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	<title>Riverview Heritage Values 2012</title>
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	<link>http://www.riverviewvalues.info</link>
	<description>A project to document community heritage values for the Riverview Lands</description>
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		<title>Results from Workshop #4</title>
		<link>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-4</link>
		<comments>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-4#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Sep 2012 19:16:38 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous Comments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Results]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The following comments were collected at the June 12th Drop-In Workshop. If you would prefer to download this information by PDF, please click here: Workshop #4 Results PDF Theme 1: Hillside and River Riverview is Coquitlam’s version of Stanley Park. &#8230; <a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-4">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The following comments were collected at the June 12th Drop-In Workshop. If you would prefer to download this information by PDF, please click here: <a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Riverview-workshop-4-transcript.pdf">Workshop #4 Results PDF</a></p>
<a name="theme-1-hillside-and-river"></a><h4><strong>Theme 1: Hillside and River</strong></h4>
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<div>Riverview is Coquitlam’s version of Stanley Park. Not many cities have a peaceful oasis in the middle of an urban setting. Even driving by, on Lougheed Hwy., there is a more peaceful feeling than in other places. The trees, plants and grounds provide a tranquil setting with trees from many parts of the world, all in one place. Parking lots and pavement, housing developments &amp; shopping complexes can’t provide the serenity that nature does. Don’t pave paradise to put up a parking lot, like the old Joni Mitchell song says. Save Riverview! It’s our heritage, once sacrificed, it’s too late.</div>
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<div>An opportunity to showcase Human Settlement layers of our various layers of what is really our Human Experience in this province and specifically in the Region. Because as our values and social cohesion is under assault, we have in this very unique site a potential to tell our human story, and, in turn face the future with a 21st century model of a self contained community habitat…</div>
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<p>Westlawn &amp; core heritage precinct are a visual reminder of a grander epic era. We are losing a sense of this type of planning. Fully integrated concept, a story.</p>
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<p>The lands contain priceless trees from all over the world that could NEVER be replaced. It seems a natural spot for family parks, Convention Centre &amp; ongoing Psychiatric treatment facility. They can heal on the therapeutic environment already there. The “housing” has already encroached enough on the property. Riverview lands contain a beautiful arboretum &amp; the lovely green hillsides which help create a quite safe haven amid the chaos around it &#8211; traffic overbuilding. Already we have lost too much of the Riverview lands to housing. Green spaces are badly needed in our over developed cities. What species are/will be at risk?</p>
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<p>Riverview lands contain a priceless collection of trees. It is a magnificent arboretum. Whatever happens, the trees must stay.</p>
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<p>Tree # 932. California Laurel, I walk past it everyday going to work &amp; HEY. It makes my day, the fragrance is heavenly.</p>
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<p>Greenspace is a vital tool for emotional/psychological therapy. Part of the stress of today’s society is related to our disconnect from nature. Development (i.e. housing) would be detrimental to strengthening our link to nature.</p>
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<div>This is an amazing place to see and understand the seasonality of region &#8211; trees, animals, etc. A person needs to go there every day for a year to understand and appreciate it.</div>
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<p>The lands contain a historical collection of trees combined with the open greenspace. Coquitlam’s “Stanley Park”.</p>
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<div>Riverview lands contain historic as well as environmental treasures. We need to save the valuable trees and greenery. Too many open spaces are being claimed for re-development! Strongly object to Riverview being developed into a “community”.</div>
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<p>The people of BC want this entire site preserved for future generations to enjoy &#8211; it’s a MAGICAL, MYSTICAL place. We all need mental health care &amp; this site provides it. Every visit I learn something new, see something I’ve never seen before. The roads through the site are like a labyrinth’s path, revealing fresh insights at every turn.</p>
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<p>The trees of riverside and the greenspace surrounding them are unique in Canada and must be preserved. As population pressure promotes development in this area, all of us need to be vigilant to protect Riverside.</p>
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<p>Riverview is one of the jewels of Coquitlam. It says a lot about us if we level the site &amp; erect towers. Willing to bulldoze a site that for many years was the center of the community for $$ is a sad commentary.</p>
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<p>Greenbelt &#8211; for animals</p>
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<p>Story of the culture we inherited from beyond our provincial borders.</p>
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<p>Coquitlam has 7 identities.</p>
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<p>The whole thing should be kept for mental health. It is important because it is out of the way &#8211; it allows for people with addictions to be detached from society until they are rehabilitated.</p>
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<p>It has a golf course setting for none golfers. Pristine setting, of expanses of grass &amp; trees. Riverview provides this experience and is different from other Lower Mainland parks.</p>
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<p>Central to Lower mainland, this land may be needed for more important uses in the future (i.e. 100 years from now) lets save it for the future.</p>
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<p>No other place with specimen trees of this age &amp; size in BC.</p>
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<p>Where will artists be inspired once Riverview is paved?</p>
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<a name="theme-2-the-planted-landscape-"></a><h4><strong>Theme 2: The Planted Landscape </strong></h4>
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<div>Human settlements stories over time. A place where you can have a community.</div>
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<p>Landscape communicates, &#8211; peace, &#8211; harmony, &#8211; sense of nature.</p>
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<p>The whole site is the history of healing (calmness).</p>
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<p>Boys School, Valleyview. Early landmark. An important precinct for mental health delivery.</p>
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<p>Administration Building is valuable as a place for continued community life. Important to keep for future.</p>
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<p>Lawn buildings area. Important precinct for mental health delivery. I.e. put Royal Columbia here. Stunning siting and gardens that is being lost. Reflection of wisdom and vision. Original landscape.</p>
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<p>Laundry. echo of complete sustainable community.</p>
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<div>Out of the way location for drug addicts and homeless. Rebuilding the Lawn buildings to house this population.</div>
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<p>Value as a place of connection to nature.</p>
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<p>Looking old.</p>
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<p>Valuable as green space, valuable as a place that tells the story of treatment for mental health.</p>
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<p>Value, it can be a place to communicate of all layers of human settlement patterns.</p>
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<p>- Place looking for itself. &#8211; Fragmented identity of Kwikwetlam. &#8211; Riverview lands can be the place for holding the memory of the first people here.</p>
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<p>Feeding itself. British character in the design. Harbour for living things.</p>
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<p>Linkage with Colony farm</p>
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<p>Continued emergency services.</p>
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<p>Value as township. Value as challenge for finding a future settlement model</p>
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<a name="theme-3-grand-and-modest-design"></a><h4><strong>Theme 3: Grand and Modest Design</strong></h4>
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<p>Riverview should continue in its role as a treatment/research facility. Unfortunately when the buildings were closed many patients ended up in Downtown Eastside. Why not use it (or part of it) as a detox/rehab centre? Goodness knows there are not enough of these types of facilities in the Lower Mainland.</p>
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<p>Why not co-operate with SFU or UBC for a medical research facility/lab? The medical theme is important.</p>
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<p>History is necessary for education and ongoing training. Full circle! Therapeutic milieu remains of ultimate importance along with medication compliance. Moving patients from the huge wards to smaller treatment environments, &#8211; nursing students homes. Connolly Place was all highly therapeutic.</p>
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<p>As many buildings as possible should be retained because of their historical value. They are quite majestic sitting on the hillside &amp; set far enough apart to create a feeling of space and peace. The buildings could be used for many purposes in the health care field. We have so many mentally ill on the streets who need homes &amp; care. We have them (&amp; more and more people with Alzheimers) filling our Acute Care beds and not enough publicly funded care facilities to house them. The Riverview lands would be ideal but the footprints of any new buildings must not be larger than the present structures. Under no circumstances should the lands be used to build private housing.</p>
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<p>An early concept of therapy was associated with the work programs involving the earth and fresh air. This concept remains with us today as do the buildings &amp; landscape.</p>
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<p>I am not opposed to new facilities for treatment. It isn’t realistic to think all of it can be saved. BUT some of it needs to endure in some significant way. The beautiful site should not be wasted on land development. PS De-institutionalization was failure on many levels.</p>
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<p>Mental Health is a huge issue and we need facilities for treatment. I can’t imagine anywhere else where people would open their arms for mental health facilities. Nobody wants to have mentally-ill people anywhere near their backyard. So having a place designated for this purpose and has been already accepted by the general public is precious.</p>
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<a name="theme-4-places-of-treatment-and-therapy"></a><h4><strong>Theme 4: Places of Treatment and Therapy</strong></h4>
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<p>Save it all &#8211; including the 2000 (more or less) tagged trees.</p>
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<p>Crease clinic has “hydro therapy” tubs used in the 50’s. ECT was used there in the 50’s. West Lawn, East Lawn illustrates the care (institutional) …large dorms &amp; side rooms to contain the “chronic” people in side rooms for aggressive patients. They were full until the new drugs “antipsychotics” came along.</p>
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<p>The concept of “asylum” is one of promoting safety and security. The Riverview lands and buildings did provide a necessary therapeutic sanctuary. They can again.</p>
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<div>How many other places have buildings from pretty well every decade of the 20th century? In Europe, they don’t demolish buildings just because they are old. They are often tours and attractions which are revered. Are we so uncultured that we only appreciate architecture that has no history connected to it? Also, being in nature has a huge therapeutic effect on people, unlike being in a sterile building with only glass and concrete around you.</div>
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<p>Key: a central value is that it physically there, in public hands, and appropriately zoned for health care. Value of place is its zoning and use, which is supported by community &#8211; this is RARE. And not to be recaptured.</p>
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<p>BC residents like myself are starved for architect! Riverview provided one of my only glimpses of design that is timeless, not fiberglass, cupolas and plateglass.</p>
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<p>Build on Riverview’s excellent standard of care for mental illness &amp; addictions detox/rehab &amp; dementia care. Expand to meet that growing demand. Where else but Riverview’s legacy of Care?</p>
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<a name="theme-5-adaptability-"></a><h4><strong>Theme 5: Adaptability </strong></h4>
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<div>Community spirit is important, but a community of medical treatment, not a high end housing development.</div>
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<p>The community is proud of the lovely Riverview lands and many community groups use them. I especially love the peace and solitude of the lands. We used to take our children to Colony Farm to see the animals. We walked the grounds &amp; watched the birds.</p>
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<div>The idea that all the mentally ill can be rehabbed &amp; fully socialized has run its gamut. Those buildings can still be used for the 24 hour care with a good remodeling job!</div>
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<p>It has become in part “Stanley Park” for Coquitlam while maintaining its present use as a mental health institution. Because it is an intact property looking at other health care facilities is possible on this site.</p>
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<p>It was a community and a huge source of revenue for Tri-Cities as it provided many good stable jobs. I went there as a student nurse in 1968. It had a huge impact on the person I became. In later years when most community hospitals of any size had a psych unit (I worked in a number of these) it still provided specialized longer term care for the most ill people.</p>
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<a name="theme-6-self-sufficiency-community-spirit"></a><h4><strong>Theme 6: Self-Sufficiency/Community Spirit</strong></h4>
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<p>Riverview was the earliest part of the community, everyone else moved in with it as a neighbour.</p>
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<p>Valuable to making the wholeness important, (Wholeness, green factor. Some of the buildings</p>
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<p>The buildings illustrate how Riverview functioned as a self contained community &#8211; the firehall (served the surrounding communities as well as Riverview). The tuck shop/bus stop. The tuck shop was the only place where patients could purchase comfort items without leaving the grounds. The Pennington Hall recreation centre i.e. bowling, dances etc. The Volunteer Centre, where patients could obtain clothing. The industrial buildings, the laundry, fully functioning facility where the patients worked. The industrial building later became the Heritage Museum. The Credit Union, where staff &amp; students did their banking. The Nurses Homes, Nurses Home 1, a beautiful building, later to be the Administration offices. Doctors Homes, later to house patients pre discharge into the community. The Henry Esson Young building, nursing school and library. Of course, the main buildings, Crease, West, East &amp; Centre Lawn, North Lawn where the patients lived and were cared for by many.</p>
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<div>- feeling of worth. &#8211; think about the obvious. &#8211; food, vegetables, bakery for other hospitals. -value for potential future uses. &#8211; can get rid of the asbestos. &#8211; save something we’ll never get back. &#8211; engineers lived in the cottages. &#8211; won trophies, PNE steers, swine, stock sold around the world. &#8211; HEY, changed plumbing etc for Expo ’86, divided up the bathrooms, use for homeless, have a nurse downstairs. &#8211; training centre. &#8211; trees are completely interlocked. &#8211; community farm, bakery, tuck shop. -immaculate flower beds, then had to pay men, didn’t let the patients work there anymore. &#8211; food scraps went to piggery. &#8211; taking care of animals for therapy. -all back into mental health unit. &#8211; complete unit, a family. laundry, garden, farm. &#8211; everyone had a job and it had meaning. &#8211; sterilizing, post office, credit union.</div>
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<a name="theme-7-stewardship-of-the-land-amp-theme-8-provincial-icon-and-community-amenity"></a><h4><strong>Theme 7: Stewardship of the Land &amp; Theme 8: Provincial Icon and Community Amenity</strong></h4>
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<p>The buildings &amp; setting are so unique, they are often used as settings for movies. They have character, they are unique. It isn’t a “cookie cutter” approach, every building has it’s own distinctive style. In addition, we need more green space, not less. The peacefulness of Riverview is a precious commodity within an urban setting. Please don’t decimate this priceless gem. We owe it to ourselves &amp; future generations.</p>
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<p>The grounds are close in proximity to a huge surrounding population who probably know much of this background of the institution. These are irreplaceable. A natural park amidst high density development. Long term stay facility still needed for the mentally ill. The governance &amp; stewardship is best taken over by those who have the history &amp; care the most.</p>
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<div>The lands must remain in public hands. I think it’s important that the governance should remain in local, regional &amp; provincial control, not simply in the provincial control. Private concerns must not be allowed to purchase the lands.</div>
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<p>Riverview is indeed a beautiful provincial asset which should be available to all citizens of BC The pristine setting is perfect for therapeutic healing, whatever form that may take. Recreational facilities should be included as well.</p>
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<p>Riverview is known throughout the Province. many people know someone with a connection, patient friend, staffer, patient. Their memories are mainly positive.<br />
Riverview is known for its beauty, serenity and wonderful trees. Why does the community always need to forfeit green spaces? Do not destroy our places of sanity!</p>
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<p>It may not be practical to save all or most of the buildings but the site must not be turned over to developers. I don’t want to drive down Lougheed &amp; pass a condo village.</p>
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<p>Some &#8220;things&#8221; cannot be replaced, nor values measured. The Riverview Lands in their entirety are these “things”.</p>
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<p>Poster. Protect… all of it, forever. Riverview Hospital Site. Health, Heritage, Harmony, Habitat.</p>
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<div>Zoning for Health, mental health &amp; other health care. (See City of Coquitlam 2005 vision) Valuable as a Provincial Health Care holding. (petition against selling/developing, 2007-2008).</div>
