British Columbia

Little Mountain redevelopment up for rezoning after 7-year wait

It was called 'nothing short of criminal' when backhoes razed Vancouver's oldest public housing project in 2009. Seven years later a plan is finally on the table to rebuild.

Redevelopment in limbo since 224 public housing units demolished in 2009

LIttle Mountain site rezoning plan would see 1,400 residential units by its end, double the density that existed when the site was demolished in 2009. (Holborn/City of Vancouver)

 It was called 'nothing short of criminal' when backhoes razed Vancouver's oldest public housing project — Little Mountain — in 2009.

Seven years later a plan is finally on the table to rebuild on the site. 

On Tuesday night a public hearing on the rezoning application will reopen discussion on development of the prime real estate located at 155 East 37th Avenue.

The City of Vancouver has chosen Holborn Properties Ltd. to redevelop the site, which sits between Queen Elizabeth park and Main Street overlooking city hall.

Design plans for a development project.
Most of the six-hectare Little Mountain site has sat empty since the controversial demolition of the existing buildings in 2009. (Holborn/City of Vancouver)

The public hearing on the rezoning application is expected to draw a crowd given ongoing demand for affordable housing in Vancouver's red-hot housing market.

The new proposal to replace the 224 public housing units splintered by wrecking crews years ago includes:

  • Three 12-storey mostly residential buildings
  • 1,400 market value homes.
  • 234 social housing units.
  • 69-space childcare.
  • 48 units of affordable housing adjacent to Main Street.
  • A new community plaza and public park.
  • A new city street and an extension of 35th Avenue

Little Mountain's history 

There was a loud outcry by activists when Little Mountain buildings were razed in 2009. (CBC)

When Little Mountain social housing was demolished in 2009 activist Kia Salomons with Community Advocates for Little Mountain slammed the province for razing affordable homes.

"It's nothing short of criminal to be destroying solid, well-built homes with the knowledge that nothing will be built here for many years to come," Salomons told CBC at the time.

The project built in 1954 was home to 700 people and 37 buildings on the 15-acre or six-hectare site.

An artist's representation of the kind of low-rise, mixed use building proposed for the Little Mountain site in Vancouver B.C. (Holborn/City of Vancouver)