Shadbolt Centre for the Arts (Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada)

Shadbolt Centre for the Arts

The stunning and striking, 3,252 sq. m. (35,000 sq. ft.) Shadbolt Centre for the Arts (SCA), adjacent to Burnaby’s Municipal Complex, serves as a venue for both performance and teaching in the arts.  This wood and stone facility was designed to carefully integrate into the park setting, offering spectacular natural views from its windowed studios, atrium and exterior raised terrace.

East entrance

Owned and operated by the City, the building is named after internationally acclaimed, England-born painter Jack Leonard Shadbolt (1909–1998) and his wife, the curator, author and art educator Doris Shadbolt (1918–2003).

Jack and Doris Shadbolt

This lovely, award-winning, multi-purpose community arts facility, in a central Burnaby location in picturesque Deer Lake Park, augments and unifies the existing natural and cultural “park.”

Commemorative plaque

Housing a recital hall, theaters, dance and pottery studios, clean and spacious music rehearsal rooms and more, this community resource offers a year-round schedule of live performances, festivals, exhibitions and special events ranging from theater and music to dance, literature and the visual arts and supports artists through our Artist in Residence Program.

The Atrium

Artists have access to large, windowed studio spaces and rehearsal rooms, including ceramics studios, kilns, visual arts and music studios, dance and theater rehearsal spaces. More than 8,000 arts enthusiasts take part in its programs, classes and workshops and, on average, over 250,000 people visit the center annually.

The Gallery

Designed by the internationally renowned firm of Hotson Bakker Architects (Henry Hawthorn Architect), this performance and teaching center for the visual arts, theater and dance opened on November 18,1995 and received the prestigious Canadian Wood Council Award of Merit for the building’s creative design in 1996.

Stairway

Its exterior cladding materials, including the cedar shingles and stone, were selected to integrate with the surrounding heritage residential buildings. The Plaza, the raised Terrace and the Promenade connect the building with the other cultural and community amenities.

James Cowan Theatre

To provide opportunities to experience the activities held within, there are ample views into the building as well as opportunities to walk up and over as well as through it.  The interior public spaces of the Atrium and the Gallery separate the building into three pavilions (Music, Dance and Theater Arts) that complements its natural surroundings and provide public spaces between for gathering.

Center Aisle Gallery

The airy Atrium, characterized by an exuberant heavy timber roof structure that is also featured in the Gallery as well as the primary dance studio, provides direct access to the recital hall and 150-pax studio (black box theater) while scaled to also support markets and other community activities within.

One of the rehearsal rooms

The Gallery, running the length of the building, links the many and varied teaching and performance spaces, while providing opportunities to display some of the visual arts created within the facility. The prominent stone wall recalls the heritage projects of the precinct.  The new dance rehearsal studio enjoys ample daylight that helps highlight the heavy timber roof structure.

BC Spirit Square

Outside the arts center is BC Spirit Square which was opened last July 18, 2010, the 150th anniversary of the founding of the Crown Colony of British Columbia. It has carved basalt monoliths (called Vitality) carved by Coast Salish artist Thomas Connell.

“Vitality,” 7.5 to 9 ft. tall basalt monoliths at BC Spirit Square by Coast Salish artist Thomas Cannell chiseled with images of family life rendered in a traditional Coastal Salish community environment.  The outer rims are left unfinished to give them a natural edge.  At night, the slabs are lit, from below, by embedded lighting.

Outside the west entrance are the 6.2 m. (14-ft.) high Burnaby Millennium Sculpture Poles were done in 2001 by Keith Rice-Jones, with the assistance of his wife Celia Rice-Jones, both local ceramic artists. 

Burnaby Millennium Sculpture Poles. These three structural poles, representing Burnaby’s past, present and future, were built with raw clay flue liners, with low relief sculptural rendering on each of the four sides, created by Burnaby residents, with their personal creative interpretations of the theme of persistence.

Shadbolt Centre for the Arts: 6450 Deer Lake Ave., Deer Lake Park, Burnaby V5G 2J3, British Columbia.   Tel: (604) 297-4440 and (604) 205-3022. Fax: (604) 205-3001.  Website: www.shadboltcentre.com.