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<p>Value as a holding until the future of health care.</p>
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<a name="theme-9-what-have-we-missed"></a><h4><strong>Theme 9: What Have We Missed?</strong></h4>
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<p>There needs to be consideration for birds, including birds of prey &amp; many protected migratory species, that use the Riverview lands for nesting as well as migration stopovers, in fall and spring. Also native wildlife uses these lands as part of a green belt that stretches from the Coquitlam River to Port Moody &amp; the Inlet.</p>
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<p>Provincial impact ? All municipalities should have input into this process.</p>
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<p>So much emphasis is being placed on those that have a history with the Lands. “Future Generations” deserve to enjoy &amp; have access to these valuable Lands and Heritage buildings. The citizens of Canada that are not aware yet of this ‘national treasure’ should have this property kept in public hands, so that they or their family can also ‘one day’ enjoy the trees &amp; heritage buildings. Compared to other countries, Canada fails at keeping our historical sites safe. Lets make sure our great nieces/nephews, &amp; grandchildren have a beautiful place to go for years to come. Keep it all for us all.</p>
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<p>I am concerned that an operational hospital with full facilities was recently closed, so that the residents of the Tri-Cities have to be moved to White Rock for assessments for long term care. Also, the former nurses residence with many room &amp; lecture halls &amp; offices is also closed. This is a waste &#8211; economically, to taxpayers, socially and environmentally.</p>
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<div>These facilities could so easily have been upgraded.</div>
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<p>The trees, if uprooted would cause great instability to the soil, severe environmental damage to the immediate area, and for miles around, not to mention the wildlife activity which contributes to the ecology which is highly critical to our environment. The buildings built on Riverview grounds in the late 1800’s. Deep down this historical site is a mark of history, some thing priceless. Like the monarchy of England words cannot express its true value. The provincial government wants to replace this irreplaceable heritage site for ultimately money to boost our economy. My concern is when it’s all said and done, and the land is ruined, all the money is squandered away, what next?</p>
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<div>Trees, Finnies Garden,</div>
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<p>The ecological value of trees. Many Cities plant trees for the express purpose of absorbing CO2 emitted by vehicles. Riverview’s greenery is providing a vital service in adding to creating an environment that is healthier. This setting also provides a safe haven for various birds &amp; other wildlife, rare in a City.</p>
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		<title>Results from Workshop #3</title>
		<link>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-3</link>
		<comments>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-3#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Sep 2012 20:22:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous Comments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Results]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.riverviewvalues.info/?p=693</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The following comments were collected at the June 11th Drop-In Workshop.  If you would prefer to download this information by PDF, please click here:  Workshop #3 Results PDF Theme 1: Hillside and River Riverview lands has a “distinct character and &#8230; <a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-3">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The following comments were collected at the June 11th Drop-In Workshop.  If you would prefer to download this information by PDF, please click here:  <a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Riverview-workshop-3-transcript.pdf">Workshop #3 Results PDF</a></p>
<a name="theme-1-hillside-and-river"></a><h4><strong>Theme 1: Hillside and River</strong></h4>
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<p>Riverview lands has a “distinct character and unique sense of place”. The special features, tree collection, landscaped grounds, Finnie’s garden, natural habitat areas, streams, historical buildings, and a hospital. Riverview lands is an ideal site for mental health care. It is important to retain all the remaining Riverview lands (244 acres) as public lands, in perpetuity for the continued use of people with mental illness and addictions A new model of mental health care for the Province of BC is needed. It would be cost effective and would ensure treatment and safety for the people with mental illness to remove them from the ever growing “new street institutions”. It is also cost effective since we already own these lands.</p>
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<p>The planted trees &amp; lawns should be kept &amp; used by everyone as a park. The Arboretum is world class. Due to the space, trees are allowed to grow to their total height &amp; are marvelous to behold. The waterways should also be preserved.</p>
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<p>Please keep the natural “footprint” of the land and trees. It’s a gem and ought to inform and inspire the next chapter of the Riverview Lands.</p>
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<p>All of the Riverview lands must be maintained, those buildings which can be, restored. The lands are a perfect place for mental healthcare. There is no need to develop the Lands by developers. This is an important oasis. It is also an important greenspace corridor for our wildlife. Leave the Lands undisturbed so future generations can also benefit from their current state.</p>
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<p>Riverview lands are on the western limb of the Coquitlam River watershed &amp; overlooks its estuary. Its significance is directly related to the importance of this watershed in this region. The preservation of the natural features of watersheds everywhere has now come to be seen to be vital to a healthy community.</p>
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<p>This site is a national treasure that should be carefully cultivated to maintain its value while new uses are contemplated. It should be maintained as an integrated village w/offices/care/retail/workshops/and residential uses.</p>
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<p>The unique character of Riverview Lands should be kept as a living legacy.</p>
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<p>There is a unique and special feeling captured within the flow of the land, the older trees, forest gardens, and the views. There is nothing like it, this close to an urban area. It offers something hard to capture in words, but worth preserving as a special experience to future generations. The orchard. Trees. Colony Farm, river wetlands.</p>
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<p>Important connectivity to Colony Farm and Mundy Park and Como Creek and other natural areas. Specimen trees are amazing and beautiful, draw many people each year to view, unique in this area and so precious on a ‘public’ site.</p>
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<p>All the features of the Riverview Lands, the monumental trees, the grand buildings, the beautiful gardens (Finnies, Serenity, &amp; Valleyview), the wide open green spaces, the many streams, the rockwalls, &amp; terraces, the old orchard, the nature meadows, the wildlife, the winding roads, are all integrated as one and still exist today. As a testament to this monumental sanctuary in the middle of the Lower Mainland of BC.</p>
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<p>The cultivated landscape is unlike anything seen anywhere else in the Metro Vancouver area or province. Designed by world renowned botanist Dr. John Davidson it is a legacy of his gift to us all to be cherished and preserved. Many of the landscaping was done by patients the rock walled terraces and Finnies garden are attribute to them all and must never be disturbed. All of the cultivated areas as well as all of the woodland area as well as all of the architecture in place are all part and parcel of what makes the Riverview Lands valued as a historical legacy. None of is for sale, to be split up, to be fragmented. It is all a historical treasure to us, all of it must be preserved as so!</p>
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<p>Note to above (the cultivated landscape etc…) I am in agreement with the person on my left (see above). this land is a treasure of serenity and not to be desecrated for dollars$. My uncle was taken out of jail in the Interior foraging in anxiety on the street. He spent his whole life</p>
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<p>There are so many significant aspects to the entire Riverview Lands. All of these aspects are important. They form the history of Riverview Hospital &amp; Lands.</p>
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<p>My formative years spent at Riverview have had a life-long calming and positive impact on me particularly regarding respect for others and for the natural world.</p>
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<p>The Riverview lands are part of a great link, which extends from the Fraser River to Port Moody Inlet, and beyond. This is an important link for animals, including some that visit the Lands, Bears, Bobcats, deer and of course the squirrels that grab all the nuts.</p>
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<p>The trees are my passion, the variety, the fact that they can have all the room they need, that they have had very little pruning, and they do so well with the large buildings, each showing off the other. The resulting landscape is very soothing to the soul, and healthy for the lungs.</p>
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<p>Important about the melded natural &amp; built landscape &amp; buildings: a nurturing &amp; protective space in the world!</p>
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<p>An oasis &amp; a historical GEM!! Every time I come off the Freeway, EAST, and reach Riverview, my spirit is uplifted and I breathe in the sight, views and feel refreshed after battling URBAN DEVELOPMENT so. Developers HANDS OFF!! Riverview Lands is ALREADY developed for now &amp; future generations.</p>
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<a name="theme-2-the-planted-landscape"></a><h4><strong>Theme 2: The Planted Landscape</strong></h4>
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<p>Keep all these Lands as public lands, in perpetuity. All of the Riverview lands has a distinctive character, and a unique sense of place based on all its special features, the fabulous tree collection, the grand buildings, the spectacular views, the winding roads, the beautiful gardens, the significant high aesthetic values, the significant ecological oasis, the significant geography of the area are all paramount to physical, mental, emotional and spiritual healing.</p>
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<p>The different features, enhance each other. They are hard to separate from each other and must remain as one. All are integrated as one to make “Riverview” truly special and one of a kind. All of the remaining Riverview Lands (244 acres) are an ideal site for mental health care and all the Riverview Lands should continue to provide the much needed mental health care on these lands.</p>
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<p>On all these Riverview Lands:<br />
All buildings should be protected &amp; restored. Where appropriate these buildings should be used again for mental health care. Buildings include significant grand heritage buildings. All of the tree collection must be preserved and funds allocated for their protection. All remaining Riverview lands should be designated as a Federal Heritage site. No market housing or high density on all the remaining Riverview Lands.</p>
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<a name="theme-3-grand-and-modest-design"></a><h4><strong>Theme 3: Grand and Modest Design</strong></h4>
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<p>All the remaining Riverview Lands (244 acres) should continue to provide the much needed Mental health care on these public lands for the people of BC. All these Lands should remain as public lands in perpetuity.</p>
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<p>HEY Bldg, like many, many of the extant buildings is still perfectly useable.</p>
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<p>The Riverview grounds must be preserved as a place of mental health treatment. The grounds themselves are an integral part of a therapeutic environment. It also provides a place of safety for those with dual mental illness/addictions – i.e. safety from the elements of the street/drug environment.</p>
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<p>BISCO. (ed. Boy’s Industrial School). – did feel like a prison for the boy’s there, but Uncle Henry in West Lawn felt at home. – probably cleaner than the bunk house on the ranch (Douglas Ranch). Henry was reported to be the best irrigation man west of the Rockies (according to one of `the foremen of the Douglas Ranch.)</p>
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<p>Important for being a safe place for Henry after his life in the Douglas Ranch (after retirement). It was a place of rescue off the streets in Lytton. This was during the early 80’s</p>
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<p>Open space, green landscapes, mature trees offer a sense of security and peace. I support integrating mentally challenged into communities as opposed to segregation, but this history must be retained here because that is its original purpose and still needed. So many features of the place are critical for improving mental health.</p>
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<p>Important not to lose places that are restful – continue as place of therapy.</p>
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<p>The “cottage” effect went a long way to remove the institutional feel, and made for a more home like atmosphere, more like “normal” society into which one could be easily reintegrate.</p>
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<p>important for? HISTORICAL REASONS. &amp; still applicable in these modern days!</p>
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<p>SELF SUSTAINING! some of the marble in the buildings are beautiful. There is a grouping of trees like no where else in the world. Teachers need to be brought up to teach on these grounds!</p>
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<p>Good combination of institutional (supportive) care &amp; transition spaces like the cottages.</p>
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<p>Most of the buildings in Riverview are beautifully designed and very appropriately reflect the advanced level of architecture &amp; landscape design in the Province. Also some of the smaller buildings that were added along the way should be removed so as not to spoil the splendour created by the main buildings. Riverview had a significant role in BC As life &amp; technology have changed the building &amp; grounds should be preserved to enlighten younger generations but life must go on. The value in this complex should be preserved.</p>
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<p>Save the large buildings before they fall apart and cannot be salvaged.</p>
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<a name="theme-4-places-of-treatment-and-therapy"></a><h4><strong>Theme 4: Places of Treatment and Therapy</strong></h4>
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<p>I was at RVH Riverview Hospital} for a course in 1960’s &amp; stationed in Crease &#8211; where a lot of the cutting edge work was being done. On ‘our’ ward the OT (ed note Occupational Therapist) was the person who got to know the patients best. I still know people who go to the (ed note Wagner?) Farm weekly, and love it. I think that Hort. Therapy should have continued at RVH &#8211; for those that were interested. The big Lawn buildings were needed for control &#8211; locked up. Consider going outside (Airing Court) and there was little possibility for privacy.</p>
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<p>Hydrotherapy was cutting edge back then</p>
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<p>There should be continued treatment of mental patients at Riverview as this is a very beneficial environment. A system where patients simply pick up pills periodically &#8211; from a doctor, while cost effective for the Government is not an efficient system and is not holistic.</p>
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<p>Important not to lose places that are restful – continue as place of therapy.</p>
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<p>An opportunity to remember the past with regards to mental Illness but also a spot to produce/create a safe home for those with MH issues in the future. Not to be forgotten are the staff who spent years caring for and being the families of the patients.</p>
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<p>(Important because..) Centre of excellence.</p>
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<div>Mental Health &amp; mental Illness are on a continuum. While many people with mental illness are doing well in the community, others need more care. The land belongs to mental health. A top notch tertiary care centre.<br />
A modern psychogeriatric treatment and research centre.<br />
Step down units to help patients re-integrate</div>
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<p>Great suggestions! (editor note, comment above). I know we can do better than in the old “Essondale” days and the Downtown Eastside isn’t working for people with mental illness challenges.</p>
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<p>Also, many with serious &amp; persistent mental illness (particularly<br />
“addictions” require stable, long-term treatment.</p>
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<div>Even though modern pills have been most successful in helping people with mental problems fro some long term treatment &amp; rehab may still be a needed. The Lands do belong to the Mentally ill. &amp; some consideration to keeping some buildings that have not deteriorated too badly to be up graded &amp; used.</div>
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<div>I wouldn’t be where I am today if it hadn’t been for the professional, caring and supportive staff at Riverview &amp; the Lodges.</div>
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<a name="theme-5-adaptability"></a><h4><strong>Theme 5: Adaptability</strong></h4>
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<p>Adaptability is great and needed, as long as it stays to the main focus and goals, to house and care for British Columbians who are incapable of caring for themselves. Activity that gives them a purpose to get out of bed in the morning and be alive. Maybe one day they will able to do this on their own. Medical surprises are coming down the ‘Pike” all the time.</p>
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<p>The entire Riverview Site is therapeutic to patients.<br />
The integration of buildings and landscape provides tranquility, healing, pleasing outdoor experiences and a sense of community.<br />
The involvement on the lands gives the patient a sense of worth, provides exercise and teaches skills. The daily activities throughout the lands promoted friendships and a feeling of family in the hospital community, memories, increased confidence, hope and self esteem</p>
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<p>There is no doubt that there was a great community spirit &amp; many occupational endeavours. The clientele was huge &amp; the doctors &amp; nurses lived on site. It was a little town. The patients were looked after but, the possibility of returning to normal life was not likely. Even Lesbians were considered mentally ill. Things have changed &amp; many patients look forward to re-integrating with the regular community.</p>
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<p>There is no one theme that fully encompasses the reasons that Riverview should be preserved for the greater public benefit. Housing/commercial development would only serve niche groups. All the displayed themes are compelling reasons for the continued access &amp; ownership</p>
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<p>Now, more than ever, sustainability is a hot topic, &amp; one that threatens human kind in a big way. Riverview stands as a symbol for the harmony that is created by small scale agriculture &amp; sustainable communities, &amp; is arguably even more impressive on account of the labourers being at a disadvantage, yet still fostering such self sufficiency.</p>
