Vancouver's Canada Post block sold to investment firm - Action News
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British Columbia

Vancouver's Canada Post block sold to investment firm

The future of an entire city block in Vancouver's downtown core is now up in the air, after Canada Post finally let go of its signature mail processing plant.
In 2011, Canada Post announced it would close the downtown Vancouver mail sorting facility and move its operations to a site near the Vancouver airport by 2015. (CBC)

The future of an entire city block in Vancouver's downtown core is now up in the air, after Canada Post finally let go of its signaturemail processing plant.

The Canada Post building at Georgia and Hamilton street has been sold for an undisclosed sum to the British Columbia Investment Management Corporation (bcIMC), a pension fund management company.

Donald Luxton, president of the Heritage VancouverSociety, said his group will be closely watching the progress of any changes proposed for the site.

"It's building that we consider to have significant heritage value, which is not officially recognized in any form of protection or even heritage register listing of the building," he said.

"We feel it's a very significant piece of mid-century architecture, and public and institutional civic architecture," he said.

LuxtonsaidHeritage Vancouver would like the city to assess the building for heritage value before anything drastic is done.

"Our position is that the building would have significant heritage value if it was evaluated, and we think alarm bells should be going off on this issue," he said

Themodernist building, which opened in 1958, does not have an official heritage designation, which means it could be demolished.

But Vancouver City Councillor Geoff Meggs says nothing would be done to the redevelop the propertywithoutinput from various parties.

"There's no requirement to keep the building exactly as-is, but changes would have to go through some kind of approval process and there would be assessments of the heritage value, and recommendations coming from professionals about what can be protected and what could be changed," he said.

In 2011, after Canada Post announced the relocation, Meggs suggested the buildingcould serve as a new, larger home for the Vancouver Art Gallery. The city had already reserved a site for a new gallery two blocks east of the post office at the corner of Cambie and West Georgia streets.

In a statement, the bcIMCsays the building provides a unique opportunity for a large-scale mixed-use development, but says a redevelopment on the scale of the existing full-block building would require extensive planning.

In 2014, Canada Post will begin shifting the operations intothe new 700,000-square-foot processingfacility being built at Vancouver International Airport in Richmond, B.C.

With files from the CBC's Robert Zimmerman