Vaunted Vancouver
Set between the Pacific Ocean and a coastal mountain range, the British Columbia city—with a rain forest in its midst—may be the ultimate urban playground
- By Jonathan Kandell
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2004, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Milton Wong, 65, financier and chancellor of Simon Fraser University in suburban Vancouver, grew up in the city at a time when the “right kind of people” most emphatically did not include Asians. Born in 1939, he is old enough to remember the internment of Japanese Canadians in the country’s interior during World War II. (Chinese Canadians did not get the vote until 1947; Japanese Canadians followed in 1949.) “My two older brothers graduated as engineers from UBC but were told, ‘Sorry, no Chinese are being hired,’ ” recalls Wong. “They had to go back into the family tailoring business.”
By the time Wong graduated from UBC in 1963, the bias had eased; he became a stock portfolio manager. He ended up making a fortune for many of his investors. “Maybe I didn’t think wealth was the most important thing in life, but everybody else seemed to view it as a sign of success,” says Wong. “They started to say, ‘Gee, if people trust Wong with all that money, he must be smart.’ ”
Funds have undoubtedly diluted prejudice against the 60,400 Hong Kong Chinese who have moved here in the past decade, abetted by Vancouver’s direct flights to Hong Kong. Canada readily granted permanent residence to immigrants who demonstrated a net worth of (U.S.) $350,000 and invested (U.S.) $245,000 in a government-run job-creation fund. “Perhaps it was a lot easier to accept immigrants who drive Mercedes,” quips Jamie Maw, a real estate banker and magazine food editor. Even today, some heads of households continue to work in Hong Kong and visit their families in Vancouver for long weekends a couple of times a month. In fact, Richmond, a southern suburb that is home to the city’s airport, has become a favored residential area for Hong Kong Chinese immigrants. Nearly 40 percent of Richmond’s residents are Chinese, twice the percentage of Chinese in the metropolitan area.
“It’s easy to spend a whole day at the mall,” says Daisy Kong, 17, a high-school senior who lives in Richmond. Kong, who moved here only eight years ago, would like to return to Hong Kong someday. But for her friend Betsy Chan, 18, who plans to study kinesiology at SimonFraserUniversity, Hong Kong would be an option only if she were offered a better job there. “I have a mixed group of friends, and even with my Chinese friends, we usually speak only English,” says Chan, who prefers rafting, hiking and rock climbing to browsing the stores in the mall. Ricky Sham, 18, who is soon to enroll at the University of Victoria, says Chan has obviously gone native. “You won’t see Chinese-speaking Chinese hanging outdoors,” he says. “My friends go to pool halls and video arcades.”
Another group of recent arrivals—American filmmakers—also prefer the city’s indoor attractions. “People all over the world rave about the great outdoors and stunning film locations in British Columbia. We offer the great indoors,” claims a Web site advertisement for one of the half-dozen local studios. The message has been heeded in Hollywood. On any given day here, anywhere from 15 to 30 movies and television shows are in production, making Vancouver, a.k.a. “Hollywood North,” the third-largest filmmaking center in North America after Los Angeles and New York. The television series “X-Files” was filmed here, as were such recent features as Scary Movie 3, X2, Snow Falling on Cedars and Jumanji.
“The beautiful setting put us on the map originally,” says Susan Croome, the British Columbia film commissioner. “Filmmakers could travel a couple of hours north of L.A., in the same time zone, speak the same language, get scenery here they couldn’t get there—and at less cost. From that followed the development of talented film crews and well-equipped studios where sets can be built quickly.”
At Mammoth Studios, a former Sears, Roebuck warehouse in suburban Burnaby, an L.A. production team is filming Chronicles of Riddick, an intergalactic adventure starring Vin Diesel. (As sci-fi cognoscenti are well aware, this is a sequel to Pitch Black, in which Diesel also plays a likable outer space sociopath who vanquishes even nastier goons.)
Still dressed in suit and tie from previous interviews, I arrive late by taxi at the wrong end of the aptly named Mammoth Studios. I’m told the production office, where I’m expected, is located the equivalent of three city blocks away in a straight line through several sets—or about double that distance if I were to skirt the sets. I opt for the indoor route, and have barely begun before I’m thoroughly embarrassed by a booming megaphone voice: “Yoooh . . . the man in the business suit, you are walking through a live set!”
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Comments (2)
RE "In the bookstores I wandered into, locating anything beyond bestsellers and self-improvement tomes posed a challenge. But then, this is a young city—barely 120 years old."
The problem is not that the city is too young, but that corporations imprint sameness everywhere. If you're looking for "good" bookstores selling more than the latest Best Seller, you just have to steer clear of the national chains.
Try heading down to MacLeod's Books, at 455 West Pender Street (Vancouver BC), is a legend and an institution. It is favorably compared to Powell's Books (Portland) or Black Oak Books (Berkeley), but is distinctly more antiquarian. Sparticus Books, at 684 East Hastings Street (Vancouver BC), is a Left/Anarchist bookstore. It's not unlike Bound Together Bookstore (San Francisco CA) or any number of the cooperative haunts vanishing from Berkeley (CA).
Posted by opendna on February 23,2010 | 08:45 AM
My husband's family, brothers, are living in the Vancouver area. My brother-in-law Larry, is among the Engineers working on the Olympics at this time. Milton Wong, who would know if we are somehow connected through family, Wong being a common name, was around at a time Asians weren't as pronounced as an immigrant group. We look forward to travelling West for the Olympics, and perhaps meeting family we would otherwise not have the opportunity to do. Wonderful Article ! Thank you.
Posted by MaryAnne Latimer Wong on February 12,2008 | 12:42 PM