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<p>It’s time to move into other uses for the community &amp; mental health. Read the RHCC report, lots of ideas.</p>
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<div>I was not aware of this history of self-sufficiency- what a thing of the past to honour the future. It should be noted that lands around it have changed substantially, which limits options.</div>
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<p>Yes, given that the facilities are at a crossroads, many of the well built buildings could be converted to residences for rent or private ownership. I would favour this approach over a developer coming to level and turn the place into a conglomerate of “chicken coop” condos!</p>
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<p>No private or public development!!</p>
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<p>As a child of one of the psychiatrists we mingled, played on and used the Riverview grounds. We weren’t aware that it was a “mental hospital” &#8211; there was forest, hills, Pennington Hall. One of the patients lived in our house on the grounds. He was discharged and had no family, so my father (Dr Rob Halliday) invited him to live in the basement of the house. It was a great place to grow up in. I hope you can preserve the natural landscape.</p>
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<p>Adaptability is good as long as all elements blend together.<br />
This complex is truly a self-sufficient village which must be preserved as it is very unique in this location.</p>
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<a name="theme-6-self-sufficiency-community-spirit"></a><h4><strong>Theme 6: Self-Sufficiency / Community Spirit</strong></h4>
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<p>Why? Because in our suburbs we are disconnected. This is a beautiful space which could be wonderfully used to sustain us (community, green space) in the future.</p>
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<p>It is good to have a reminder of how these kinds of institutions functioned and helped people especially if the pendulum on mental health swings back in the other direction.</p>
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<p>These lands supported many institutions for many years. Other hospitals with food &amp; produce which was award winning for health and soul. St Mary’s Hosp, RCH received many things. They produced furniture, clothing. They also were a teaching facility. Which they could still be used as.</p>
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<p>Coquitlam &amp; Port Coquitlam sent floats in for Riverview parades.</p>
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<p>The idea of Riverview, (all 244 acres) as a self-sufficient community goes back in history. Patient labour should not be forgotten. Patients cleared the site, built dikes, rockwalls &amp; terraces, farmed and built gardens. Their participation in these on-going activities were in harmony with their treatment. This gave them a sense of worth, improved friendships, learned skill. Colony Farm became the best farm in Western Canada. Finnies Garden was a therapy garden, good improvement in physical, mental and emotional &amp; spiritual health. All of the remaining Riverview Lands continues as a sanctuary. All the remaining lands are ideal for continued health care. What is needed is 24 hour care to independent living. The rebirth of a new community.</p>
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<p>Important as an employer. And training for many Pitt Meadows and Maple Ridge, e.g. McKechnie of Dewdney Trunk.<br />
intermarriage of employees &#8211; socials! dances!</p>
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<div>All the Riverview Lands must be saved. Most features remain today. Different features all enhance each other and its hard to separate one feature and another feature. All the features tell a story and cannot be separated. It’s a magical site of history on the Riverview lands. Keep all.</div>
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<a name="theme-7-stewardship-of-the-land-amp-theme-8-provincial-icon-and-community-amenity"></a><h4><strong>Theme 7: Stewardship of the Land &amp; Theme 8: Provincial Icon and Community Amenity</strong></h4>
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<div>Riverview has been a valued part of this community for over 100 years.</div>
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<p>All the buildings are important in telling the story of Riverview’s development and evolution over time. Heritage architects have evaluated these buildings and deemed the older, monumental ones of very high heritage value. The variety of buildings at Riverview represents a continuum of care over the century. All on one site. This is unique. Riverview is greater than the sum of its parts (buildings plus landscape plus history)</p>
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<p>[History] &#8211; human and natural!</p>
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<div>Given the size of land, and given its proximity to a huge noisy city, the opportunity is to capture and preserve the unique possibility, architecture, and spirit of nature &#8211; here! For future generations.</div>
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<p>What is City of Coquitlam’s PLAN for zoning?!</p>
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<div>These sacred lands of the Kwikwetlam First Nations must be kept for all future generations just like Stanley Park. I am over 80 years old and started visiting the Riverview lands for over 25 years. Walking by creeks, trees and flowers, get in tune with nature and feel better with the clean air. Always more reasons for coming back to the Riverview Lands.</div>
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<p>Remaining Riverview lands. All is important and significant. And all integrated together as one. No to housing.</p>
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<div>A provincial icon due to the many reasons present within. The fact that it contains western Canada’s first Botanical Garden and the 3rd in the entire country. The uniqueness of a man made garden evolving for over 100 years. Left to mature undisturbed within the natural West Coast ecosystem which surrounds it. Filled with a myriad if birds and animal species that have evolved with it. It is home to a very unique and special life cycle found nowhere else. It is also a major animal corridor between Burrard Inlet and the Fraser River. Many animals depend on it for food sources throughout the season changes throughout the year.</div>
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<div>Riverview is a unique site despite its institutional nature. It has attracted the attention of various communities in the lower Mainland, especially the Tri Cities. We need to encourage the locals to tour the site &amp; encourage this “ownership” feeling.</div>
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<div>Riverview is an “ecological oasis positioned between Coquitlam River, Colony farm and Riverview forest”. There are streams that flow on the Riverview lands and bring water in culverts to the Coquitlam River. There is wild life on the grounds.<br />
All the Riverview Lands (244 acres) must be saved forever.</div>
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<p>Green spaces speak to the ill on all levels and help us all in lowering health costs. The residents helping with the stewardship of this land help with their own health.</p>
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<p>The oldest arboretum in Western Canada and one of the oldest Botanical Gardens in Canada. Home for countless birds and animals. A place for all to enjoy &amp; explore is enough alone to protect and save the lands. We may never have enough space and park lands.</p>
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<p>The current situation presents a unique opportunity to demonstrate stewardship by the Government and proceed with respectful &amp; thoughtful development.</p>
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<div>The Arboretum must be preserved. Although patient have been sent elsewhere, there should be uses for mentally ill patients and their carer’s can use the building. Teaching? maybe school for organic gardening.</div>
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<div>Stewardship of the lands, preserve a sense of ‘flow’ created by older, unique trees and landscapes is a unique feature of Riverview, and Colony farm, birds, wetlands. Some of the brick buildings, East Lawn, are classic and could offer a unique rejuvenated architecture, as condos/apartments. A piece of heritage worth saving, balance the development.</div>
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<p>The lands need to be preserved and protected for future generations just as pieces of Colony Farm has been set aside for park land. The birds, animals etc need a home and humans need places to relax and enjoy the outdoors. It will also act as a carbon sink to fight global warming.</p>
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<div>trees and open space key, importance for healing is key.</div>
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<p>The Lands are a unique setting with a unique history &amp; need to be preserved, its history is important. the site is perfect for continued use for mental health care. All 244 acres need to be saved from development.</p>
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<p>This is a sacred site and deserves a sacred trust. RVH should be protected &amp; preserved as much as Stanley park. This was the patients’ home &amp; is also their place of rest (for many). Trust was placed by the public for the care of the patients and for the grounds.</p>
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<p>It was a quintessentially perfect self-sustaining system that foreshadowed what we now deem really important in communities.</p>
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<p>The Land should be kept for the health &amp; community of all, not sold to developers to make money &amp; increase the suburban sprawl.</p>
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<a name="theme-9-what-have-we-missed"></a><h4><strong>Theme 9: What Have We Missed?</strong></h4>
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<p>The importance of recognizing and documenting the history of Mental Health and Mental illness and the thousands of patients who found a home in Riverview/Essondale/Colony farm (Riverside) should not be lost. This facility was originally home stedded by patients from Woodlands/Institute for the insane in New West… This is their land, their heritage, their home their history.</p>
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<div>As a family historian and a genealogist I would like to have the human stories behind the buildings and the landscape.</div>
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<p>As a former patient I believe all the different aspects of Riverview are intertwined.</p>
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<div>When I walk the Riverview lands I smell the sweet air, I hear the birds sing, I drink in the majesty of the plant life. Trees of astounding size, variety of species, shapes textures, light and shadow pull me into a special place felt only here. I have walked the Lands since 1985. I have experienced the natural treasure within. It has touched my soul in a way no other place has. These lands and what they have evolved into are unique in a most special way. I know it to be true, having travelled in over 50 countries for 5 years, experiencing the best, the most beautiful, the most spirit evoking our world has to offer. No other place I have been has moved my soul to the level of our beautiful, special, Riverview Lands.</div>
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<p>Get City of Coquitlam to put Land Use in 5 Yr. OCP (Official Community Plan)</p>
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<p>The history and importance of the site should be incorporated into its future. Mental illness is all around us. Along the theme of adaptability, its role needs to change, but not be forgotten or bulldozed. The buildings and landscape are the obvious features – but also the sense of place/purpose/peace.</p>
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<p>Keep all remaining Riverview Lands as public lands into perpetuity.</p>
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<p>The patients. Where do they go now! What kind of care.</p>
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<p>We need these beautiful lands to keep is ALL SANE. Don’t let greed play a hand. We the people must make a stand.</p>
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<p>I hope that this is only the start to the process of deciding what to do on the Riverview Lands as the current questionnaire only asks very pointed questions. You’re going to get very biased (as such) answers as you’re only asking about some things, what about the people who don’t use the lands? why not? what is their opinion? City of Coquitlam? people in the area?</p>
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<div>Keep all the Riverview Lands (244 acres) as public lands, in perpetuity for the continued use of people with mental illness and addictions. All the Riverview Lands and area central in the Lower Mainland is an ideal location to provide all levels of mental health care, from 24 – hr. to independent living housing and ancillary services. This would be cost effective since we already own these lands.</div>
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<p>A “feature”, as such, of Riverview is the invisible barrier around it, the unspoken belief that you are not supposed to go on the Lands. More people would go into the Lands if the perception was there that this is a public space we are allowed to use.</p>
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		<title>Results from Workshop #2</title>
		<link>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-2</link>
		<comments>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-2#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Jun 2012 20:35:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous Comments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Results]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.riverviewvalues.info/?p=648</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The following comments were collected at the May 23rd Drop-In Workshop.  If you would prefer to download this information by PDF, please click here:  Workshop #2 Results PDF Theme 1: Hillside and River Why: this is a self answering question! &#8230; <a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-2">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The following comments were collected at the May 23rd Drop-In Workshop.  If you would prefer to download this information by PDF, please click here:  <a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Riverview-workshop-2-transcript.pdf">Workshop #2 Results PDF</a></p>
<a name="theme-1-hillside-and-river"></a><h4><strong>Theme 1: Hillside and River</strong></h4>
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<p>Why: this is a self answering question! What happens when history is reduced to print on paper? Letʼs not destroy the physical history on our very doorstep!</p>
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<p>Increasingly in our urbanized world, history needs to be treasured and green spaces for recreation preserved. Natural history links people together. Green spaces are important for healing and for connecting with the natural world.</p>
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<p>Natural history is important because so little undeveloped large land parcels are now left due to intense urbanization of surrounding areas. No matter how much “development and modernization” a community achieves, natural land values are crucial for a healthy, balanced society. These healthy, balanced values are natural green space, open space, unobstructed views out to mountains, rivers and fields (Colony Farm lands).</p>
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<p>Why build mental facilities in Vancouver when the therapeutic site exists. “Patients” need fresh air and beauty around them.</p>
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<p>Natural history of the Riverview Lands is important because it is part of our heritage!</p>
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<p>The undeveloped lands should remain that way! There is precious little space for plants and wildlife in our fast-developing community. It cannot be preserved on a postage stamp, but needs space.</p>
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<p>Endless words may pass but the intrinsic value of untouched heritage must be shared, preserved, revered. As a country with so little history, can we really think we need so much process to decide something so fundamentally obvious?</p>
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<p>Increased awareness of the impact of development on biodiversity ought to compel us to preserve greenspace and rehabilitate it as able – soft footprints in any future development is essential.</p>
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<p>It is one of the few river bottom areas left in a very developed region. Save the land for the future and rehabilitate the creeks and streams.</p>
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<p>Finnieʼs Garden</p>
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<p>The Riverview Hospital land is a treasure in the midst of suburbia. When this is lost it will be regretted by anyone who has known what it was.</p>
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<p>The owls and the bears and the eagles and the salmon continue to live in the thickets and tree canopies and streams. It is very special and unusual in an urban space to have such a diverse array of natural habitats. It is not just natural “history.” It is natural “present.” Please let it be a natural “future.”</p>
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<p>Save the land as a park!</p>
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<p>The natural landscapes are of major importance. They connect the Coquitlam River and Colony Farm with the Riverview Forest and Port Moody Inlet.</p>
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<p>Green link for wildlife from Burrard Inlet to the Fraser River. Migration route, seasonally.</p>
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<p>Legacy is vital. This natural land and ecosystem belongs to citizens of yesteryear, now and future, but especially the animal creatures that call this land home. Save it for them!</p>
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<p>Riverview Creek, Lost Creek, Davidsonʼs Creek, wetlands.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-2-the-planted-landscape"></a><h4><strong>Theme 2: The Planted Landscape</strong></h4>
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<p>Examples of trees such as are found on this ground are priceless in terms of their aesthetic, educational, and scientific values. This site will be world-renowned if it becomes a preserve or educational centre. International society of municipal arbourists.</p>
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<p>There is no other place like it. The heritage trees are also a one of a kind collection – eliminating these is to destroy valuable history which cannot be resurrected once destroyed! Take a page from world renowned heritage sites eg. Boston. I was there recently and saw teams of workers working on preserving old buildings.</p>
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<p>c.2000-2001, Girl Guide trips to visit and sing at Christmas and another time to see the trees.</p>
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<p>Save the trees!</p>
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<p>Trees such as this take a very long time to grow to the size of these. They are worth preserving – they do it in Europe, why not here? Arboretums are great draws for academic studies as well as tourists. The cannot be replaced. They have heritage value as well as buildings do.</p>
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<p>The trees are a legacy, a gift to be held for all future generations. It is up to the present generations to make this so.</p>
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<p>The trees contribute to the fresh air of Coquitlam. We do not have a heritage park of this size in Coquitlam. It needs to be maintained as a park. The trees are specimens that if cut down will never be replaced.</p>
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<p>The tree collection is unique and irreplaceable. They are the lungs of the region and must be preserved.</p>
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<p>Once gone, these trees can never be replaced.</p>
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<p>This collection needs to be managed for health and life cycle. Exotic trees and plants need to be replaced in kind.</p>
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<p>How long would it take to recreate this piece of nature? Answer: infinity. It can never be recreated. It is priceless.</p>
