Archdiocesan offices to move south to Cambie
Transcription
Archdiocesan offices to move south to Cambie
January 12, 2015 The B.C. Catholic John Paul II Pastoral Centre | Page S1 BUILDING NEW BEGINNINGS JOHN PAUL II PASTORAL CENTRE Archdiocesan offices to move south to Cambie area New structure at the corner of Willow St. and W. 33rd Ave. will include a retired priests’ residence A By Alistair Burns fter a decade of conversations and long-term planning, the Archdiocese of Vancouver’s offices will soon move out of the downtown core and into a new building near Queen Elizabeth Park. “We’ve known for a long time that the building was no longer suitable for use as the administrative headquarters of the archdiocese,” said Paul Schratz, director of the Communications Office. That structure, originally a warehouse for electrical goods, needs maintenance and repair. In the last few years, he quipped, “We’ve had to stick people in little cubbyholes wherever we could find them.” Dan Moric, the archbishop’s delegate for administration, said the building at 150 Robson St. was “never built or designed with our intended use in mind.” Parking is also a major hassle downtown. Schratz said the new building at the corner of Willow Street and West 33rd Avenue, on the site of the old St. Vincent’s Hospital, will have better parking options. He also mentioned many positives of working on Robson Street: Holy Rosary Cathedral is a 10-minute walk away, lots of restaurants and coffee shops are nearby, there is close access to news media, and there are plenty of transit options. Plans afoot The communications director laid out the various options that rested in the hands of a three-clergyman steering committee: Archbishop J. Michael Miller, CSB; Msgr. Stephen Jensen, now Bishop of Prince George; and archdiocesan building commission chairman Father Stanley Galvon. The first option was to stay somewhere downtown, perhaps at the site of a renovated Holy Rosary Cathedral. John Clark, the new building’s architect, did a study of the ca- ignated a heritage building, Amacon is limited in its options to redevelop the site. Clergy home Agnieszka Krawczynski / The B.C. Catholic The John Paul II Pastoral Centre at Willow Street and West 33rd Avenue will cost about $25 million. Paul Schratz, communications director, said it made sense to move, because of the “cost of downtown land and the parking situation.” thedral site over a decade ago. Bishop Jensen told The B.C. Catholic that redevelopment of Holy Rosary would have been a “very complex and lengthy process.” Meanwhile, an empty St. Vincent hospital site beckoned. A building there could be “designed from the ground up,” he said “When you look at the cost of downtown land and the parking situation, it made more sense” to use the St. Vin- cent’s site, Schratz said. The new archdiocesan headquarters is the second stage in a “campus of care” developed by Providence Health Care and the archdiocese. The first stage was the St. Vincent’s Honoria Conway assisted living residence for seniors. Since the old hospital site was leased to Providence Health Care, the two organizations went to the City of Vancouver to apply to rezone the site. Moving costs Schratz estimated the new building will cost $25 million, including the retired priests’ residence. There will be a $4 million contribution by the St. Joseph Society for retired priests. Most of this bill will be paid by the sale of 150 Robson Street to Amacon, a real estate developer. Since 150 Robson is des- Moric said the clergy residence will “stand as a tangible expression of care and respect” for priests. Schratz joked that he would miss little about 150 Robson after 18 years, including “an old freight elevator that’s like something out of a 1940s suspense movie,” and “an alarm system I’ve accidentally set off too many times.” Instead, the new building offers modern phone service, wi-fi Internet, and many meeting rooms. When the move is complete, Moric hopes his fellow employees will be able to say this change of environment has “contributed to their workplace health and happiness and has better positioned them to effectively serve the faithful.” [email protected] q Page S2 | The B.C. Catholic John Paul II Pastoral Centre January 12, 2015 BUILDING NEW BEGINNINGS JOHN PAUL II PASTORAL CENTRE Pastoral centre construction faced many challenges Some of the ground was unstable; spill gates, canals, and retention tank used to collect rain water D By Alistair Burns espite years of meticulous planning, the work site at 33rd Avenue and Willow Street provided a unique challenge for hard-hatted labourers. The workers tasked to build the new John Paul II pastoral centre had to deal with a massive slab of unearthed concrete, lay out a system of canals and spill gates to siphon off rain, and acquiesce to the city of Vancouver’s demands for a so-called “green roof.” Many workers Dan Aird, the project superintendent for Ventana Construction Corporation, provided insights into the process. Between 140 and 170 workers suited up and came onto the site daily. They included electricians, roofers, plumbers, glazers, tillers, painters, waterproofers, and civil contractors. Aird estimated the hard hats put in an average of 27,000 working hours a month. “Access was very difficult,” since the city of Vancouver was repaving 33rd Avenue at the same time. “We found unstable ground for the building at the north end,” he recalled. In order to reinforce the area, labourers backfilled the area with recycled concrete, which delayed the opening date by a few weeks. Overall, they used 5,550 cubic metres of concrete, or “550 truck loads of concrete,” for the new building. St. Vincent’s block Also, they uncovered the final hurrah of the old St. Dan Aird / Special to The B.C. Catholic Dan Aird / Special to The B.C. Catholic To meet the challenge of excessive rainfall, the labourers of Ventana Construction Corp. built a water retention tank in July 2014 and buried it underneath the work site. After the rainwater was collected, it was pumped into a treatment tank, then transferred to the city’s storm drain. A worker stands beside a 50,000 pound concrete slab. The colossal footing, five feet tall, 10 feet wide, and five feet long, had to be jackhammered into smithereens for removal. Vincent’s Hospital, the site of the John Paul II Pastoral Centre: a colossal concrete footing, a “block that’s five feet tall, 10 feet wide, and five feet in length.” It “weighed over 50,000 pounds, which made it very difficult to handle.” Aird called for a jackhammer; workers slowly broke up the massive slab and hauled the chunks away in trucks. In regard to safety, the superintendent said they erected four stories of scaffolding on the north-west side, where the apartments for retired clergy are situated, and another six stories of scaffolding on the southwest side. “It’s probably more windows than walls,” Aird said, summing up the building’s look. thumbs-up to the decision that saved redwood trees from being chopped down; the building site was pushed back from the Willow Street corner at 33rd After the deluge The Ventana team had to brainstorm two separate ways to deal with the constant downpour of rain. First they buried a tank underneath the site to collect the rainfall. The water was pumped into a treatment tank, and transferred by three twoinch pumps into the city’s storm drain on 33rd Avenue. The hard hats created rock berms and laid down sandbags to create an impromptu canal system, with a spill gate. Green roof Amber Paul, a landscape architect with the firm of Durante Kreuk Ltd., explained the eco-friendly approach that the City of Vancouver wants for new structures. There will be a so-called “green roof” to provide heat reflection on top of the clergy housing apartments. A concrete slab is covered with insulation, a drainage mat, and on top, a threeinch “lightweight growing medium,” called sedum, which will hold minerals and water. Paul explained sedum is “similar to turf, in the concept of a mat.” The plants will not need “a lot of water after the first few years,” and storm water retention was also built into the system, along with roof drainage. Installation took a week. She gave another green Avenue. “They [the archdiocese] gave up a lot of land,” Paul pointed out. “They should be commended.” [email protected] q ADVERTORIAL Thank you to the archdiocese I t has been a tremendous honour and privilege to serve His Grace, Archbishop J. Michael Miller, CSB, and the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver as architect for the John Paul II Pastoral Centre. John Clark Architect Inc. would like to thank the archdiocesan staff, volunteer committee members, donors, the City of Vancouver Planning Department, and a long list of behind-the-scenes individuals who made this project possible and a monumental achievement. We endured and faced constant technical hurdles and bureaucratic red tape, but in the end, after much perseverance and prayer, we can now reflect upon those days with pride and thanksgiving. When you walk through the doors of the new John Paul II Pastoral Centre, the most awesome aspect of that experience is not the building itself but rather the work that will carry on from 150 Robson St. Yes this is a very modern, sleek, and efficient facility which will serve the RCAV for many years to come, but the star of the show is actually the staff, His Grace, and the work they will do here. Through their dedication and devotion to serve, my sense of purpose as an architect for this project is fulfilled. I am grateful knowing that beyond architectural aesthetics, ingenuity, and the bells and whistles, this building has a much greater purpose and higher