Reclaiming ‘renewal’: Society pitches new life for historic Black Vancouver area
VANCOUVER — When Randy Clark wants to return to the home where he spent his formative years from 12 to 16, it means gazing at a viaduct that many credit with the destruction of Vancouver’s historic Black community.
The house where Clark lived with his mother and four of his 10 siblings was demolished in 1970 alongside others that backed onto “Hogan’s Alley.”
The city approved the construction of the Georgia viaduct under a banner of “urban renewal,” but it came at a cost to those who called it home.
“That’s where the viaduct currently rests, on that piece of property,” Clark, 67, said in an interview.