How to Get There: Bus 123, 133, 144 and Skytrain (Millenium Line) transit lines have routes that pass near Shadbolt Centre for the Arts.  The closest stations to Shadbolt Centre for the Arts are:

  • Southbound Deer Lake Ave @ Shadbolt Centre ( 131 m. away, 3 min. walk).
  • Eastbound Canada Way @ Century Park Way (191 m. away, 3 min. walk)
  • Bus Loop @ Burnaby City Hall (536 m. away, 8 min. walk)
  • Sperling-Burnaby Lake Station (1,835 m. away, 24 min. walk)
  • Royal Oak Station (2,602 m. away, 34 min. walk)

There is free parking at the Shadbolt Centre for the Arts which includes 70 underground stalls and 130 surface stalls at the north end of the building.

Fairacres Mansion (Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada)

Fairacres Mansion

The large, two-and-one-half storey, sprawling Fairacres Mansion, also called the H.T. Ceperley House (after its original owners), now houses the Burnaby Art Gallery.   Designed by English born and trained architect Robert Percival Sterling Twizell (1875-1964) who was steeped in the current architectural trends in Great Britain, it was one of his grandest residential commissions.  The mansion, on the north shore of Deer Lake, was built in 1910 at an estimated cost of C$150,000.00, making it the largest and most expensive house in Burnaby and the Lower Mainland at that time.

Check out “Burnaby Art Gallery” and “Deer Lake Park

The 20-acre (half of it landscaping) estate, owned by American-born couple Henry Tracy Ceperley (1850- 1929) and Grace E. Dixon Ceperley (1863-1917, a successful and well-respected businessman who made a significant contribution to the development of the City of Vancouver), was conceived and funded by Grace who had achieved significant wealth through a bequest from Vancouver pioneer Arthur G. Ferguson (the same Ferguson of Ferguson Point in Stanley Park), her brother-in-law. The construction of Fairacres, their retirement home, spawned the transformation of the Deer Lake area from a farming community into a preferred location for elite suburban homes.


The mansion was constructed in the Edwardian Arts and Crafts style which is often used for estate mansions as a symbol of affluence and good, modern taste, as well as an affinity for all things British. It is reflected in the architectural detailing and proportions, with handmade fixtures, carpentry and tiled fireplaces.  Quality, in the finishes and materials, orchestrated by James Charles Allen, a prominent local contractor, was displayed inside and out.

On the death of Grace at the age of 54 ‘(her ghost was said to haunt the mansion), Henry sold the house, in 1923, to Frederick Buscombe (one-time mayor of Vancouver). It also served as a tuberculosis ward for Vancouver General Hospital.  In 1939, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Munro, the last family to own the mansion, sold the house to the Benedictine monks from Oregon and, in 1953, it became an abbey. In 1954, the Order vacated the house when it moved to Westminster Abbey (British Columbia) in Mission.

 

In 1955, the Benedictines sold the property to the Canadian Temple of the More Abundant Life, a cult headed by William Franklin Wolsey (who called himself “Archbishop John I”), a convicted bigamist (with a string of extortion and wife-beating charges), serving as its church and school.  After the school closed in 1960 (when Wolsey fled the country), it was leased and converted into a fraternity house (or “Animal House” of sorts) for Simon Fraser University‘s Delta Upsilon Fraternity.

Ground floor fireplace

In 1966, the Burnaby Art Society (led by Jack Hardman, Polly Svangtun, Sheila Kincaid and Winifred Denny, among others) worked with the City of Burnaby (its first civic heritage conservation project) to purchase the 3.4 hectares (8.4 acres) site for C$166,000.00 for conversion to Burnaby’s first art gallery.

To mark Canada’s Centennial of Confederation, the Burnaby Art Gallery opened its doors in June 1967. In 1992, it was designated as a Heritage Property and, on February 22, 2005, it was listed on the Canadian Register of Historic Places.

Wooden stairway

The exterior featured a rich variety of exterior elements that demonstrate the typical Edwardian Arts and Crafts use of local materials such as cobblestone chimneys and foundations, wide wooden siding and half-timbering.

It had a side-gabled roof with prominent dormers and cedar shingle cladding, a porte cochere (with its side steps for those arriving by automobile, and central raised step for those alighting from horse-drawn carriages), a mixture of double-hung and casement wooden-sash windows (many with multi-paned sash) and a verandah across the eastern (garden) facade, with its vistas over the landscaped gardens, the distant mountains, Deer Lake and other grand homes in the area.

