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Move Vancouver Art Gallery to post office, says condo king

One of Vancouver's top real estate developers says the Vancouver Art Gallery should move to the recently sold downtown Canada Post building.

Where should Vancouver's art gallery go?

12 years ago
Duration 1:59
Two ideas include the Canada Post building and a site near the Granville Street Bridge

One of Vancouver's top real estate developers says the Vancouver Art Gallery should move to the recently sold downtown Canada Post building.

The so-called condo king Bob Rennie told Rick Cluff, host of CBC Radio Ones The Early Edition, building a new art gallery isn't a good idea.

"I think a quick fix of, Let's just build a $600 million museum,' without looking at it in its entirety is not what we should be doing in this economy," he said.

Rennie says there are very few big city blocks downtown with redevelopment potential like the block at West Georgia and Homer streets where the post office sits.

He favours the idea expanding the Vancouver Art Gallery by creating smaller satellite spaces for art rather than moving the whole institution.

If Rennie had his way, the iconic front of the post office would be used to create a 60,000-square-foot gallery space, while the rest of the building would be used for retail and condos.

Rennie says the money saved by not building a new gallery should be put toward the art collection.

The Vancouver Art Gallery has said it is squeezed for space at its current location at West Georgia and Hornby, and is only able to show three per cent of its permanent collection at a time.

Vancouver Coun. Geoff Meggsthrew his support behind the ideaof moving the gallery to the post office building in 2011.

Canada Post is closing the downtown Vancouver mail sorting facility and moving its operations to a site near the Vancouver airport by 2015. (CBC)

The gallery has requestedthat the Larwill Park property be considered as a site for a new facility. The site,two blocks east of the post office at the corner of Cambie and West Georgia streets, is currently a parking lot.

No decision on the request has been made. If it is granted,the gallerywould have to startraising thefunds needed for a new building.

Another unsolicited proposal from architect Tony Osborn involves demolishing the circular on-ramps at the north end of the Granville Bridge and building a new art gallery between Howe and Seymour streets.