http://www.historicplaces.ca
Construction
Date(s)
1925/01/01
Listed on the Canadian Register: 2007/07/25
Statement of Significance
Description of Historic Place
The
Chin Wing Chun Society Building, at 158 East Pender Street in
Vancouver's Chinatown, is a narrow, four-storey brick and stucco
building in the classical revival style, which houses Tong meeting
rooms over a street-level store.
Heritage Value
The
Chin Wing Chun Society Building has value for being representative
of buildings erected and occupied by major Tongs (surname societies)
during a period of rapid growth in Chinatown, and for being an
excellent example of the Chinatown style of architecture.
The
Chin Wing Chun Society Building is a particularly good example
of the mature Chinatown style and this is an important aspect
of its heritage value. Four storeys high (with a 'cheater' mezzanine
added after completion) and free of interior columns, it has retail
space (in this case a restaurant) on the ground floor, offices
above, and a meeting room on the top floor. The street-facing
windows on the upper floors are all recessed behind balconies
flush with the stucco finish. The pedimented parapet features
the name of the Tong and the date of construction (1925). Like
most buildings of this kind, the architect, R.A. McKenzie, was
European-Canadian.
The
building accommodated the Chin Wing Chun Society, the association
that provided support and protection to people with the surname
'Chin', 'Chan', or 'Chen', whose ancestral birthplace was Wing
Chun Village in Hunan Province. Organizational life flourished
in Chinatown during the early 1920s; the number of active Tongs
expanded and they assumed an important role as property owners
along Pender Street. The reasons for expansion include the overall
increase in Chinatown's population, fuelled by immigration from
China and migration from other centres in British Columbia, an
increased interest in Chinese politics within the immigrant community,
and heightened discrimination from the white community.
Heritage
value is also found in the significant contributions several members
of the Society made to the community. An example is Chin Chuck
Lin (Harry Chin), who came to Vancouver from Guangdong as a teenager
in 1920, began work as a vegetable peddler, went on to flourish
as a produce and floral wholesaler, and donated generously to
Chinese cultural and charitable organizations through his Harry
Lin Chin Foundation.
Source:
City of Vancouver Heritage Conservation Program
Character-Defining Elements
The
character-defining elements of the Chin Wing Chun Society Building
include:
- Location on East Pender Street in the heart of Vancouver's Chinatown
district
- Tall narrow street elevation
- Decorative elements, including twin flagpoles, raised parapet
incorporating pediment with date of completion, frieze, tympanum
with inset Society name, cornice and hood mould, columns, pilasters,
strings, dentils and corbels.
- Recessed balconies, and the remnants of the original red colour
of their floors
- The asymmetrical storefront arrangement with side stair
- The decoration in the staircase and the interior meeting hall
|