Wish I wasn't right, but looks like there won't be a clamshell.
http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ne...72e193&k=18145
An idea to build a wooden "clam-shell" roof over Robson Square has been shucked and thrown out with the garbage.
Economic Development Minister Colin Hansen said yesterday the idea for a wooden roof over the square, linked to Premier Gordon Campbell, is now officially dead.
"
We had never adopted that concept," he said. "That concept for a so-called clam-shell roof is not on."
The B.C. government has announced a public-consultation process over what to do with Robson Square, designed by architect Arthur Erickson.
Les Bazso, The Province
The idea was floated last year, but received almost universal derision, including a plea from the prestigious Royal Architectural Institute of Canada to drop the concept.
Hansen said the province wants public input into the future of the downtown Vancouver plaza, which is getting an $87-million facelift.
Much of the site is currently under tarps, to plug leaks in the 30-year-old structure.
Hansen wants Robson Square to become a cultural space that could be used for public events.
"We're open to ideas," Hansen told The Province. "I hope
people will look at how Robson Square can become a meeting-place, and a place where Asia-Pacific cultures can be celebra-ted."
Part of the plan is to build a new $23-million Asia-Pacific Centre.
Robson Square is to be one of the celebration spaces around the city during the 2010 Olympics and the outdoor skating rink is being refurbished in time for the Games.
The square's architect, Arthur Erickson, has been giving advice on the project, Hansen said,and will be part of any design changes.
NDP Olympic critic Harry Bains wanted to know if this is another Olympic cost.
"The taxpayer has every right to know if this is another hidden cost," said Bains. "The public should make the decision. There should be real input by [the] public, then act upon those suggestions."
Fred Kent, president of the New York-based Project for Public Spaces, said the square's sunken plaza rarely works because people don't like to go below ground.
Kent said Robson Square should remain open 18 hours a day, with cafes, restaurants and activities.
"It has to work all the time. It can't just work when there are festivals," he said, adding that it should also link up with the lawn of the Vancouver Art Gallery.
"You really don't have any great gathering place in downtown and that's really a fatal flaw," he said. "It may be the last attempt to make it work."