Vancouver Art Gallery Real Estate Debate

Vancouver Art Gallery
Image by: iStock
Is the Vancouver Art Gallery relocation plan about art or "starchitecture"?

Like everything else in Vancouver, the 
VAG imbroglio is all about real estate.

The debate surrounding the relocation of the Vancouver Art Gallery (VAG) has turned a discussion on art into a power play of words.


The gallery’s board of trustees have been overt in their desire to reflect the city’s position on the “world stage” with a “landmark art museum,” as they have trumpeted in a two-page advertisement in local newspapers. It was not predicted, however, that as events unfolded, the top dogs in the local business community would descend upon this issue, each vying to write themselves into the script with a speaking part.

 

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For the past five years, the powers that be at VAG have been planning a new home for the gallery, having deemed the current Robson Square location too small. The gallery has proposed that the City of Vancouver donate its last remaining plot downtown, the former bus depot site at Dunsmuir Street, as an alternative site. The province has already donated $50 million toward finding a new home for the gallery. Strong criticism has emerged about moving the gallery from its central location and about the expense involved in building a new facility.


The fanfare surrounding this relocation has prompted eminent local business figures to weigh in, resulting in a clash of standpoints and opinions. Such a cultural war of words has not emerged since the conflict surrounding the radical design of Library Square in the 1990s. 


The argument for the relocation centres on the exterior: the building, its location and the potential benefits it will bring to the city. Little has been said about the art itself, and some suggest the silence speaks volumes about where the real interests lie.


Condo market maestro and art collector Bob Rennie is curious about the issues dominating this debate: “Why is it that all this emphasis is being put on the ‘starchitecture’? Why has the box become more important than the content?” Rennie’s voice is not simply a case of another leading business figure throwing his two cents into hearings. He owns a private gallery in the Downtown Eastside and sits on the North American Acquisitions Committee for the London’s Tate Modern, where dialogue, he says, is centred on the art itself. “If you were going to build a building for ballet, all you would talk about is the dance company and what they need. What is missing from this equation is the art. Instead, all I hear about is this grandeur that is going to ‘save’ the city.”


The notion of grandeur indeed weighs heavily in these discussions, marked by such catchphrases as “world-class” and “high profile.” The implication is that a trophy location will lure visitors and fuel the local economy. Susan Stewart, dean of culture and community at Emily Carr University of Art and Design, is well aware of this agenda. “Instead of having a real citizens’ debate, what we have is a lot of high-profile pitching going on,” Stewart says. “These kinds of big-money projects don’t come by that frequently. Some people have the potential to make a lot of money if it goes ahead.”


Both Stewart and Rennie express unease about the motivation behind the move. “The VAG is pushing for starchitecture at the expense of all small art and community groups,” Rennie declares. Stewart admits there is a certain apprehension in the art community regarding the situation: “Right now the developers are leading the debate . . . . It’s not an in-depth discussion about what we really need in Vancouver.” 


According to Rennie, the real issue here is how money should 
be spent in the current economy. 
As a result, instead of emphasizing art, the focus has been on developing a grand landmark for the city. “With some engagement rings, it’s about the diamond, and with others it’s the hand it is on,” Rennie says. “It’s about how you wear a quarter-carat ring – proudly. When you need a five-carat ring, I think you are showing, this is a marriage with a pre-nup.”


The verdict is out as to whether the VAG will remain loyal to its childhood sweetheart or jump into bed with a potential sugar daddy.


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Both worlds are possible in the VAG debate: A great new building & improvement of the VAG displayed art currently in storage of dubious value. That said, egos are involved in this debate, and with already $50 million thrown into the game, the stakes are high. This is public money and despite the cavalier attitudes of the players in the VAG debate ... $50 million is a lot of tax cash. Wait for it ... they want more. Around this debate is the whiff of that condition common to public funding debates: kleptomania. The debate demonstrates a total disregard to value. VAG wants a world-class building, stand alone (feet stamping the ground ...) and they want it now. A new stand-alone VAG is a pig of a project. Much better is that the VAG gets a very large chunk of a serious development on the bus lands, which will also include an extension of the underground mall system, more parking underground (also needed), and a multi-use tower above to pay for the new VAG. By very large chunk I mean they would also control the rental income for the property in the mall area which would fund the VAG going forward. With such a project the VAG would have, say, five or six complete levels to display the amazing art collection, a few levels for temperature-controlled storage, and an administrative level for restoration labs, offices, and a VAG conference center. Add to that a serious VAG restaurant (after all, visitors and patrons of the arts have to eat too) and you have everything the VAG wants, except the stand alone building. A project as detailed above would conceivably pay 100% of the entire VAG move AND the cost of construction. As for the stand alone building die-hard fans ... you have a stand alone building now and a new one would be a prodigious waste of taxpayer's money when you can get, basically for free, ten story's of a mega project by cooperating with the city and some key developers. The taxpayers win but it will be a lot of work for the VAG. I would buy a condo at the top of a building that houses in the bottom ten stories the Vancouver Art Galllery.
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