West Vancouver is situated on the side of the Coast Mountains. Because of this position, many homes in West Vancouver have views of Vancouver Island, the Lower Mainland, and/or Howe Sound.

Affluence[]

Apartment and condominium towers lined along the seawall.

West Vancouver is Canada's wealthiest municipality, with an average household net worth of CAD$4,454,424.[12] North Vancouver just next door is the tenth richest. West Vancouver is home to some very large, luxurious and expensive properties and houses. Occasionally, houses have been priced and sold at around CAD$30,000,000. In 2011, West Vancouver's average house sold for over CAD$2,000,000;[13] 95% of the houses or close to 16,000 homes are worth over CAD$1 million. In West Vancouver, average total incomes were $86,253 for males and $48,070 for females, almost double the provincial average. Over 80% of the population has a total family income of at least $100,000.[8]

Politics[]

As of 2018, the mayor is Mayor-Ann Booth having been elected by 21 votes in the 2018 Municipal Election. [14]

West Vancouver ridings typically include Squamish and Whistler, and sometimes the Sunshine Coast.

Provincially, Joan McIntyre and Ralph Sultan of the BC Liberal Party were elected to the and West Vancouver-Capilano ridings, respectively, in the 2005 Provincial election (West Vancouver-Sea To Sky Country includes Squamish, Whistler and Pemberton).

Federally, West Vancouver-based ridings historically have voted Conservative since 1974, electing John Reynolds of the Reform Party of Canada (later the Canadian Alliance) from 1997 to 2004. Reynolds declined to run for re-election in 2006, however, and Liberal Blair Wilson defeated Conservative John Weston to replace Reynolds as Member of Parliament from the West Vancouver—Sunshine Coast—Sea to Sky Country electoral district. Wilson left the Liberals in 2007 and joined the Green Party in 2008, becoming the first Green Member of Parliament. The re-election in 2008 saw a rematch between Weston and Wilson. This time Weston emerged as the victor, carrying nearly triple the vote of his incumbent opponent to handily return the riding to the Conservatives. Weston won again in 2011. In the 2015 federal election, Weston was unseated by Liberal candidate Pam Goldsmith-Jones, who was previously the mayor of West Vancouver from 2005 to 2011. Pamela Goldsmith-Jones chose not to run for re-election in the 2019 federal election and Patrick Weiler of the Liberal Party of Canada went on to win the election.

Education[]

There are 17 public schools and 4 private schools in West Vancouver. Of these schools, 6 are high schools. School District 45 West Vancouver. Over 80% of graduates go to post-secondary schools.[15] Many residents from the Sunshine Coast, Squamish, and North Vancouver attend West Vancouver schools.

Surrounding municipalities[]

·Electoral District A

·North Vancouver (District)

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "British Columbia Regional Districts, Municipalities, Corporate Name, Date of Incorporation and Postal Address" (XLS). British Columbia Ministry of Communities, Sport and Cultural Development. Retrieved November 2, 2014.
  2. ^ "Lions Gate Bridge". Vancouver Heritage Foundation.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Statistics Canada. "Census Profile - West Vancouver". Retrieved 2013-02-18.
  4. ^ "West Vancouver", Kerry McPhedran, The Vancouver Book
  5. ^ "Navvy Jack Point". BC Geographical Names.
  6. ^ Joseph P. Harris, "Practical Workings of proportional representation in the U.S. and Canada," National Municipal Review, 19 (5) May 1930 (pages 337-383)
  7. ^ North Vancouver District Library, Capilano Branch Library, Space Needs Assessment and Feasibility Study (2004)
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b 2001 Census Profile of British Columbia's Regions, West Vancouver DM BC Stats (subscription service)
  9. ^ [1], Focus on Geography Series, 2011 Census-Census subdivision of North Vancouver, CY - British Columbia
  10. ^ Vancouver&SearchType=Begins&SearchPR=01&B1=All&Custom=, Community Profiles from the 2006 Census, Statistics Canada - Census Subdivision
  11. ^ [2], Aboriginal Peoples - Data table
  12. ^ "Canada's richest communities 2019 - Macleans.ca". www.macleans.ca. Retrieved 2020-02-20.
  13. ^ Benchmark Detached Home Price, Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver
  14. ^ "Mary-Ann Booth confirmed as West van mayor-elect following recount".
  15. ^ "10 Reasons to Choose West Vancouver | West Vancouver Schools International". Retrieved 2020-02-19.

External links[]

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