British Columbia

B.C. adds three more Vancouver hotels to housing stock for homeless people

The B.C. government has purchased three more hotels to help house homeless people living in Vancouver.

Patricia Hotel on Hastings Street and two others on Main Street will provide rooms

A six-storey hotel on the corner of a street block.
An image from Google Street View shows the Patricia Hotel at Dunlevy Avenue and East Hastings Street in Vancouver. The hotel has been purchased by the B.C. government as part of a plan to house homeless people living at Strathcona Park nearby. (Google Streetview)

The B.C. government has purchased three more hotels to help house homeless people living in Vancouver.

Housing Minister David Eby said in a news release that the properties will help the province meet its goal of providing dignified indoor living spaces for everyone currently camping in Vancouver's Strathcona Park by the end of the month.

The province says it is spending about $75.5 million to buy the Patricia Hotel and two properties on Main Street.

The buildings have a total of 249 units and about 114 are expected to be offered soon to people experiencing homelessness.



B.C. Housing will work with current long-term tenants at the Patricia Hotel to ensure they have appropriate accommodation as the building transitions to supportive housing, while tenants at the other two hotels will not be displaced.

This comes after a federal announcement of the purchase of three other properties through the Rapid Housing Initiative, including the Ramada Hotel on West Pender Street.

Together, all six buildings will provide about 340 permanent supportive homes, according to the B.C. government.

"Street homelessness and encampments aren't working for anyone in Vancouver — not for people who have been living outside over the winter in unsafe conditions without access to supports, and not for their neighbours who live nearby," said Eby in a statement.


Initially, the Patricia Hotel will provide about 100 permanent homes with wraparound supports and a non-profit housing operator will be on site to manage the building and provide services.

Daily meals, access to life-skills training, recovery services, employment assistance, counselling and physical and mental health resources will be available to residents, said the government.

B.C. Housing is reaching out to non-profit housing providers to explore support services for the two buildings on Main Street.

One is a 22-unit building and the other has 32 units. They're both located just north of National Ave. Between the two buildings, there are currently 14 vacant units.