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<p>It is so therapeutic for the mind and soul. I have gone through the ups and downs of life without medications as the serenity of the Riverview Lands calmed my spirit. The tree collection is so valuable as a teaching resource. My daughterʼs Brownie group came here to study about trees – wow, what a learning experience!</p>
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<p>Why: The trees are a priceless asset to the entire region. They must be preserved at any an all costs. There are things money cannot buy and 100-year-old trees and rare trees are among those few.<br />
What: The very grounds themselves are an oasis of peace and tranquility, again, priceless.</p>
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<p>Hear, hear!</p>
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<p>Yes, yes!</p>
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<p>Please donʼt destroy what has taken 100 years to produce.</p>
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<p>The arboretum is immensely valuable and must not just be guarded but stewarded. Caring for the trees and renewing the arboretum as trees reach their inevitable lifespan.</p>
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<p>Trees take a long time to grow. These trees have been here for a long time – time and growth are priceless and timeless.</p>
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<div>Why: Very unique specimens of mature trees that were nurtured and planned.</div>
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<p>What: To present a pleasing and soothing impression. Early planting by John Davidson the provinceʼs first botanist who developed the first botanical garden on this site. Trained a Kew Gardens in England. Also developed western Canadaʼs oldest arboretum, all planned and connected to beautifully designed heritage buildings all over the Riverview site.</p>
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<p>The remarkable collection of trees and landscaped spaces is of extraordinary educational and recreational value. The value is not just in individual features or things. The value is in the entire, organized well-rooted arrangement of paths, grass fields, trees and vistas. The whole is greater than the sum of the individual features.</p>
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<p>These trees are not what you would find in your backyard. So awesome.</p>
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<p>The grounds and trees are the highest quality any park can provide. Many specimen trees came from people who much later developed the UBC Botanical Garden. This was an earlier botanical garden and continues to be. Itʼs beautiful in all seasons and must be retained for future generations. These trees and grounds cannot be replaced.</p>
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<p>Need more citizen participation walks / school groups / Scouts / Girl Guides etc. to see and appreciate grounds.</p>
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<p>The tree collection is all over the Lands. There is no “arboretum area.” This could be an internationally recognized horticultural destination. A “remnant” is better than nothing. Cultivated by trained landscapers to very high standards.</p>
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<p>The trees are a world class collection of mature trees which add immeasurably to the grand landscape design. Of course the are important!</p>
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<p>These trees have been planted specifically to fit into the landscape. The collection of trees is unprecedented in the area of Vancouver. It is a jewel in the crown and should not be lost.</p>
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<p>Walking for residents is healthful. Seeing the changing seasons is important. We need green space for the increasing population around Coquitlam Centre. Mundy Park is one experience but earlier or later day walking needs a well-lit place. Itʼs safe. Itʼs good for the healthy to interact with residents. This is a “Stanley Park.” We wonʼt get it back.</p>
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<p>Stanley Park, Central Park &#8230; people with vision saved these, we need to save Riverview.</p>
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<p>The Beech trees, the Oaks. If properly managed, these could be as good or better than UBCs gardens.</p>
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<p>Trees planted are some of the best mature specimens existing anywhere. Well tended when young and well planned, even though badly neglected in recent years, they survive and would continue to thrive and play a role in connecting humans to the majesty of the trees. These kinds of trees in European jurisdictions are considered a heritage structure and have budgets and government programs to look after them. Why do we even consider removing them?</p>
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<p>One just has to look at the residential development directly to the west and across the river to the east to see how landscapes can be destroyed for the mighty $. Plants are landscapes and this includes old growth and new growth as well as undergrowth and open fields.</p>
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<p>The fruit trees are testament to and evidence of the heritage – beauty to be saved. The garden is worthy of preserving as a heritage garden.</p>
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<p>The treesʼ colours through seasons, buildings as descriptive as they are, are a photographerʼs dream. Encourage students and schools.</p>
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<p>My husband and I have walked through this park several times for therapy, relaxation, fresh air and exercise. This must be very therapeutic for the patients that still reside there.</p>
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<p>Keep the trees, keep the green space. Once bulldozed we cannot go back. In an urban environment, green space is very important.</p>
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<p>The trees are important to me at all seasons. They support us mentally, physically and spiritually. The open lawns are serene in a hectic world. Greenness and quietness is healing. Finnieʼs garden, re-created by volunteers, is a magnet for people and wildlife alike. Allow the arboretum and open space to be a treasured space in this Lower Mainland of condos and roads.</p>
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<p>The social benefits to both patients and visitors are in part due to the landscape and calming nature of the Riverview Lands. The stewardship efforts have contributed to these benefits.</p>
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<p>Significant trees throughout the Lands.</p>
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<p>Ianʼs beech tree.</p>
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<p>Trees and gardens.</p>
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<p>Orchard.</p>
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<p>Sequoia, Ginkgo.</p>
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<p>Tree nursery.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-3-grand-and-modest-design"></a><h4><strong>Theme 3: Grand and Modest Design</strong></h4>
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<p>We need to preserve our history as well as our heritage. Where else in Coquitlam do we see buildings like this?</p>
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<p>There is no other place like it. The architecturally historic buildings are priceless. Take a page from world renowned heritage sites eg. Boston. I was there recently and saw teams of workers working on preserving old buildings.</p>
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<p>The heritage value of the buildings needs to be preserved.</p>
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<p>More recent Lodge buildings.</p>
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<p>Terrible that patients had to look at noise / traffic of highway and railway [from the Valleyview building]. Patientsʼ Bill of Rights.</p>
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<p>Patient labour! Especially the land clearing and the stone walls. Stone walls, stone stairs – so many! Made by patients. Should be measured and displayed.</p>
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<p>Refurbish older buildings into education centres for heritage themes with donated fixtures from the past to compliment the heritage lands and walkways.</p>
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<p>Design that is coherent with the sweep of the space and the landscape is a part of the intrinsic character of Riverview. This must be a value in all future thinking.</p>
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<p>The design is important for its historic aspects.</p>
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<p>The province has very few grand buildings and therefore it would be very important to maintain the restore the remarkable, century-old buildings. The landscape could be described as grand, but it is also magnificent, serene, and peaceful, and cannot be replaced. It took a century to create and should remain for residents to enjoy for centuries more.</p>
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<p>This example of unique architecture displayed in these large buildings is ultra-rare and once lost are like an animal species that will become extinct if knocked down.</p>
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<p>The present architecturally historic buildings could be restored and utilized for what they originally used for – mentally ill patients. The buildings could become “condos” for the patients who are being shipped out to the Downtown East Side – not too therapeutic for oneʼs health! The buildings could also be used for medical facilities for the patients. We need to give back to what we have robbed from the mentally ill!</p>
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<p>All the buildings have a story to tell – the heritage buildings for sure but some of the more modern buildings are very functional and should still be in sue for health care – Valleyview, Henry Esson Young etc.</p>
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<p>Well designed buildings not only have a use but also represent the strivings of past times. There must be some buildings for future generations to see for their beauty of design and form. Glass and steel is functional but cold and can be frightening or threatening.</p>
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<p>The design is vitally important for its uniqueness. There is nothing else like this amazing collection of buildings in this special setting. Centre Lawn, East and West Lawn are majestic in stature and design and should be preserved for arts, culture and heritage uses.</p>
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<p>It is a real treasure to find such a connected landscape in an urban setting. Those who originally developed the site and landscaping understood how a connection to the natural world was therapeutic for our mental health. For a while, this was forgotten but now it is being re-discovered. To risk destroying this space and design now would be travesty. In a short time it would be sadly regretted.</p>
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<p>The wooden bowling alleys in Penn Hall are important heritage structures.</p>
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<p>These buildings should be restored and used for the mentally ill. If that is not possible, new buildings should be built to house the mentally ill. The way these people are treated is uncivilized and is not something Canada should be proud of.</p>
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<p>Architectural history is so important, should be declared a national / provincial historical site. No real estate / partition of property.</p>
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<p>All the work the patients did on site is very special, eg. rock walls and stairways.</p>
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<p>These healing acres are for the handicapped, taking them away requires low ethics and morals. It is like “stealing candy from a baby.”</p>
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<p>The change in architecture through the years gives the grounds a feeling of place and history of architecture covering 100 years.</p>
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<p>The Riverview design was developed over 100 years ago. Throughout this time, designs, treatment and uses have changed and evolved. I believe we have now come full circle and accept that the early Riverview design was an excellent model to treat the human mental condition and now due to high density development, humans need a space like this for stress release and nature reconnection. We should not have to go to the Rockies to see open spaces and feel a connection with natural surroundings. The placement of buildings, walkways, trees are all integrated to invite humans in and feel the pull of greenery, soothing bird songs, etc.</p>
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<p>Mysterious fire occurred and Penn Hall closed.</p>
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<p>Key buildings should be preserved. Current standards would require new buildings that can be built with heritage designs.</p>
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<p>What are the key buildings?</p>
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<p>You wouldnʼt tear down the Parliament Buildings in Victoria, why would you want to raze the Riverview heritage buildings?</p>
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<p>Keep development of high-rises and condos off and develop “responsibly.”</p>
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<p>This place cannot be re-created, but can serve as a park-like setting for generations to come. The major large buildings should be maintained. Some areas can still be used for more current mental health treatment. The need for asylum still exists.</p>
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<p>This is a site devoted to mental health and was cutting edge in its day. The only reason it isnʼt cutting edge in mental health research / diagnosis / treatment is lack of leadership and loss of our soul. The mentally ill are some of the most neglected in our society.</p>
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<p>My primary concern is the preservation of green space and historic trees. Second is the footprint of the buildings and the relationship to the green space. Third is the actual look of the buildings. Put all this together and I would not be unhappy with future uses that preserved green, trees and footprints, but only facades of selected structures.</p>
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<p>The planning and design of the buildings and grounds was inclusive and well thought out. These elements have stood the test of time and ideally should continue to be used for the benefit of the mentally ill. New buildings could be created on the footprints of existing buildings to treat, house, recover the evicted mentally ill patients.</p>
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<p>How dare you! Try to develop these beautiful lands.</p>
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<p>Please leave the land alone. Too many areas are destroyed by development. Take your time with the development process.</p>
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<p>This site requires maintenance. Too much has been neglected in the past few years. Work is required.</p>
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<p>Library / Henry Esson Young building, lecture theatres, classrooms, heritage parlour.</p>
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<p>Cottages.</p>
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<p>Boiler house.</p>
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<p>Historical buildings – Lawn buildings, Crease Clinic.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-4-places-of-treatment-and-therapy"></a><h4><strong>Theme 4: Places of Treatment and Therapy</strong></h4>
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<p>The patients worked in Finnieʼs Garden and this provided tremendous therapy for them.</p>
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<p>Maintaining Riverview for support of mental health patients is critical, but those people deserve to be cared for in modern facilities. A private/public partnership would help in allowing the re-development of the Lands. Upgraded and new buildings to serve primary, secondary and tertiary needs. Open spaces in their natural condition preserved. Small component of market housing with buffer to existing lands.</p>
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<p>The buildings should be oriented to increase walking between facilities. Walking is excellent for health. Regarding building size, small buildings require much froe staff. Is there no means of creating humane density? Who is going to care for the aging population without resources for at-home nurses? What is the demographic bell curve telling you?</p>
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<p>When my brother lived at Riverview, he was socially active, physically active walking the grounds, and so happy! Since he has been sent to live in the Downtown East Side, he no longer walks, sits in his room, as he is scared to go out into the Vancouver “jungle” and has totally deteriorated. Riverview Lands is definitely a place for treatment, so good for the mind.</p>
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<p>These places saved lives, allowed to heal, rather than set adrift. The grounds function as a sanctuary. The lands absorbed the mental illness (eg. screaming is accommodated.</p>
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<p>Penn Hall was important as a place of fun, socialization.</p>
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<p>There is along history of treating the mentally ill here.</p>
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<p>Tranquility, spiritual, peace, quiet, calm. Horticultural therapy. Green space, watercourses, wetlands, biodiversity, wildlife habitat. Seven creeks traverse the lands, some with fish such as salmon, coho. Beauty of the seasons, winter spring, summer and fall. Rolling hills, trails and meadows, open spaces to walk, bike or run for recreational value. Open to view, panoramic views – Golden Ears mountains to the north, Mount Baker to the south. Place of healing, wellness, refuge and protection.</p>
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<p>There are few sanctuaries left, very few that can match this one.</p>
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<p>The therapeutic history allows us to know where we have been and how treatment policies have changed. Hitosry ties us to where we live. The fact that people, highly stressed in the world today, need places of beauty and quietness to recreate themselves.</p>
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<p>Let the buildings go. Save the landscape</p>
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<p>Riverview needs to be for mental health care treatment and after care. It would be great to include educational psychological teaching / research facility or a small version of one. UBC, SFU, Douglas College could all be involved. We will need an area for an increase in dementia-related diseases.</p>
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<p>The whole context of the history of mental health care over the years is important. This is the only place where it is visual.</p>
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<p>Our treatment of people with mental difficulties is shameful to us as a society. So many people do not have the ability or skills to care for themselves and to live with dignity within a typical community. We do have the intelligence and resources (a great resource being the Riverview Lands) to provide these people with a safe and nurturing place to live. We need to end these evils: 1. Destitute mentally ill people wandering in the streets (eg. Vancouverʼs Downtown East Side). 2. Mentally ill people occupying space in regular hospitals, space inappropriate for them and needed by other patients. 3. Mentally ill people terrorizing their families and others. Riverview is an ideal location where experts can design appropriate places for these people to live, amongst the trees and gardens, to feel safe and to feel a sense of community and home. Sanctuary, caring community.</p>
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<p>These lands belong to the mentally ill. They should remain dedicated to primary research and treatment. We have so much more to learn.</p>
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<p>We need to understand our progress in treatment deeply, visually and emotionally. The Lands help this. The Lands are an asylum in the true sense of the word.</p>
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<p>Riverview has always been important to the local region since it opened for its therapeutic purposes. No NIMBY happening here. We want it here.</p>
