Cambie Street is a street in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It is
named for Henry John Cambie, chief surveyor of the Canadian Pacific
Railway's western division (as is Cambie Road, a major thoroughfare in
nearby Richmond).
There are two distinct sections
of the street. North of False Creek, the street runs on a
northeast-southwest alignment (following the rotated street grid within
Downtown Vancouver). As such, the street direction is approximately 45
degrees to that of the Cambie Bridge, and there is no seamless
connection between the two. Instead, Nelson Street carries southbound
traffic onto the bridge, and Smithe Street carries northbound traffic
away from the bridge. The downtown section of Cambie Street runs from
Water Street in Gastown in the north to Pacific Boulevard in Yaletown in
the south and is a two-way street for its length.
South of False
Creek, the street is a major six-lane arterial road, and runs as a
two-way north-south thoroughfare according to the street grid for the
rest of Vancouver. This section of the street was originally named
Bridge Street, and was first connected to Cambie Street after the first
Cambie Bridge opened in 1891; it was renamed Cambie Street after the
second Cambie Bridge opened in 1912.
Between King Edward Avenue
West and Southwest Marine Drive, the street has a 10 metre wide
boulevard with grass and many well established trees on it; the
boulevard was designated as a heritage landscape by the city of
Vancouver in 1993.
When proposals to build SkyTrain's Canada Line
(formerly known as the Richmond-Airport-Vancouver or RAV Line) along
Cambie Street first emerged, they were heavily protested by residents
and business owners who wanted to keep the street as a heritage
boulevard. They argued in favour of using the existing Arbutus Street
rail corridor instead.
Once the decision was made to use the
Cambie alignment for the Canada Line anyway, residents along the
corridor successfully persuaded authorities to put the rail line in a
tunnel instead of running it as a surface route, and to dig the tunnel
using a tunnel boring machine. However, due to cost concerns and time
constraints, the winning bidder decided to use a cut-and-cover method to
build the tunnel – which required disruption to traffic and business
along the corridor during the construction. As such, even though it cost
less and was much faster than using a tunnel boring machine, the plan
drew heavy criticism from area residents and businesses.
During
2006 to 2009, portions of the street south of False Creek were closed to
traffic to allow for construction of the line. The cut-and-cover tunnel
runs underneath the east side of the street for most of its route.
South of West 63rd Avenue, the line emerges from the tunnel and runs on
an elevated structure across the Fraser River.
Gregor Robertson,
who later became the mayor of Vancouver, was a strong supporter of
Cambie Street merchants and spoke regularly about hardships from the
Canada Line construction. He called the handling of the rail line
construction an "injustice."
On March 23, 2009, Robertson
testified in a lawsuit brought by Cambie Street merchant Susan Heyes,
owner of Hazel & Co., in the B.C. Supreme Court regarding damage to
her business from the construction, a lawsuit for which she was awarded
$600,000 by the B.C. Supreme Court due in part to the fact that there
was insufficient action to mitigate the effects of Canada Line
construction on Cambie Street merchants. The award for damages was later
reversed at the British Columbia Court of Appeal, which determined that
while the project had resulted in a legal nuisance to the claimant, the
government had acted within its authority and was therefore not liable
for damages. Leave for further appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada was
subsequently denied. On the Canada Line's opening day of August 17,
2009, Robertson said Greater Vancouver needed more rapid transit but the
Canada Line was a "great start" and that he was a "Johnny-come-lately"
to the project.
Saturday, November 6, 2021
On Cambie Street in Downtown Vancouver. Summer of 2020.
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