calling. Sincerely, John Clark, Architect AIBC, AIA q January 12, 2015 The B.C. Catholic JOHN PAUL II PASTORAL CENTRE John Paul II Pastoral Centre | Page S3 BUILDING NEW BEGINNINGS Archbishop fields questions about new building T By Agnieszka Krawczynski he archbishop says it’s time to move out of the former electrical warehouse that the archdiocesan offices have called home for more than 50 years. Within the next three months, the John Paul II Pastoral Centre will pack up and move south to a shiny new location near 33rd Avenue and Willow Street in Vancouver. Archbishop J. Michael Miller, CSB, sat down with The B.C. Catholic to talk about how the move will affect employees and the people in the pews. The B.C. Catholic: Why is the John Paul II Pastoral Centre moving from 150 Robson Street to 4885 Saint John Paul II Way? Archbishop Miller: I guess the major reason is that we’ve been at this location for 60 years and, although it has served very well, the building was never designed for the purposes it has filled wonderfully throughout the years. It’s totally handicap-inaccessible. It doesn’t foster a collaborative working environment because we’re all divided up into these separate little places. We were able to put up a new facility and at the same time fulfill a second need, QA & to provide senior housing for our retired priests. Putting the two together on the site on land which we did not have to purchase; it was simply the right time. People have been talking about it for many years. BCC: What are some benefits of the new location, just down the street from Queen Elizabeth Park? AM: For one thing, there will be more parking. It is just as accessible since it’s on the Canada Line. There is bus service. For people coming from the south, it’s more accessible than bothering to come to the downtown corridor. I think, frankly, it’s more accessible because you don’t have to come downtown. The big thing is the (housing for) retired priests. It’s also a far better and far healthier, in every sense of the word, working environment. It fosters a more collaborative and cooperative atmosphere because it’s far more open. BCC: How will the move affect the average Catholic in the pews on Sunday? AM: The archdiocese Agnieszka Krawczynski / The B.C. Catholic Archbishop J. Michael Miller, CSB, breaks ground at the new location for the John Paul II Pastoral Centre Aug. 29, 2013. The centre, to be complete this spring, will contain offices, a chapel, meeting rooms, and nine suites for retired priests. will continue to render the same services. We’re not adding services provided to the parishes in any sense, so I think it should be a pretty seamless transition. BCC: What changes are in store for the people who come to the archdiocese Men’s shelter to get new home T By Agnieszka Krawczynski he Catholic Charities Men’s Hostel will soon have a new location to serve the 2,000 guests who sleep there every year, but the location is still unknown. “The nest has left us,” said Scott Small, the director of Shelter Services in the archdiocese. When the shelter finds a new home, it will be the first time it is separate from the chancery since it opened on the third floor of the building at 150 Robson St. in 1959. The archdiocese has sold that building and will move its offices outside downtown to a new location near Holy Name of Jesus Parish this spring. By March 31, when ownership transfers to Amacon, the development company that bought the building, the hostel will also need a new home. Francis Wong, the director of finance for the archdiocese, said Amacon is “obligated to provide us with a new space” for the Men’s Hostel. “Where, when, and how, we don’t know.” Though its future is largely unknown, Small has revealed some of his hopes for the Men’s Hostel: longer stays, services geared toward seniors, and a chapel. “At least 55 per cent of our guests are 50 plus,” he said, adding he hopes access to the new space won’t require a hike up three storeys of stairs. Guests in the 102-bed facility may currently stay at the hostel for up to three months. Small said it’s an improvement to the single night, 60 day, and 90 day policies it has gone through over the years, but some guests could do with a little more time. Small said the hostel hosts about 2,000 homeless men each year. “You have to have a good relationship with the shelter crew,” to stay resolved to fight drug addictions, he said. The hostel currently has crucifixes above doorways, weekly visits from priests, and Catholic movie nights on Fridays. “The new shelter will definitely have a chapel,” he added. [email protected] q regularly for meetings? AM: That’s a big benefit. There’s a large hall that will be able to seat 200 people and is more open to diocesan use. That’s a nice feature. The chapel is bigger. It’s not huge, but for 50 or 60 people. There’s a lot of meeting space. See