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<p>This facility needs to be turned into a teaching facility to help with the impending increase in people with age-related mental health and other issues. We could create a world-class geriatric studies centre.</p>
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<p>Therapeutic history is important because we cannot go forward if you donʼt know where you have been. So much “modern” research now tells us that mental health is greatly helped and influenced by being exposed to open spaces, natural surroundings, fresh air, places to walk and take exercise. Guess what? Riverview has all this, we own it, letʼs just look after it and let it continue to treat us as was envisioned over 100 years ago. We have retained so little of our gracious old buildings anywhere in Metro Vancouver. The buildings at Riverview as a group represent so much history and are fine architectural specimens of their day. Large spaces like this could be put to great uses in the future.</p>
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<p>The therapeutic value of the open spaces is not only a matter of history and heritage. Three days ago, I said hello to a group of five male patients who were enjoying a safe and peaceful walk across the entire site. A leader kept an eye on the slow walkers, demonstrating their sense of a healing community.</p>
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<p>We must not hide this history. We must also recognize the designation of the lands and buildings, integrating history, intent and heritage values.</p>
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<p>Finnieʼs Garden is a very special place and should be kept for its original use.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-5-adaptability"></a><h4><strong>Theme 5: Adaptability</strong></h4>
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<p>Letʼs plan together with the Kwikwetlem First Nations for their involvement in the future of Riverview. They have much to offer in stewardship and connection to Colony Farm activities. And the First Nations community, like every community, could be involved in enhanced mental health and addictions programs.</p>
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<p>Think ahead for amenities like Stanley Park.</p>
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<p>This was their home. They were comfortable here. Adaptability is important, but not total destruction. There is an excellent plan already developed for “adaptive uses.”</p>
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<p>Retain what has been bought and paid for by earlier citizens of British Columbia.</p>
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<p>By all means adapt present Riverview to now address homelessness, addiction, etc. these lands, buildings and planned gardens were initially developed for similar uses in their day. Now we update to 2012 and use this resource to treat problems evident in our BC society today.</p>
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<p>The needs of a large growing city are complex and multi-faceted. This site was a cutting edge / responsive facility serving the needs of the most vulnerable in society, responding to change and challenges. We must look backward and forward at the same time and for the same purpose.</p>
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<p>Yes. Much of this facility can be used fro current mental health care. It just needs to adapt to the present, as it has in the past.</p>
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<p>Currently the Lands are adapting to neglect and may need to adapt to the depredations of the developers and greed.</p>
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<p>I donʼt believe mental health should be part of Riverview. For years the people with such problems were shoved out of the way. Riverview was the answer – a dismal, foggy place out of the way (although it is not as foggy now as in years past). Think of it this way, sunshine, gardening and animals all help people feel better but all these important elements to a healthy life are in short supply at Riverview. In this area, if you want to garden, itʼs difficult, one good crop every four years. This is depressing, along with the dismal, foggy we weather at this location. Canʼt we treat mentally ill people with better elements that this?</p>
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<p>Adapt, do not destroy &#8230; the value will be lost if the alteration is too drastic – concrete, high density, etc.</p>
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<p>First Nations reserve must be respected as their legacy during Riverview Hospitalʼs evolution to meet our current mental health issues, drug / alcohol detox treatments and recovery programs are sadly lacking in Metro Vancouver. Why not Riverview Hospital? Local hospitals cannot support increasing numbers of dementia patients displaced from Riverview and hard core drug addicts who require their own space and skilled medical support. Homeless shelters are a band aid, not equipped to support or treat these vulnerable folks, many of who are now homeless as a result of Riverview closures. Would our forebears support closing this down? No. Providing care continues to be important.</p>
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<p>The adaptability can be seen in the diverse uses of the site – health care, arborists, dog walkers, radio hobbyists – who have used the location in harmony for decades. And now the spaces are used for newer buildings and facilities that reflect modern care practices. The 244 acres can be adaptable and multi-purpose into the future.</p>
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<p>Besides for mental health uses, some of the buildings should be adapted and refurbished for uses like offices for community groups, arts and cultural groups, and recreational facilities.</p>
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<p>People can adapt to many things, good and bad. Sometimes it is better to step back! Riverview can and still should be a healing place. Un-adapt and restore to an exceptional health facility again.</p>
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<p>Adapt – fine. But some things must not be lost. Public ownership, public access, priority use for mental health treatment, the tree collection, the heritage buildings – these things should remain constant.</p>
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<p>I agree.</p>
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<p>I think the buildings should adapt and become condos only for the mentally ill to adapt to the view of non-hospitalization settings. Also, some of the buildings could be used for medical facilities for the mentally ill. At the present, the patients have been “shipped out” leaving to “adapt” to foreign areas and surroundings and far from friends and relatives. We need to adapt the use of the buildings solely for the purpose of a “good mental health” being or becoming facility for the needy.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-6-self-sufficiency-community-spirit"></a><h4><strong>Theme 6: Self-Sufficiency / Community Spirit</strong></h4>
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<p>Letʼs plan together with the Kwikwetlem First Nations for their involvement in the future of Riverview. They have much to offer in stewardship and connection to Colony Farm activities. And the First Nations community, like every community, could be involved in enhanced mental health and addictions programs.</p>
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<p>It has value for film making and dog walking.</p>
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<p>Slow speed limits and an unhurried landscape.</p>
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<p>Patients felt good about doing their jobs.</p>
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<p>“Heʼs a local” speaks of the importance of Riverview in the life of Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam.</p>
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<p>It takes a village &#8230;</p>
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<p>It is important to build on previous citizensʼ vision, not just discard it and arrogantly believe we now know better. We are doomed to repeat past mistakes!</p>
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<p>It has value for film making and dog walking.</p>
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<p>Enduring social institutions in Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam.</p>
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<p>Penn Hall was such an important part of the social lives of patients. One girl who was discharged from Riverview used to come back every Friday that they had a dance. That was her community, her social life. Others go to night clubs, golf course, a trip to Hawaii. For some mentally ill, all they had was Penn Hall. It should have been replaced.</p>
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<p>Everyone had jobs. Patients washed floors, polished taps &#8230;</p>
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<p>Generations of workers at Riverview.</p>
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<p>People here often married co-workers.</p>
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<p>People today need to know what it was like. Milk comes from cows, not the supermarket. Community gardens are important.</p>
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<p>My brother used to farm on the Lands, did upholstery, made rocking chairs &#8230; At Riverview, idle hands lead to idle minds! It was such a vibrant community and could become so again if properly planned.</p>
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<p>This is an iconic facility that has been terribly neglected. It is not just a Coquitlam / Port Coquitlam facility (although it is hugely significant in these communities). It is a core part of BCʼs history.</p>
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<p>The community spirit can be seen in the positive interactions of the people who have walked, lived and visited.</p>
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<p>There are those who canʼt see the forest for the trees. And there are those who canʼt see the trees for the forest. But even for those who see the trees and forest, rarely do the see the roots, without which neither the trees nor forest could exist.</p>
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<p>I loved the seasonal landscape as the light lamps were lit up with Christmas decorations. So lovely!</p>
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<p>The idea of a complete therapy for mental illness, where patients had meaningful activities and interaction with the community, was successful and far-sighted.</p>
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<p>We need more community gardens, people need activities. Bike trails and gardens are very important.</p>
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<p>The concept of self-sufficiency is almost lost today, especially for mentally ill people. This should be re-created and the work of the patients and staff kept on record.</p>
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<p>Community spirit is evidenced by people coming together to save the Lands.</p>
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<p>Why not add education for the public on growing food, composting, as well as involving residents benefiting from the pleasure of growing their food? It sure beats TV and cigarettes.</p>
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<p>Self-sufficiency is great profit, not a consideration or goal.</p>
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<p>Maintain a balance. Need to be practical in decision-making.</p>
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<p>In this great province we have a large, unacceptable number of homeless people, many of whom have mental health problems. This is the reason they are homeless. Riverview could be developed to provide “sheltered” housing for many of these folks. By using the example of the Downtown East Side, the Riverview community could provide a healthy, self-sufficient, independent life within a sheltered community model. The addicted, alcohol syndrome, disadvantaged, etc. need a place to be their home. Group homes come and go at the whims of government. To develop a “community” to house these folds would be the best use of the Riverview Lands. Why sell it off just to used hard to find mental health dollars to buy housing sites for homeless people?</p>
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<p>Maintain community by preserving Riverview. What could be easier?</p>
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<p>Riverview Hospital was a total community, self-sufficient with food, community centre, bus stop, post office, gardens and open space, chapel etc. It was very important to so many patients and families, it should be preserved intact. Much of the forest has already been developed.</p>
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<p>Future homeless retirement destination property.</p>
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<p>These Lands once provided 2,000 jobs and had green space.</p>
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<p>Farmers markets operated by patients. Incentives, recycling, entrepreneurship, can contribute, can be useful. UBC for the homeless.</p>
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<p>Riverview as a community has a better chance of healing people with mental illness than isolating them in sterile city spaces. People need a community to help them heal as well as grow. People need exposure to varieties of socialization and healing and less segregation. Riverview could also serve for the homeless, battered women, etc. There are spaces sitting empty!</p>
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<p>I remember Christmas at East Lawn. Dances, singing, fun. It really made my family happy. So much can be done for the mentally ill if given a proper facility. This facility is Riverview.</p>
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<p>Patients harvested hay in 1913 and grew potatoes. The nursery produced 17,593 pounds of new potatoes. Bees in their first year produced 381 pounds of honey. In 1916, plants at the botanical garden John Davidson estimated to number about 26,000, which were transported to the Point Grey site of UBC.</p>
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<p>Pennington Hall has great memories for me. Loved the staff. It was a real “socially” happening place and my brother thoroughly loved it. We used to bowl there. A real shame it closed.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-7-stewardship-of-the-land"></a><h4><strong>Theme 7: Stewardship of the Land</strong></h4>
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<p>Letʼs plan together with the Kwikwetlem First Nations for their involvement in the future of Riverview. They have much to offer in stewardship and connection to Colony Farm activities. And the First Nations community, like every community, could be involved in enhanced mental health and addictions programs.</p>
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<p>How about the Kwikwetlem First Nation? Isnʼt this their land?</p>
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<p>The Lawn buildings, Crease Clinic, the Boysʼ Industrial School “cottages,” all the residences, and the Administration building. These are all excellent heritage rated. Other buildings: Henry Esson Young, North Lawn, Penn Hall, Valleyview have excellent facilities. Together this collection has potential for use as educational, conference, or art centre in harmony with mental health treatment and research,</p>
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<p>Save it all as a park.</p>
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<p>The clearest sign of successful, diverse stewardship is that Riverview has existed as a mental health facility and a world-class arboretum. These groups have worked collaboratively together, jointly sharing the space and respecting each other. A sign of poor stewardship is Riverview Heights subdivision that simply took earlier lands for a single purpose.</p>
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<p>“It is very important for people, especially children, who live in cities to have an opportunity to experience nature. That is what makes the Riverview Lands so important. I hope it will be seen as already fully developed and left for people to experience.” Dr. David Suzuki</p>
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<p>The lands should be returned for the enjoyment of who they were created for ititially – the mentally ill. They need a place for restorative health.</p>
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<p>Why build a building in Vancouver as has been suggested when this site is so supremely more beautiful. Patients were moved to the Vancouver streets years ago in a failed experiment so they should be moved back where they belong.</p>
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<p>Properly managed for healthy forests, gardens and lawns. Restored waterways and conservation initiatives. Flora and fauna preserved and enjoyed in concert with human activity.</p>
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<p>These lands were retained for their therapeutic benefits for those with chronic drug / alcohol addictions and those with mental health issues, which is a growing trend in our society. Where better to recover you mental health? Vanishing natural areas are essential for all Metro Vancouver residentsʼ mental, physical and spiritual stability, especially due to greater density. More people living in high rises need community gardens for good nutritious food currently grown for food banks. We all need good healthy food and wide open habitat, as well as Riverviewʼs arboretum. Our forbears supported Riverview as the site for mental health treatment and recovery which is province-wide.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-8-provincial-icon-and-community-amenity"></a><h4><strong>Theme 8: Provincial Icon and Community Amenity</strong></h4>
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<p>Letʼs involve Kwikwetlem Band in the discussion. How can it benefit from the future uses of these lands?</p>
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<p>The people who came before created a gem at Riverview – a sanctuary for the mentally ill, mystic trees, beautiful green spaces and wildlife habitat connecting Colony Farm and Riverview Forest. It is a fantastic community amenity for mental wellness. We need to honour the people created Riverview by having it continue.</p>
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<p>The future generations deserve this.</p>
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<p>If the First Nations have any connection with this area, we owe it to them to respect that and not just disregard what they feel like we have in the past. Many citizens feel a great attachment to this place because we live nearby and see what intense urban development has done to the surrounding area. Many of us have dealt with mental health issues or know these who are suffering still and understand that Riverview could provide a ray of hope for future mental health treatment and community. Many of us can make the connection from past history to present day reality. How does the song go – “take paradise and put up a parking lot.” Is this what we as British Columbians aspire to for the last piece of paradise in our midst?</p>
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<p>Riverview is not just an icon of grand ambition. It is an icon of a deep commitment to the health and well-being of the people of the province. It is an icon of a caring society that creates a safe and healing environment for people. The icon is now the smaller buildings (Cottonwood, etc.), many more of which can be built in and around the landscaped setting. The more tragic icon is the empty buildings while patients needing health care are living in the streets or filling jails.</p>
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<p>There are not many iconic spaces left. Weʼre losing our story and sense of place. We can put houses on everything or we can values the unique spaces and honor their intended purposes.</p>
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<p>The whole remaining site is an icon and the legacy of the far-sighted men and women who planned and created it. It is the legacy of the patients whose labour created and maintained it.</p>
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<p>Very few people in North America and Canada value historical sites. It is important as part of the history of Coquitlam and for that reason alone should be saved. It is almost like a Capability Brown landscape that has been planted purposefully. You would never find this anywhere else.</p>
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<p>The cemetery has space for others. Do we want to use it? Example – a small Church of England church in Australia that has its own cemetery (old English style) invites people to choose to use their cemetery. Applicants mush achieve the criteria, eg. relatives already buried there or some claim to historical aspect of church, etc.</p>
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<p>If you need to be told why itʼs important you will never understand.</p>
