British Columbia

Farewell from Fernwood: Victoria's Cornerstone Café has closed

After 12 years, the Cornerstone Café in Victoria's Fernwood neighbourhood has closed.

Social-enterprise café in Victoria says goodbye after 12 years as community hub

The Cornerstone Café transformed a derelict building into a community hub. (Mila Czemerys)

After 12 years as a popular meeting spot, the Cornerstone Café in Victoria's Fernwood neighbourhood served its last cup of coffee earlier this week. 

The café, a non-profit run by the Fernwood Neighbourhood Resource Group, was a catalyst for neighbourhood revival.

In 2005, the building on the corner of Fernwood Road and Gladstone Avenue was derelict and home to squatters.

When the Fernwood NRG first bought the building, Lee Herrin, the group's executive director, remembered that it felt like a gamble.

"We took a big risk as an organization in purchasing a boarded-up building," he told On the Island's Khalil Akhtar. "At that time, the neighbourhood was really struggling."

The neighbourhood's living room

The gamble paid off. The Cornerstone Café opened and became a local hub. More commercial tenants came to the building, and the NRG opened affordable housing above the café. Herrin said that stable income let Fernwood re-invest in the neighbourhood, hosting regular community dinners and creating a sense of stability. 

"All the things we wished for have happened," said Herrin.

The Cornerstone Café was a social enterprise started by the Fernwood Neighbourhood Resource Group. It closed on January 23. (Alexandra Stephanson)

"There's friendships that have been formed, relationships, probably a few marriages, maybe even some divorces," said Herrin. "It really has been a stage on which the neighbourhood has lived out its life for the last dozen years."

New tenants, same mission

Now it's time to move on, and in characteristic fashion, Cornerstone is helping a neighbour.

Next month, the space will become the new home of The Parsonage Café and Fernwood Coffee. The Parsonage, which is currently just a few blocks away from Cornerstone, was looking for a new home after facing a rent increase.

Herrin says while the café's name will change, the Cornerstone building will stay part of the social fabric of Fernwood.

"For many, many years to come, the neighbourhood will have the same living room, just different ownership."

You can hear Khalil Akhtar's full interview with Lee Herrin from On the Island here:

With files from On the Island.