North Vancouver Shipyards undergoing major redevelopment - Action News
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British Columbia

North Vancouver Shipyards undergoing major redevelopment

North Vancouver's waterfront is set to undergo a redesign, the city is partnering with a developer to give the Shipyards a new look.

The waterfront will be lined with shops, restaurants, parking, skating rink and water park

An artist's rendering shows the plan for The Shipyards development on North Vancouver's waterfront. The project is set to be completed in 2018. (Quay Property Management Corp.)

North Vancouver's waterfront is set to undergo a redesign the city is partnering with a developer to give the shipyards a new look.

"We are going to change an old industrial shipyard building area wasteland into a great people orientated dynamic place," said Darrell Mussatto, mayor of North Vancouver.

The plan which has been in the works for years will be equipped withrestaurants, shops, a boutique hotel, underground parking,an outdoor skating rink in the winter and a water park in the summer.

The property on North Vancouver's waterfront a little east of Lonsdale Quay is set for significant redevelopment. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

"It's going to be a great place for people to gather all year-round," he said, "That can be thenew gathering spot not just for the north shore, but be one of the better ones for the lower mainland," he said.

Quay Property Management Corporation will fund the $35 million project and will leasethe land from the City of North Vancouver.The city will pay $5 million for theremediation ofthe site.

The redevelopment will include shops, restaurants, a public stage, underground parking, a skating rink in winter and a water play zone for the summer months.

Mussatto says the redevelopment isn't going to take away from the iconic area. On the contrary, he says it will add to it.

"By removing toxic soils that are full of carbons and heavy metals and taking them away from thesite andremediation elsewhere, you will see an enhancement in natural areas."

The projectisexpected by to be completed by 2018 with remediation expected to start in the next few months.

Parts of an old machine shop that was disassembled on the property sit underneath tarps. Many of the original pieces will be used to build the new Shipyard development. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

With files from the CBC's The Early Edition and Bal Brach


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