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<p>I have walked my dogs along the back road and it is beautiful. It is so peaceful. You could spend the whole day there. It is a very special place. The whole of Riverview is very special and should be preserved.</p>
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<p>I agree.</p>
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<p>The entire urban forest and all its benefits to our social, environmental and economics of the Tri-Cities communities.</p>
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<div>The iconic spaces in the Tri-Cities included Oakalla / Deer Lake, Woodlands, BC Pen and Riverview. Some of Deer Lake lands remain, the others are gone. Riverview Lands are a crown jewel to be preserved.</div>
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<p>I agree.</p>
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<p>All aspects of the early Riverview Lands have their place in history. The site is centrally located in Metro Vancouver, well served by public transit, easy access to highways and roads. The intense development of surrounding lands has left Riverview as an island of green space which although neglected still retains much of itʼs early historical buildings. This is our Ankor Wat or Windsor Castle. Why would we want to destroy it just to sell more condos? “We” actually donʼt. Someone in “government” does.</p>
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<p>Cemetery.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-9-what-have-we-missed"></a><h4><strong>Theme 9: What Have We Missed?</strong></h4>
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<p>Riverview has saved lives and should continue to do so.</p>
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<p>Therapeutic labour contributed by patients:</p>
<ul>
<li>774 days building a stone fence around boundary</li>
<li>1,579 days clearing the land</li>
<li>831 days digging drains and ditches</li>
<li>9,571 days grading the land</li>
<li>2,726 days lawn maintenance</li>
<li>660 days building roads</li>
<li>6,400 days doing other activities</li>
</ul>
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<p>Sold in 1904 to King / Crown (public lands)<br />
First settlement Kwikwetlem First Nation<br />
Was originally 1,000 acres (how and who sold this off?)</p>
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<p>Thanks to all who continuously work to keep our community great.</p>
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<p>Please do not develop these lands any more. This space and buildings are heritage. The trees are amazing and must be saved for the future. I will be a tree hugging granny if development takes place.</p>
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<p>UBC for the homeless that never should have ended up on the street with no hope, no help and no family.</p>
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<p>Riverview Hospital was a happy and comfortable home where people felt accepted and valued. There were 5,000 people there in the 1960s. This deserves recognition as a historical site. The history can be combined with recreation and serve the community in the future – gardens, trees, walking trails, etc.</p>
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<p>Riverview is a hospital and should remain a hospital.</p>
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<p>Preserve / Reinvigorate / Renew: Heritage, environmental / arboretum, cutting edge mental health facility.</p>
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<p>There is no dollar value to the Riverview Lands, they are “priceless.” Valuable to the mind and soul of both the mentally ill and “normal.” What is normal anyways? With a serene sanctuary like Riverview, all can reach their potential physically (walking the grounds), mentally (inspirational), and spiritually (look up at the trees).</p>
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<p>Timeline for report is too short. Public workshops should be held in schools, City Hall, etc. Other groups contacted ʻstakeholdersʼ at workshop?</p>
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<p>You have missed any mention of wildlife values. Swifts live in some of the old chimneys, bats and barn owls (which eat insects and rodents) roost / nest in the building sites, green areas connect with Mundy Park and Colony Farm. Salmon returning to creeks, south facing land used extensively by migratory birds &#8230;</p>
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<p>Signage at front of venue.</p>
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<p>Save the woods.</p>
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<p>You have missed the overall picture. In segmenting it you have lost the spirit of the Lands.</p>
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<p>Riverview and Colony Farm used to be run in conjunction with one another. A working farm providing work for the mentally ill. Where could you find a better combination, producing one of the top breeding farms in Canada. What a loss.</p>
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<p>Supported financially by the province.</p>
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<p>Advertising for todayʼs event inadequate. Perhaps some signs around the community for the next event and email messages which could be sent around. This subject is too important not the have the largest participation possible.</p>
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]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-2/feed</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Results from Workshop #1</title>
		<link>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-1</link>
		<comments>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-1#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Jun 2012 19:03:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Miscellaneous Comments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Results]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.riverviewvalues.info/?p=605</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The following comments were collected at the May 22nd Drop-In Workshop.  If you would prefer to download this information by PDF, please click here:  Workshop #1 Results PDF &#160; Theme 1: Hillside and River Natural forested areas for wildlife complements &#8230; <a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/results-from-workshop-1">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The following comments were collected at the May 22nd Drop-In Workshop.  If you would prefer to download this information by PDF, please click here:  <a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Riverview-workshop-1-transcript.pdf">Workshop #1 Results PDF</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-1-hillside-and-river"></a><h4><strong>Theme 1: Hillside and River</strong></h4>
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<p>Natural forested areas for wildlife complements the cultivated landscape.</p>
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<p>Educational value of hillside and river. Introduce children to First Nations culture through experiencing the natural environment.</p>
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<p>Fabulous cycling access between older parts of Coquitlam (southwest) and Colony Farm and Port Coquitlam trail. Safe cycling and gentle slopes.</p>
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<p>Ravines, streams with fish in them, trees for birds and animals, green corridor between Colony Farm and Port Moody. Valued for migrating birds and animals.</p>
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<p>High quality land and soil should not be buried under houses. Green space larger than Central Park in NYC is treasured.</p>
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<p>We must preserve the beauty of Riverview and our city. It adds beautiful green space and is a special place for everyone to enjoy and explore.</p>
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<p>Riverview is a remarkable site that combines important natural areas with glorious groomed ones and the tree collection, this makes it unique and very special. Add in the views and the buildings – wow.</p>
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<p>Riverview preserved for future generations just the way it is.</p>
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<p>Riverview is an integral portion of a “green infrastructure,” a significant patchwork of green space that is vital to habitat and territorial range protection. Consider Mundy Park, Riverview Forest, Riverview, Colony Farm, Douglas Island. Essential habitat and “green links” support.</p>
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<p>Connections to other green space, especially Colony Farm. Large open space is rare and valuable.</p>
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<p>Greenery helps to clean our already polluted air.</p>
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<p>The vegetated hillside and (mostly) lack of paving make these lands very valuable as a water supply for the Coquitlam River and its tributaries and wetland. No development on these lands.</p>
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<p>The river and wetlands are an integral component for sustaining the area around the lower Coquitlam River.</p>
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<p>Biodiversity.</p>
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<p>Views, nature, refuge from city.</p>
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<p>Excellent wildlife corridor.</p>
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<p>Environmentally sensitive.</p>
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<p>Clean groundwater is needed.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="-theme-2-the-planted-landscape"></a><h4><strong> Theme 2: The Planted Landscape</strong></h4>
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<p>Collection of trees. Huge selection (1600 at least), part of the overall design with the architecture. Natural form of trees. First botanical garden, then moved by horse and wagon. Associated with nursery. Plants – many provincial institutions have Riverview specimens.</p>
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<p>Green space in an urban setting. The trees were planted to complement the buildings.</p>
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<p>Green open space with a notable collection of trees. Appreciation of nature / spirit.</p>
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<p>Sum total of the place. Historical significance through association with Henry Esson Young. The quality of the landscape is superb and deliberate – nothing like it. The terrain is key.</p>
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<p>Huge variety of planted trees – arboretum. Educational value for future serenity, tree identification and the unique characteristics of various trees.</p>
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<p>Historically the arboretum story (created by John Davidson) is something of great value and should be celebrated and preserved along with the site. More public awareness of the history of the Lands it what Iʼd like to see.</p>
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<p>Please leave the Riverview Lands just the way they are. They are a valuable green space in our ever-increasingly built up space, for people and wildlife.</p>
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<p>I agree, the trees are for the generations to come and the only un-pruned (natural) ones of their kind. They offer enhanced healing for everyone in terms of therapeutic value as well.</p>
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<p>Peaceful, therapeutic, historical value. A cultural gem and a refuge. Please listen.</p>
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<p>Do not let real estate in or high rise buildings.</p>
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<p>These amazing trees were a highlight of drives during my childhood.</p>
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<p>This was always meant to be for the people in a form of health care whether mental or physical care for our soul. What right to sell without our consultation. This is ours.</p>
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<p>This planted landscape – and the potential to return to the some of its historical attributes (re-establishing the botanical garden) offers a ʻuniquenessʼ which would have caused the site to be snapped up decades ago by a National Trust type society in Europe. It is one of the many qualities possessed by Riverview that gives the site such possibilities for becoming a community gem and thus could be the region on the map if proper foresight is shown.</p>
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<p>Magnificent arboretum of trees to treasure. Wide open green spaces which are inviting for peaceful walks, nature viewing and contemplation. Spectacular vistas of surrounding areas.</p>
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<p>Open space valuable in a dense urban environment. Important for current mental wellness.</p>
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<p>We need green space. Progress is keeping a natural spacious haven. Stanly Park for Vancouver, Mundy Park and Riverview for Tri-Cities.</p>
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<p>Any other country would have claimed these lands for the benefit of the whole community long ago eg. Giverny, Trianon, etc. Tree collection a rare and unique blessing.</p>
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<p>Riverview Lands contain a garden of specimen trees – a destination for people travelling the globe. It is a treasure for Coquitlam and the Greater Vancouver region.</p>
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<p>The mental health benefits of the planted landscape are the same benefits that need to continue into the future, regardless of the future status of the hospital. Amongst much soulless development, the Riverview Lands and the planted landscape are a critical component of our sense of place. It gives us value in our community and its loss would have significant negative consequences on of sense of community.</p>
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<p>My husband and I love to walk and ride our bicycles through the Riverview Lands. We love the peacefulness and grandness.</p>
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<p>Arboretum – rare / unique.</p>
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<p>Riverview is a treasure and a part of our legacy to our children and grandchildren. We have a unique opportunity here and we would be remiss not to protect this green space for future generations. Preserve Riverview. Save the most incredible and beautiful open grown arboretum in Canada.</p>
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<p>The green space and wide open areas provide an opportunity to relax away from the hectic pace found elsewhere throughout the city.</p>
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<p>This is the site of Western Canadaʼs first botanical garden. One of the finest collection of trees in Canada and the Pacific Northwest.</p>
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<p>Space and trees create a place of contemplation.</p>
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<p>Restore botanical garden. Respect what early Kew gardeners formed.</p>
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<p>Arboretum – get among trees, peacefulness.</p>
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<p>Fog.</p>
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<p>Views to Golden Ears and Port Mann bridges.</p>
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<p>Enjoyed seeing the manicured holly trees because they were unusual at that time.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-3-grand-and-modest-design"></a><h4><strong>Theme 3: Grand and Modest Design</strong></h4>
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<p>Rock walls and stairs at Finnieʼs Garden. They are physically impressive, associated with Finnie (nurse), and with the history of therapy which included patients building the wall.</p>
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<p>Country estate is also a campus with sense of university eg. spaces for contemplation and inspiration. Landscaping is also a heritage treasure particularly so given it is “mature” having been worked for over 100 years.</p>
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<p>Beautiful heritage buildings should be maintained and restored as necessary. They will outlast anything new that could be built today.</p>
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<p>Can be used as a museum for all the wonderful pieces of history that are being lost and otherwise misplaced.</p>
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<p>The marble and architectural features need to be maintained and shown to future generations how we have evolved.</p>
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<p>Is Fraser Health looking at Valleyview Pavilion yet? Shame.</p>
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<p>Technically advanced buildings. Sign of the architectural connection with Victoria cathedral competition assessor who was promoting reinforced concrete.</p>
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<p>Brick, maybe made on site, represents self-sufficiency.</p>
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<p>Central porticoes or front central façade. Increased decorative value and provided an agreeable scale.</p>
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<p>The buildings can be repurposed.</p>
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<p>Buildings are valuable because of their unique style, still useful with modifications, palatial and impressive, and historically interesting.</p>
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<p>Campus form lends itself to be adapted to many different uses.</p>
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<p>The size of the grounds is unique in the middle of urbanization.</p>
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<p>Winding, slow, scenic roads.</p>
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<p>The outer shells of the buildings should be retained as a reminder of the care we gave to the mentally ill. The insides should be repurposed for educational, civic and therapeutic use.</p>
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<p>The buildings are beautiful. They symbolized that society really cared for the mentally ill.</p>
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<p>Interesting trees, patterns and spaces.</p>
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<p>The Riverview Lands and buildings are a heritage legacy which must never be lost to the people of British Columbia. The natural beauty contained within this 244 acres is an ecosystem unique in balance continually evolving and changing with the life it protects. It must be kept accessible to the public of our province. It must be always dedicated to the needs of the mentally ill and for the mental well-being of all British Columbians.</p>
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<p>The Riverview Lands have provided a safe haven for those that sought help in healing. The beautiful grounds and “village” layout allowed patients to move about in a community where they could be themselves. Riverview can continue to serve as a place of respite.</p>
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<p>Long views not actually part of the plan. The growing in of trees represented the long term view, long term planning and long term use.</p>
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<p>Still needed for an ever-increasing density all around us. Please no market housing in such a precious and beautiful space.</p>
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<p>We are quick to destroy, replace and modernize but we forget the history, what weʼve learned and how we can progress with reminders like Riverview. The landscape is irreplaceable, the heritage is necessary and the location is perfect to help future generations in many ways. Modernize, add, but do not destroy in the name of progress.</p>
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<p>The heritage buildings are unique and add to the character of the site. They bring direct and indirect value by attracting the movie industry. Break that character and those benefits stop. The buildings are an essential element of the sense of place.</p>
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<p>The heritage buildings and the grand (now deteriorating) walkway help us to remember how gardens and community centres have been a place of refuge over time. The Riverview site has a grand, palatial feel.</p>
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<p>What about out returning veterans and those suffering from post traumatic stress disorder?</p>
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<p>Grand design and comfortable living for those in need of healing. So forward and enlightened in their treatment of the mentally and emotionally ill.</p>
