Event Listings

GROW


Dates: May - June, 2011
Location: South East False Creek area

Workshop Dates: May 21 & 28, June 4, 2011, 12:00-4:00
Location: Multipurpose Room, Creekside Community Centre (1 Athletes Way)
All levels of experience with design and gardening welcome
All workshops are free
To register, call Creekside Community Centre at 604.257.3050
Website: www.othersights.ca

Other Sights for Artists’ Projects Association’s project GROW consists of a series of walks, lectures, workshops and experiments focusing on Vancouver’s growing identity as a sustainable city. This program will explore various notions of sustainability through the site of South East False Creek. Seasonally planned events include a series of walks in the area led by artist Holly Schmidt, generative workshops on urban design and sustainable growing practices, and lectures about ecological and social sustainability.

Join artist Holly Schmidt, Vancouver Design Nerds, Ocean Dionne and Alicia Medina Laddaga and a team of gardeners for a workshop exploring the possibilities for growing food in the urban environment. Through observation, discussion and hands-on prototype building you will create and share new ways to grow veggies, greens and herbs in the city. Small pocket gardens will be planted at Creekside and then suspended on chain link fences near the Grow project site. Take a miniature garden of your own to add some green to your neighbourhood.

The first in this series of walks takes place this Saturday, May 7th, 2011 from 1:30-3:00, meeting at the main entrance to Creekside Community Centre, 1 Athletes Way.

Holly Schmidt has invited sustainability educator, Duane Elverum to join her for a walking dialogue through the Olympic Village and South East False Creek. Duane will draw from his experience in sustainable design and community engagement to consider the urban design issues of our growing and changing cities, as well as the social and ecological issues raised by Vancouver’s “greenest” development. Holly will explore the question of how sustainability can be enacted not just built into our urban environments.

This walk is part of Jane’s Walks in Vancouver.

With support from the City of Vancouver’s 125th Anniversary Grants Program and the participation of the Government of Canada.

Bhangra.me: Vancouver’s Bhangra Story


Date: May 5 to October 23, 2011
Location: Museum of Vancouver
Website: www.museumofvancouver.ca and www.bhangra.me

Experience an interactive exhibition that chronicles Bhangra music, dance and politics in Vancouver. From dance teams in the 70s, to international DJs in 2011, this exhibit features Vancouver’s unique Bhangra story. Play instruments, listen to local DJ-curated playlists, read about Bhangra’s connection to social protest, and dance in the Performance Lounge. Share your Bhangra story, memories and photos online at Bhangra.me.

With support from the City of Vancouver’s 125th Anniversary Grants Program and the participation of the Government of Canada.

Read More

Download the Bhangra.Me Press Release

SFU: Think You Know Vancouver?


Date: Throughout 2011 (next event on March 31)
Location: Venue TBA - please check website
Website: www.sfu.ca/history/van125.htm

As part of Vancouver’s 125th Anniversary year celebrations SFU’s department of History has planned a year-long lecture series exploring different aspects of Vancouver’s history.

These events are free and open to the public, but registration is required. Visit the SFU website for further information on times, locations and to RSVP.

The schedule for the lecture series continues throughout the year, and the Vancouver Sun is also providing a free podcast service of all the lectures.

* January 27th, 2011 – Charlie Demers and Matt Hern: “Vancouver: The Best Place on Earth?”
* February 24th, 2011 – Ilya Vinkovetsky: “I Can See Russia from My House”: Russian Colonization on the Northwest Coast, 1804-1867.
* March 31st, 2011 – Jennifer Spear: “Captain George Vancouver goes to California, 1792-1794”
* April 28th, 2011 – Mary-Ellen Kelm: “The Flu of 1918 - preview of H1N1?”
* May 26th, 2011 – Allen Seager: “Vancouver’s First 50 Years”
* September 29th, 2011 - Jack Little: “Vancouver’s Playground: Class and Leisure in Howe Sound, 1902-1962.”
* October 27th, 2011 – Andrea Geiger: “Taking the Province to Court: Japanese Immigrants and Race in Early Vancouver”
* November 24, 2011 – Derryl MacLean: “Realizing the Muslim Community in Vancouver.”

Read More

Visit the Vancouver Sun’s website to learn more and to listen to podcasts of the SFU History Vancouver 125 lecture series.