Classical Chinese Garden
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Vancouver's
Chinatown began in Shanghai Alley in the late 1880's,
on the shores of False Creek at Pender and Carrall Street.
Today, Chinatown stands firmly established as a strong
ethnic community, a well-known tourist attraction, and
a prosperous commercial district.
To discover Chinatown is to be suddenly engulfed with
the tastes, sounds and fragrances of another culture.
Streets bustle with colour and commerce, telephone booths
are topped with pagoda tiles. Curious foodstuffs spill
onto the sidewalks and apothecaries sell ancient and
exotic remedies of dried lizard skin, thin-sliced deer
antler, and ground rhinoceros bone.
Listed in the Guinness Book of World Records,
the Sam Kee Building is the narrowest building
in the world - it's only 6 foot wide. In 1912, the city
expropriated most of Chang Toy's property to widen Pender
Street. Leaving only a tiny strip of land, Chang responded
by erecting the narrow building. Below the sidewalk,
a basement 10 foot wide extended the full length of
the building, which was used as an underground bath
house.
In
1911, Dr. Sun Yat-Sen took refuge at the Chinese Freemasons'
Building at 1 West Pender Street. Here, he organized
headquarters for those who helped him to depose the
adolescent Emperor Pu-Yi. Nestled behind high white
walls in Vancouver's bustling Chinatown is the exquisite
Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden. Completed
in 1986 at a cost of 5.3 million Canadian dollars, with
both craftsmen and materials imported from China, the
garden is a photographer's delight. It seems almost
monochromatic after the dazzle of Chinatown: all contemplative
muted greens and stony grays, with water walkways leading
from pavilion to pavilion among the gnarled trees and
natural rock sculptures that keep the city and the century
at bay.
You will be enriched by the Garden's symbolism and enthralled
with the intricate carvings, the courtyards, the 'leak'
windows, the architecture of the Main Hall, Water Pavilion
and Scholar's Study. From covered winding corridors,
ever-changing views unfold. Here the essential and opposing
elements of nature reveal the infinite and subtle contrasts
of Taoist yin and yang. Throughout the Garden treasured
Tai Hu limestone rocks blend with plants, trees and
jade-green water.
Classical Chinese Garden
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The
government of Canada and the People's Republic of China
collaborated to create this wonderful Ming Dynasty (1368-1644)
garden. Private sector enthusiasts, local designers
and consultants worked with 52 artisans from Suzhou,
the Garden City of China. To enhance your experience
and refresh your heart, take an interpretive tour with
a Garden Docent. Learn about the centuries-old methods
and imported materials the Chinese craftsmen used. Your
visit may also coincide with cultural performances,
Tai Chi classes, the sighting of koi fish or 'Henry'
the heron. Step into the Gift Shop before leaving the
Garden, select from unique treasures to keep the memory
alive.
The
elaborate 4 columned China Gate and the Chinese
Cultural Centre is adjacent to Sun Yat-Sun Garden.
Beautifully hand painted in traditional colours, the
gate entrance is one of the most photographed attractions
in Chinatown - the two chimeras, lion-like figures,
are protective symbols.
The Wing Sang Building, constructed in the Victorian
Italianate style of 1889, is Chinatown's oldest building.
The Chinese Benevolent Association was established
in 1906 to unify the community, settle internal disputes,
and defend the community against discrimination. The
green-balconied building was erected in 1909 and once
housed a Chinese hospital on its ground floor.
Other interesting spots to visit include the Lee
Building, which once concealed an opium factory,
and the Kuomintang Building, once the temporary
headquarters for the Chinese Nationalist League.
| Photos
courtesy of Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden
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