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<p>Cottages are homey, older architecture, more intimate.</p>
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<p>Nurseʼs Home 1. I trained there and lived there in the 1960s.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-4-places-of-treatment-and-therapy"></a><h4><strong>Theme 4: Places of Treatment and Therapy</strong></h4>
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<p>Valued for the setting and community. Peaceful, calming, safe haven. Friendship, acceptance, sense of worth, value, help near at hand. Social interaction.</p>
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<p>Flora – therapeutic.</p>
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<p>Sanctuary – safety for patients. Can step out away from bustle of urban world.</p>
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<p>Parks, trees, green space have a calming effect on people.</p>
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<p>Some mental health patients will always need the one on one institutional care that has been provided at Riverview. Calm, peaceful, healthy setting. Other uses could be geriatric care for our aging population or treatment centres (long-term) for addicts to the them away from the Downtown East Side. Downtown East Side community problem prove that downsizing was a disastrous failed experiment.</p>
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<p>The peaceful settings created under an older model of health care provides a necessary respite from the low-end developments that surround the Riverview Lands.</p>
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<p>It was good to see Riverview serving the needs of the mentally ill who suffer from addictions being looked after on the site – it should continue.</p>
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<p>Collaborate with Metro Vancouver to restore the link between Riverview and Colony Farm. Then initiate further collaborations with the appropriate health authorities to custom-fit programs towards mental wellness, using for example the fields at Colony Farm for “pastoral therapy.”</p>
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<p>Therapeutic art. Art for everybody. Painterʼs paradise.</p>
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<p>Therapeutic gardening. Therapeutic farming.</p>
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<p>Give those who need it a second chance to live and the care and therapy provided by the buildings and gardens.</p>
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<p>Patients felt a great sense of dignity working with the animals and the garden. They had award-winning cattle and vegetables at the PNE and the feeling of pride and workmanship goes a long way in healing your spirit and mental health.</p>
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<p>This could be a site for the mental health patients who still need it, assistance for those down and out on the streets, community wellness, healing for all and for teaching and educating everyone about the common misconceptions surrounding mental illness.</p>
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<p>Therapeutic gardening here and at Colony Farm. Clients could live at Riverview or in the community and garden at Finnieʼs at Riverview or Colony Farm. Check out Providence Farm outside Duncan on Vancouver Island.</p>
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<p>Use this site for what it was intended. Empty the psych wards in general hospitals, empty the prisoners that have special mental needs. Create new spaces for new innovative programs. It is a place of restoration to be kept. Empty Vancouverʼs east side where self-medication prevails.</p>
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<p>Hear hear.</p>
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<p>Open space is important for the mental wellness of all.</p>
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<p>We need both community based services and a comprehensive facility that offers holistic treatment. Not just one without the other.</p>
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<p>As a society we need to care fro all people. No one deserves to be abandoned to the streets due to mental health issues. Restore Riverview.</p>
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<p>A valuable artifact that needs to remain so others can begin to imagine another awful time that we need to remember. A place that had different rues, different terrifying rules that we need to remember and never forget, never forget.</p>
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<p>The demand for places of healing and therapy have not changed. What once was can be again with modern therapies.</p>
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<p>I agree.</p>
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<p>It is obvious to me as a PoCo resident that the present day model of mental health care (turning them out) is not working. It is not care, it is abandonment by the current provincial government.</p>
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<p>The Riverview Hospital will still have medical relevance. We have more and more Alzheimers sufferers. The site is ideal for that use. Post traumatic stress disorder etc.</p>
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<p>Finnieʼs garden still doing its job as a wonderful therapeutic escape.</p>
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<p>Solace and care, sanctuary and respite. Sanctuary still available there.</p>
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<p>It is imperative that this site, designed for the treatment and care of mentally ill patients be retained and developed further for this need in our society in BC. The setting is one of the finest and most beautiful in Canada and people with these difficulties deserve the best.</p>
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<p>People with mental disabilities should never be left in prisons, within an environment of people who willfully commit crime, are kept. This is an atrocity that should never have been allowed to happen. People who have schizophrenia and people who have a will to commit crime should never be placed together in the same location. We do it all the time and effects on those with schizophrenia are radically damaged. A proper place for those with schizophrenia is urgently needed. To leave people to survive on the streets in Vancouverʼs downtown and east end is not the answer to these peoplesʼ needs. Why leave these people alone to self-medicate when we have a beautiful site that could be developed further for caring for these people? Group homes are also band-aid places for those with mental issues. They often run away and end up on skid row. The government cost of group homes is enormous. Why? When we already have facilities at Riverview to be developed! The psych wards of our general hospitals are always full. It is only a temporary measure, so why not consolidated our resources at Riverview and take advantage of the beauty of this place for those who can be treated toward wholeness.</p>
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<p>Unique in being able to provide the setting for mental illness. To be a place of beauty for those with mental illnesses of many types to be restored if possible, or if long term ailments, kept in beautiful surroundings. It needs to be kept for its original purposes and developed further. Bring in the people off the streets and out of the prisons, to care for them properly at Riverview Lands.</p>
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<p>Physical beauty important as a community resource and still as a superior place for treatment and therapy.</p>
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<p>Important as having the capacity to meet different institutional needs.</p>
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<p>The key role provincially is to return to the original plan for Riverview Lands as a haven and healing place for the mentally ill and incapacitated. To take the vision much farther ahead. Create out of these buildings several “hospitals” each for different special needs. Develop each, one at a time, step by step, and may it become a showcase of how we truly care for people with mental needs.</p>
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<p>Airing courts. They were outside areas used for people who needed to be kept in a confined area. West Lawn and East Lawn each had one.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-5-adaptability"></a><h4><strong>Theme 5: Adaptability</strong></h4>
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<p>The old buildings are valued. Reinforced concrete has its challenges as well as opportunities for re-use, or at least portions of them.</p>
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<p>The original purpose for which Riverview / Colony Farm was developed remains the best – meaningful care in a healthy sustainable setting for the mentally ill, close to nature with inspiring views and impressive buildings and grounds – a campus of care. We should not stray from this vision and purpose but only seek ways to bring tin the community an create a more holistic setting.</p>
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<p>Riverview is an integral part of my community. Many happy memories, wandering through the trees and Finnieʼs garden. Where shall I start? Community garden, farmerʼs market, bike route, bed and breakfast, shops, garden (botanical), keep the trees, oasis, love this place!</p>
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<p>I believe that it would be a great chance for communal growth through the use of communal gardens. A lot of young generations are growing up without the chance to explore nature in their own back yard, it provides the opportunity to teach the importance of community as well as the outdoors. Give children a place to nurture and call their own and the respect and pride in our city will increase dramatically.</p>
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<p>Farm / city balance. A park within a city.</p>
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<p>Change to remember past / future and create awareness</p>
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<p>Social adaptability – at one time you couldnʼt be married and work in the nurse / training program. Was this discrimination? There was also the change to an eight hour work day from a 12 hour day.</p>
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<p>Could become a place like Balboa Park in San Diego.</p>
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<p>Multi-use place.</p>
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<p>Positive health and wellness, and recreation.</p>
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<p>Keep space for the radio club from past and present, to link to future activities.</p>
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<p>Public spaces for public needs, like non-profits, etc.</p>
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<p>It is possible to adapt while still keeping the spirit of historical uses on site.</p>
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<div>
<p>Sustainability, often, is not about “re-invention.” Itʼs more often about borrowing from past practices, with essential tweaks along the way. “Adaptability” in this sense may simply be returning full circle.</p>
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<p>Why is adaptability equated to more housing? Brandon Mental Health Hospital (Manitoba twin to this site) became a community college. So why not see adaptivity to some such as that? A community college or perhaps a high tech centre or innovation centre. Buildings can be renovated on inside to fit.</p>
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<p>Didn&#8217;t like the white aprons.</p>
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<p>The adaptability of these lands is unimportant. What is important is the retention of this as a park. We will have lots of development and redevelopment all around us. That is where adaptability can take place. We will always need a place where it is clean and green and a place where the song of birds can be heard.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-6-self-sufficiency-community-spirit"></a><h4><strong>Theme 6: Self-Sufficiency / Community Spirit</strong></h4>
<table>
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<div>
<p>Second paragraph of your synopsis should be highlighted. These activities and community sense canʼt possibly be achieved with a bed here and two beds there provided in hospitals across the province.</p>
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<p>People emerged with transferable skills as opposed to not equipped to deal with the real world.</p>
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<p>I donʼt think that self-sufficiency means development.</p>
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<p>Return to this self-sufficiency. Re-establish the link with Colony Farm. Metro Vancouverʼs sustainability initiatives demand a need to collaborate, to liaise with other agencies and jurisdictions.</p>
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<p>Organic quality of the place is valued.</p>
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<p>Regular celebration by community of the trees (horticulture culture).</p>
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<p>Could be our “Stanley Park.”</p>
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<p>Walking on the grounds was medicinal.</p>
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<p>Patients donʼt feel they are different from anyone else.</p>
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<div>
<p>Riverview Lands can continue to serve the community by functioning as a place where arts and theatre, well-being programs could be offered. It could also be open for the public to walk about the grounds, picnic and enjoy family functions.</p>
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<div>
<p>A culture within a culture. We danced with the patients, it was social and there was companionship. A safe, calm, organized place where everyone was accepted, encouraged and supported.</p>
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<div>
<p>Protection within a society. Protected from the worst elements of society. Integration with society is possible within a protected site.</p>
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<p>People developed self-worth, had responsibility, healthy pursuits, outdoor activities. Good diet, work accomplishment and satisfaction. Integration with the general public. Education regarding mental illness.</p>
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<div>
<p>The Riverview Lands and buildings house and inspire many community groups. As people live more densely we need these groups to bring us together spiritually. The Lands are idea for building community. Idea – a First Nations learning environment and learning about nature for all ages.</p>
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<div>
<p>I work in mental health. People used to tell me it helped them to know they could always return to Riverview if they needed a break. The felt welcome and safe, and then they could return to independence. It was not just a hospital and thatʼs what worked and what we no longer have to offer.</p>
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<p>A place for hobbies.</p>
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<p>Tri-Cities Arts Council – artists!</p>
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<p>People learned life skills in the arts, agriculture, ecology and community living.</p>
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<p>Protection! Protect the buildings, they are historical in their architecture, style, why the were built. Keep them to preserve the stories that are good and bad. Learn from the past and make the future of all safe, to get well and remain well.</p>
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<div>
<p>A bus ride through the grounds to and from work, New Westminster to Pitt Meadows. Watched the various Riverview employees getting on and off in different places.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-7-stewardship-of-the-land"></a><h4><strong>Theme 7: Stewardship of the Land</strong></h4>
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<tbody>
<tr>
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<div>
<div>
<p>Sustainability, often, is not about “reinvention.”</p>
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<td>
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<div>
<div>
<p>There seems to be an assumption that no future medical therapy use of the site can be made. I donʼt agree with this perspective.</p>
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<div>
<p>The Riverview Lands are a unique combination of majestic (and some not so majestic) buildings, as well as an amazing arboretum of trees not commonly found in the urban ladscape. These trees are in exceptionally good health, are “open grown” and serve as a source of beauty and escape from the urban rush. The trees should also be used as an educational resource. If we lose these trees we will never be able to replace them. Many of the buildings have historical significance. We should value our heritage and save Riverview.</p>
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<p>Important features include open space, arboretum and historic buildings.</p>
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<p>Make Riverview into a national park. B.C. and building a museum and hatchery etc.</p>
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<p>Emphasize the historical aspects – tourism, heritage, horticultural.</p>
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<p>For the birds, space and thinking.</p>
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<p>Keep the Lands for public use. No market housing. Only wealthy people could afford to buy these properties and would build very large houses. This would take away from the views and open space we all enjoy now.</p>
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<p>Library of historical knowledge of our local area to educate all in our area and outside to what exists in the gardens and in the buildings. If the local areas need a place, eg. PoCo, for some museum pieces, add to Riverview pieces.</p>
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<p>Buildings and arboretum should be designated as a heritage / historic site.</p>
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<p>Need the why. Because it is unique.</p>
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<p>If we lose these lands now we will never get them back.</p>
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<p>Connections to Colony Farm important for historical reasons and the future.</p>
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<p>Walking.</p>
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<p>Lets be guided on this by the Kwikwetlem First Nations community.</p>
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<p>Something different. A change from the standard intersection and strip mall.</p>
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<p>All the facilities shut down for the troubled ones in our society. This is the perfect opportunity to care for them again. A place of perfect beauty. No one can deny the psychological effects of nature, beautiful trees and quiet green spaces with heritage value.</p>
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<p>Because it is a valuable resource for all.</p>
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<div>
<p>Think Stanley Park. What a resource that is! No one would think of subdividing it. Preserve for future generations. Once green space is lost it is lost forever.</p>
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<p>Because of 100+ years time to create what it is today.</p>
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<p>We need the nature that has been greened. Why destroy when you cannot rebuild the gardens. Appreciate what has now matured.</p>
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</div>
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</td>
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</tbody>
</table>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-8-provincial-icon-and-community-amenity"></a><h4><strong>Theme 8: Provincial Icon and Community Amenity</strong></h4>
<table>
<tbody>
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<p>Preserve open spaces. We need more green spaces for healthy living, especially mental health.</p>
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<div>
<p>Access to natural spaces important for mental health of all. One way to carry on the legacy of history of mental health.</p>
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</div>
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</td>
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<div>
<p>The Lands should primarily focus on the mental and spiritual wellness of the greater community, including, but not limited to, addiction treatment and recovery, short term care facilities for people in crisis, transitional housing, geriatric care, etc. The second focus should be educational.</p>
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<p>I agree (4).</p>