next week for part two of this interview. q Page S4 | The B.C. Catholic John Paul II Pastoral Centre JOHN PAUL II PASTORAL CENTRE January 12, 2015 BUILDING NEW BEGINNINGS Staff recall history of John Paul II Pastoral Centre Historic building on 15O Robson Street witnessed important moments, made film appearances T By Agnieszka Krawczynski he headquarters of the archdiocese have stood in the midst of bustling business people, football enthusiasts, and panhandlers for more than 50 years. Its employees organized Pope John Paul II’s visit in 1984, welcomed hordes of fans during the Olympics in 2010, and watched Pope Francis’s election on TV in 2013. As they prepare for the John Paul II Pastoral Centre’s imminent move from the downtown core, employees are sharing their recollections about the historic building at 150 Robson St. Connection “All the memories that keep coming to mind are pertaining to the role this building has in connection with the neighbourhood,” said communications director Paul Schratz, who has worked there since 1997. During the Olympics, “the whole downtown was transformed.” The John Paul II Pastoral Centre began sporting three flags: B.C.’s, Canada’s, and Vatican City’s, and welcoming fans inside for hot drinks and big screens to watch the action. “It was a real moment of outreach,” Schratz said. Other places of outreach included the St. Vincent de Paul Salvage Bureau, which operated for many years in the basement, and the men’s shelter, which has been on the third floor for 55 years. Controller George Pinto in the finance office said the downtown neighbourhood was significantly seedier when he first set foot in it 30 years ago. “Robson Street was not how you see it now. It was gas stations and dilapidated buildings all the way from Granville Street down to here.” Atmosphere Working in the core of the city meant dealing with some of its most desperate people, and in those days security was minimal or nonexistent. “I had a person come and put a gun at me once,” Pinto said. A man approached him, asked him for money, and threatened him with a gun he claimed to have in his pocket. “He started fiddling and I started saying my prayers!” The building used to have a cafeteria, where staff and men from the hostel could purchase bacon sandwiches and coffee for $1.50. There was also a library where anyone from the street could browse. “The atmosphere was different. It was very casual,” Pinto reflected. The new building, constructed to fit the Gold standard in Leadership in Environmental Design, will have a far more professional feel than the current building, a former electrical warehouse. “I’ve been there and it’s very high-tech. The offices are very nice,” Pinto said. Teresa Rigg, administrative assistant for the Life, Marriage, and Family Office, agreed. “I will miss the downtown scene,” she said, but “will love a shining new place with every conceivable up-todate electronic device.” Cinema While the warehouse’s interior doesn’t lend itself easily to office work, its brick exterior has been the envy of many movie directors. Catechetics director Patrick Gillespie remembers “watching director Wych Kaosayananda and crew set up filming in the basement loading bays, with Antonio Banderas and Lucy Liu rehearsing in the basement.” Cameras have also caught the archdiocesan offices while filming a car explode in the alley. Though the building was first blessed Dec. 27, 1959, Gillespie recounted a more recent and less solemn sprinkling. It involved “two super soakers, multiple small water guns, a couple of umbrellas, and an unnamed nowbishop of another diocese,” he laughed. “And no, Father, now Bishop, was not blessing the building.” One thing will not change with the move to the new building on 33rd Avenue near Cambie this spring: there will still be a chapel. “We’ve always had noon Mass,” Schratz said. “That’s something that has been a fix- ture in this building. We’ll be keeping that.” [email protected] q BCC file photo Archbishop J. Michael Miller, CSB, holds a meeting with more than 70 parish secretaries in the large meeting room Oct. 17, 2012. Conclave Kyle Neilson, the director of the Adult Evangelization and Discipleship Office of the archdiocese, reminisced about his favourite memory of the nine and a half years he’s worked for the archdiocese: watching Pope Francis’s first appearance. “We all ran downstairs when the white smoke went up,” to watch the Holy Father on TV. “That was a pretty powerful experience.” Agnieszka Krawczynski / The B.C. Catholic Archdiocesan employees watch Pope Francis’s first appearance on TV and react by cheering and researching the cardinal who was previously unknown to them. Agnieszka Krawczynski / The B.C. Catholic Archbishop J. Michael Miller, CSB, greets several Crossroads walkers before they start a three-month walk across Canada for the pro-life cause.