This past weekend, the Vancouver Sun featured an article I wrote about a forthcoming design competition being sponsored by a non-profit organization known as The Lifestyle Foundation. https://www.thelifestylefoundation.com/
This organization describes itself as being dedicated to exploring the beauty of life and embarking on a journey filled with creativity and inspiration. A more down-to-earth goal is to inform and educate new Canadians, especially those coming from China and other parts of Asia, about North American lifestyles and living.
This competition is not intended for architects or developers. It's for Vancouver area renters and homeowners who are willing to share how they live with others arriving from other parts of the world. It will hopefully engage those who have designed/decorated their apartments and houses in specific ways, namely to be more pet friendly or healthier through the use of plants.
It is also intended to showcase people who have created more usable balconies through furnishings and other decoarating ideas. It is hoped these submission will inspire others to enjoy new lifestyles.
What's my interest in this competition? I am one of the judges.
As the article notes, this competition reminded me of another with which I was involved four decades ago. This one was sponsored by the Vancouver Sun. My thanks to both Vancouver Sun WESTCOAST HOMES editor Mary Beth Roberts who took an interest in the concept and worked with Postmedia librarian Carolyn Soltau to dig up the article and photos from 1976.
I hope you will take a few moments to read the article and consider submitting how you have created more enjoyable home by making it pet-friendly, healthier, and larger by making better use of the balcony.
Since the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation financed many of these apartments, as its newly arrived assistant architect/planner, I was invited to be one of the competition judges. Fifty years later, I can still vividly recall many of the creative ideas submitted by readers.
The grand prize winner was a Burnaby bachelor’s pad transformed into a jungle. It featured dark green and mirrored walls, bamboo furniture and lots of stuffed animals. The walls and ceiling were barely visible through all the plants. It wasn’t easy to imagine that this had once been a typical beige Metro Vancouver apartment.
Other submissions recreated the interior of a rural farmhouse, an elegant Cote d’Azur pied-à-terre, and the inside of an industrial factory.
Lui is an acclaimed television producer and the founder of The Lifestyle Foundation. Dong, a graduate of Parsons School of Design with experience in fashion brand marketing in Shanghai, is the foundation’s CEO.
The Lifestyle Foundation is a non-profit organization headquartered in Vancouver that promotes lifestyle exchange, quality living and philanthropy. It advocates for more enriching, fulfilling and meaningful ways of living. Its primary audience includes those who recently moved to Vancouver from China and other Asian cities.
The foundation wants to offer these newcomers insights into different Vancouver lifestyles. Like The Vancouver Sun’s “What the L” competition, it also aims to provide a glimpse into peoples’ homes to illustrate how other Vancouverites live.
On Sept. 24, the foundation is organizing a Lifestyle Award Ceremony at the Vancouver Art Gallery. It is intended that this will be the first of many such events in Vancouver and Los Angeles.
One objective is to highlight the best in Vancouver lifestyles and foster connections among guests from diverse industries. The event will include a collaboration with iQiyi, one of China’s largest private internet TV networks, which will further enhance its reach and impact.
As part of the event, the foundation is organizing a design competition to highlight three aspects of contemporary Vancouver life.
The first category is how homeowners and tenants make their homes more pet friendly. After all, thirty-five per cent of Vancouver households have a dog, and Coya, a pet food company, has ranked Vancouver as one of the best cities in the world for dogs.
The second category is how people use plants to make their homes more attractive and healthier. Having a house plant, or many plants, can be a beautiful way to bring life into our homes, improve the air quality and reduce pollutants.
The third category is how residents design balcony spaces to make them more interesting, usable and livable. While many Vancouverites never use their balconies, others have transformed them into attractive extensions of their home.
Anyone can submit entries to the competition. There is no cost to enter, but entries should include at least three digital photos, a written description (no more than 700 words) and an optional short video if desired. Further details can be found on the foundation’s website.
The foundation will announce the winning submissions at the Sept. 24 event, which will be videoed and posted online. Winning entries and honourable mentions will also be featured in a future edition of The Vancouver Sun’s Westcoast Homes section.
The event will also recognize individuals and organizations promoting other desirable lifestyles. They are expected to include those advocating for the conservation of heritage homes and living in smaller spaces, including laneway and coach houses.
Just as the “What the L” competition offered Vancouver Sun readers a glimpse into how others lived and inspired readers to redesign their own homes, the organizers of this competition are hopeful that the same will happen again — nearly 50 years later.
Michael Geller is an urban planner, real estate consultant and property developer. He serves on the adjunct faculty of SFU’s Centre for Sustainable Development and School of Resource and Environmental Management. His blog can be found at gellersworldtravel.blogspot.ca.
— With research from Postmedia librarian Carolyn Soltau
https://vancouversun.com/homes/vancouver-1970s-apartment-design