Quote:
Originally Posted by Hali87
The Granville Island comparison is valid in a lot of ways. Almost everything about the Halifax waterfront is immediate and utilitarian, there's a high intensity and variety of uses and you just step off the boardwalk and into whatever you're doing, like a pedestrian mall with boats docking on one side (edit: Purdy's Wharf being the absolute worst example of this). Vancouver's (downtown) waterfront seemed very engineered, postmodern, spacious, and outward-focused in comparison. Just completely different.
|
Yep. They have a different feel and it is hard for me to pick which one I like more.
I didn't say Vancouver's waterfront is without history. But to put it into context, the oldest waterfront buildings in Halifax are large masonry warehouses built by privateers in the 1700's and early 1800's. The pier structures (many granite) and boardwalk themselves are also historic and built in a distinct style. I'm not sure if Vancouver has wooden boardwalk sections.
Halifax also has a lot more waterfront areas than just downtown. There is Point Pleasant Park and then there is the Northwest Arm seawall and Fleming Park and memorial tower. Stanley Park is certainly the more impressive natural park but then again Point Pleasant has things like a martello tower from 1796, the first one in North America. The Dingle (memorial tower) is really cool and I'm not sure anything quite like it exists elsewhere in Canada. It has a public observation deck and is packed with monuments donated from around the British empire when it was built circa 1900 (in Vancouver it would be considered quite old).
Vancouver's ferries are not as nice (no sitting outside) and it doesn't have any harbour islands, much less harbour islands with old forts on them to explore.
I think the naval facilities in Halifax are also interesting, even though they aren't directly connected to a seawall. And the mix of ship traffic in Halifax tends to be more diverse and interesting, and more culturally connected to the city. People there tend to be interested in visiting military ships or tall ships and there are famous local ships like the Bluenose II.
I also think the WDCL does a better job in Halifax of adding interesting temporary uses to stretches of the waterfront. They have little booths and shipping containers that they move around that are filled with seasonal businesses, and the parking lots are often used as event spaces. Vancouver has some of this too but not as much.
Vancouver's maritime museum is actually the less visited and much less interesting of the two, and Vancouver has no Pier 21 equivalent. Or possibly any publicly-accessible former port facilities like that.