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Friday 13 June 2014

Yaletown: From Warehouses to "Wow" Houses

Yaletown is Vancouver's Cinderella story. Bordering False Creek, a vital harbor, this suburb in downtown Vancouver was once dotted with warehouses and marshalling yards. It was one of many areas of the city influenced by the growth of the train industry during the late 19th century. While it remained a major industrial sector in the 1970s, some professionals had other plans in mind.

Today, Yaletown is a sprawling district of modern conveniences, with remnants of its industrial past well preserved. The Vancouver Heritage Register accounts for 27 heritage sites in the area. One popular site is the Roundhouse Community Centre, a former hangar for locomotives. Today, the brick-and-mortar structure stands beside the steel-and-glass lobby.

Look at the whole of Yaletown from any high-rise condo and you can see traces of the drastic change. At first glance, it's as if Yaletown was never a marshalling yard in years past. Decades of development transformed this former industrial city into an entertainment hub filled with restaurants, cafes, and shops.

Yaletown's story is an inspiration not just to Canada but also to the world. Its transformation perfectly illustrates the sense in preserving vestiges of the past for the new generation to appreciate. The train itself was a revolution, a major player in shaping Canada's economy.

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