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<p>Mental health in our province continues to need a comprehensive world class hospital in addition to community based services. Letʼs not lose this opportunity and build on the original idea, not take it apart.</p>
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<p>This parcel defines the westernmost parcel of the Coquitlam River watershed, an iconic river whose water supplies most of the drinking water of the lower mainland and is the spiritual homeland of the Kwikwetlem Nation.</p>
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<p>The past care of patients is important to families who had family and friends “looked after” here. A sense of community, family, continuity of generations is created by this. The location, buildings, trees are the landmarks that carry that forward. Preserve the memories, do not destroy them. The past is a valuable teaching tool for / gifted to our children. It is a combination of memories, architecture, forest peace, education, wildlife, park land that makes this “saveable.”</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<div>
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<div>
<p>Parks Canada must adopt this site.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<div>
<p>A site that could put us on the map. What is the world got to know about this place?</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<td>
<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>Correct the errors for treating mental health in the past and make Riverview a sample of being better. The large area can support the treatment and integration back to people and nature.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
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<td>
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<div>
<div>
<p>Riverview – a gift from past generations to be preserved. Pass it on.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<td>
<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>There are so few historical sites like Riverview with dramatic architecture on beautiful grounds to enjoy in BC. It is a treasure to everyone in BC.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<td>
<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>The lands must remain in public trust for health care and associated and complementary uses. The tree collection must be managed with care and enhanced. The heritage buildings and campus feel must be retained.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<td>
<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>It is “plain view” obvious that this site is a provincial icon and part of this communityʼs identify. Key features: Green, green, green; avian life; heritage buildings.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a name="theme-9-what-have-we-missed"></a><h4><strong>Theme 9: What Have We Missed?</strong></h4>
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>I have no confidence in the corrupt BC government and their lobbyist cronies. No decisions on this site should be made until we have an elected premier.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>The Tri-Cities have a large immigrant / new Canadian population component. What attempt has been made to approach this community for their views on both mental health and the role of nature in sustaining mental health?</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<div>
<div>
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<p>Synergy. Keep Riverview intact. It works because it is what it is.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
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<p>The ecology of the site is the feature of this site and development will break that.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<p>Asking me for a specific feature that is important is a very reductionists approach that fails to capture the true value of the whole of the site.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<tr>
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<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>Letʼs add to, not take way, rebuild in an even better way.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
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<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>Letʼs have a residential youth addictions treatment centre and a facility for residential school survivors – a healing program permanently funded and run by First Nations.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
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<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>Think of transportation / transit access for target audiences in the overall plan.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
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<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>Restoration of the entire site to its former glory.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<div>
<p>Which is? Forest? 1930s? 1950s?</p>
</div>
</div>
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<div>
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<div>
<p>The influential role played by John Davidson starting the tree collection, creating an native plant collection at Essondale, work with patients along with his many other contributions to Metro Vancouver. It is a great shame his potting shed was demolished a few years ago. Finnieʼs would be even more fantastic if it was still there.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
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<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>Habitat ʼ76 revisited.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<div>
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<div>
<p>The whole is greater than the sum of its parts?</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
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<td>
<div>
<div>
<div>
<p>The Riverview Lands need to be utilized for cultural and recreational purposes. Could eventually be the crowning focal “ecological site” in the Lower Mainland.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Stakeholders &#8211; June 22, 2012</title>
		<link>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/stakeholders-may-25th-2012</link>
		<comments>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/stakeholders-may-25th-2012#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 25 May 2012 18:02:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stakeholders]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.riverviewvalues.info/?p=566</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As of 22 June 2012, the following organizations and/or individuals have been identified as potential stakeholders with something to contribute to the development of the Riverview Lands Heritage Conservation Plan. Their input will be sought directly either through one-on-one interviews or the &#8230; <a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/stakeholders-may-25th-2012">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: left;">As of 22 June 2012, the following organizations and/or individuals have been identified as potential stakeholders with something to contribute to the development of the Riverview Lands Heritage Conservation Plan. Their input will be sought directly either through one-on-one interviews or the project questionnaire. We have also requested that they distribute participation opportunities through their networks.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">If you know of any potential stakeholder groups or persons not noted here, and who would be interested in participating, please let us know. Please note that this list is continually being updated, so please check back.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">28 former staffers (via Riverview Historical Society)</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">7 people who lived on the Lands as children (via Riverview Historical Society)</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">A SFU Professor</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Arts Connect</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">BC Film Commission</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">BC MH&amp; A Services, Riverview</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">BC Schizophrenia Society</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">BLJC workplace solutions / WSI</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">BurkeMountainNaturalists</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Cemetery management</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">City of Coquitlam</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">City of Coquitlam heritage consultant</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Class of 1953 nurses</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Coast Foundation</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Coquitlam Heritage Society</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Coquitlam RiverWatch</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Current tenants</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Douglas College Environmental Studies</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Douglas College School of Psychiatric Nursing</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Former BCBC site managers</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Former dentist, Valleyview</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Former grounds managers</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Former medical Director</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Former nurses (3), now living away from area</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Former Occupational Therapist</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Former patient visitor</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Former psychiatrist (1970&#8242;s)</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Former psychiatrist (1980&#8242;s)</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Former real estate managers</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Former site consultants</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Freight Transportation Museum</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Kwantlen College Horticulture Program</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Lower Lougheed Residents’ Association</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Maillardville Residents’ Association</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Metro Vancouver Parks</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Movie industry liaison</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Mundy Park Community Association</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">PoCoMo Youth Centre Society</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Port Coquitlam Cultural and Heritage Society</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Port Moody Heritage Society</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Ranch Park Community Association</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Residents of a Coquitlam nursing home</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">retired Vancouver City parks director (RHCS director)</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">River Springs Community Association</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Riverview Horticultural Centre Society</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Riverview Hospital Historical Society</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Riverview Hospital staff</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Riverview Lands Advisory Committee (City)</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Riverview Preservation Society</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Shared Services BC former Riverview staff</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Society for the Preservation of Antique Radios in Canada</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Southeast Coquitlam Ratepayers’ Association</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">staff at Connolly,Cottonwood, and Cypress Lodges</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Tri Cities MH&amp;A Advisory Committee</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Tri-Cities Chamber of Commerce</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">UBC Botanical Garden</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">VanDusen Botanical Garden</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Photo Gallery</title>
		<link>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/photo-gallery</link>
		<comments>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/photo-gallery#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 13 May 2012 21:21:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Photos]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.riverviewvalues.info/?p=310</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_388" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 670px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Swimming-Pool-1929.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-388" title="Swimming Pool 1929" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Swimming-Pool-1929.jpg" alt="" width="660" height="383" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Swimming Pool, 1929</p></div>
<div id="attachment_423" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 670px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Birdcages1929.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-423" title="Birdcages1929" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Birdcages1929.jpg" alt="" width="660" height="449" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Birdcages, 1929</p></div>
<div id="attachment_431" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 2841px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Overlooking-Colony-Farm-3.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-431" title="Overlooking-Colony-Farm-3" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Overlooking-Colony-Farm-3.jpg" alt="" width="2831" height="2269" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Overlooking Colony Farm</p></div>
<div id="attachment_389" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 558px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/b_00275-Male-Building-Essondale-1940s.gif"><img class="size-full wp-image-389" title="b_00275 Male Building, Essondale 1940s" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/b_00275-Male-Building-Essondale-1940s.gif" alt="" width="548" height="416" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Male Building, Essondale, 1940s</p></div>
<div id="attachment_393" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 561px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/essondale.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-393" title="essondale" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/essondale.jpg" alt="" width="551" height="438" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Provincial Mental Hospital, Essondale</p></div>
<div id="attachment_422" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 1506px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Library-at-Crease.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-422" title="Library-at-Crease" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Library-at-Crease.jpg" alt="" width="1496" height="1200" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Library at Crease</p></div>
<div id="attachment_424" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 2849px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Large-dormitory-Femail-Chronic-nd.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-424" title="Large-dormitory-Femail-Chronic-nd" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Large-dormitory-Femail-Chronic-nd.jpg" alt="" width="2839" height="2243" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Large Dormitory</p></div>
<div id="attachment_390" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 2850px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Tuck-shop-nd_2.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-390" title="Tuck-shop-nd_2" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Tuck-shop-nd_2.jpg" alt="" width="2840" height="2273" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Tuck Shop</p></div>
<div id="attachment_426" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 2829px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Laboratory-Crease-Clinic-1950.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-426" title="Laboratory-Crease-Clinic-1950" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Laboratory-Crease-Clinic-1950.jpg" alt="" width="2819" height="2245" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Laboratory, Crease Clinic, 1950</p></div>
<div id="attachment_412" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 2831px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nurses-infirmary-1950.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-412" title="Nurse's-infirmary-1950" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nurses-infirmary-1950.jpg" alt="" width="2821" height="2111" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Nurses&#39; Infirmary, 1950</p></div>
<div id="attachment_395" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 1961px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nurses-residence-fire-drill-nd.jpg"><img class=" wp-image-395" title="Nurse's-residence-fire-drill-nd" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nurses-residence-fire-drill-nd.jpg" alt="" width="1951" height="1365" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Nurses&#39; Residence fire drill</p></div>
<div id="attachment_429" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 2010px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/West-Lawn-and-grounds-1952.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-429" title="West-Lawn-and-grounds-1952" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/West-Lawn-and-grounds-1952.jpg" alt="" width="2000" height="1348" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">West Lawn and grounds, 1952</p></div>
<div id="attachment_391" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 1807px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Stone-wall-1961.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-391" title="Stone-wall-1961" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Stone-wall-1961.jpg" alt="" width="1797" height="1200" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Stone wall, 1961</p></div>
<div id="attachment_415" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 1610px"><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/IMG_3310.jpg"><img class=" wp-image-415" title="IMG_3310" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/IMG_3310.jpg" alt="" width="1600" height="1200" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Cottages</p></div>
<p><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/IMG_3329.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-416" title="IMG_3329" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/IMG_3329.jpg" alt="" width="1600" height="1200" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/IMG_3331.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-418" title="IMG_3331" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/IMG_3331.jpg" alt="" width="1600" height="1200" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/IMGP0754.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-420" title="IMGP0754" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/IMGP0754.jpg" alt="" width="2048" height="1536" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/IMGP0704.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-428" title="IMGP0704" src="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/IMGP0704.jpg" alt="" width="2048" height="1536" /></a></p>
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		<title>Heritage Values</title>
		<link>http://www.riverviewvalues.info/heritage-values</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2012 20:37:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Natural Heritage Values]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Heritage values are defined as the historic, aesthetic, spiritual, social, cultural, and scientific significance or importance of a place for past, present, or future generations. Values can relate to physical aspects of the place, such as landscapes, trails, spiritual sites, &#8230; <a href="http://www.riverviewvalues.info/heritage-values">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Heritage values are defined as the historic, aesthetic, spiritual, social, cultural, and scientific significance or importance of a place for past, present, or future generations. Values can relate to physical aspects of the place, such as landscapes, trails, spiritual sites, natural species, water features or buildings. They can also be intangible, including stories, memories, traditions, events, language, art, craft or place names.</p>
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