New culture hub opens in downtown Vancouver

Photo credit: Ryan Snikvalds

REPRESENTATIVES from the City of Vancouver on Tuesday joined artists, members of the cultural community and government partners to celebrate the opening of 825 Pacific, a City-owned, 21,000-square-foot, arts and cultural hub in Vancouver’s Downtown South.

221A Artist Society, a Vancouver non-profit cultural organization, will operate 825 Pacific as a shared artist production, presentation, and administrative facility for more than 40 artists and non-profit organizations.

The stand-alone, seven storey facility includes 26 non-market artist studios and co-working spaces, along with 221A’s headquarters, a research library, and an event space. Among the new tenants will be the inaugural recipients of the 221A Fellowship Program.

“We are thrilled to celebrate the opening of 825 Pacific which offers much-needed space for artists and cultural organizations to thrive in Vancouver’s Downtown South,” said Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim. “We recognize that the most critical challenge facing arts and culture in Vancouver, and globally, is affordability of space. Enabling partners to build affordable, accessible, and sustainable long-term arts and cultural spaces is one of Vancouver’s key cultural objectives and helps to support a vibrant arts sector which is vital to our city’s identity, quality of life and economic prosperity.”

825 Pacific is the result of a $15.7 million Community Amenity Contribution (CAC) by Grosvenor Americas. These types of partnerships play an important role in the delivery of public amenities and infrastructure, such as cultural facilities, childcare, and affordable housing. Supporting affordable, accessible arts and cultural spaces is a key priority in the Vancouver City Council-approved Making Space for Arts and Culture report, as part of the City’s culture plan Culture / Shift: Blanketing the City in Arts and Culture.

221A completed the $2.5 million interior fit-out of the building funded primarily through support from the City of Vancouver Cultural Spaces Grant Program, the BC Arts Council, the Province of British Columbia, Canadian Heritage, and the Community, Culture, and Recreation Infrastructure Stream of Infrastructure Canada’s Investing in Canada Infrastructure Program (ICIP).

The location of 825 Pacific, in Downtown South, will complement other cultural venues in the area including Howe Street Studios, The Cinematheque, Cineworks, Canadian Music Centre, The Dance Centre, Orpheum, VSO School of Music, Contemporary Art Gallery and the Vancouver International Film Centre. It will also serve as a connection to the Granville entertainment district and the Cultural Precinct that includes the Queen Elizabeth and Playhouse Theatres, Central Library, CBC and the site for the new Vancouver Art Gallery.

The building is the tallest certified commercial Passive House development in Canada, making the interior environment very quiet and comfortable and greatly reducing its operating energy costs. The all-electric building also doesn’t use any fossil fuels and will produce nearly zero greenhouse gas emissions during its lifespan. To advance the City of Vancouver’s sustainability goals, the City requires all new City-owned buildings to be certified to the Passive House standard, the world-leading standard in energy efficient construction.