The lavish interior spaces, designed for entertaining on a grand scale, featured a generous living and dining rooms arranged off a central hall.  Detailed features of the interior woodwork (including the staircase) were carved by Scottish-born George Selkirk Gibson (1867-1942), a master wood carver who was best known for his many commissions for prominent British Columbia architect Samuel Maclure.

The billiard room and parlor with a beamed ceiling and an inglenook fireplace, also had a grand oak mantelpiece hand-carved by Gibson which bears a quote by Ralph Waldo Emerson: “The ornament of a house is the friends who frequent it.”

The tiles in the fireplace surrounds throughout the house, imported from England, were fabricated by Conrad Dressler and his Medmenham Pottery.  It is one of the earliest documented use of these tiles outside the United Kingdom.  The interiors also featured leaded stained glass and window hardware by Hope and Sons.

Marker for Root House and Steam Plant

The main house anchors, in style and setting, the four associated original outbuildings (Garage and Stables; Root House, Steam Plant and Chauffeur’s Cottage) on the estate which are an important record of the functioning of a large estate of the time.  Some were designed by Architect Robert Mackay Fripp (1858-1917), also an outspoken advocate of Arts and Crafts design.

Root House

The one-storey, 4.6 by 9.1 m., masonry Root House, was used as a frost-free store for fruit and vegetables for the family’s use. Built in 1908, the long, low Root House was significantly altered in the 1960s and restored to its original design in 2000.

Root House

It had a front-gabled roof with cedar shingle cladding and its distinctive Arts and Crafts architectural features include its original louvered ventilation cupola with flared roof, extended eaves and brackets, and pebble-dashed stucco coating on the concrete walls.

The Garage and Stables and the Chauffeur’s Cottage accommodated the use of automobiles, horses and carriages and, in concert with the estate’s location near the new British Columbia Electric Railway Burnaby Lake interurban line, illustrate the evolving nature of regional transportation and the growing bedroom communities and estates made possible by increasing options for transportation.

Marker for Chauffeur’s Cottage and Garage and Stables

The two-storey, wood frame Garage and Stables, situated to the north of the Chauffeur’s Cottage, its distinctive Arts and Crafts architectural features include the shingle wall cladding articulated with a chevron-patterned course of shingles at the first floor level, multi-paned wooden-sash casement windows (some retaining original wired glass), and deep eaves with additional purlins to support the overhang.  Its stable doors, with hand-made forged-iron door hardware, are still original.

Stables and Garage

The long, narrow single-storey Chauffeur’s Cottage, situated across from the main entrance to the Ceperley mansion, adjacent to the Garage and Stables, was constructed by joining together two modest estate cottages.

Chauffer’s Cottage

Its distinctive Arts and Crafts architectural features include the jerkin-headed door hood, a reference to the thatched-roofed cottages of southern England, eight-paned wooden-sash casement windows, and cedar-shingled exterior.  The modest, functional interior, with simple trim and lack of pretension, had two internal brick chimneys.

Steam Plant Building

The single-storey wood-frame Steam Plant building, built from 1907 to 1908, had a gabled roof that originally housed the apparatus for climate control in the greenhouse (formerly located to its north).  It was significantly altered in the 1960s and restored to its original design in 2000.

Steam Plant Building

Adjacent to it is the original rubblestone walls that formed the foundation for the greenhouse. It had six-paned wooden-sash casement windows and its distinctive Arts and Crafts architectural features include the shingle wall cladding with decorative shingling under window sills, deep eaves, and pebble-dashed concrete foundation walls.

Kiln Station

The remaining formal Edwardian garden landscape elements include the cross-axial plan that reflects the relationship of the mansion to its outdoor rooms. Its grounds also included horse stables, an aviary, gazebo and pergola, lagoons, strawberry fields, greenhouses, a kiln station and a gardener’s cottage.  On November 23, 1992, Fairacres Mansion was designated as a Heritage Site.

Check out “Heritage Buildings of Burnaby”

Fairacres Mansion: 6344 Deer Lake Ave., Burnaby V5G 213, British Columbia, Canada. Tel: (604) 297-4422.  Fax: (604) 205-7339.  E-mail: gallery@burnaby.ca.  Website: www.burnabyartgallery.ca. Open Tuesdays to Fridays, 10 AM to 4:30 PM, and Saturdays and Sundays, 12 noon to 5 PM. Admission is free (a C$5 donation is suggested).

How to Get There: Bus 144 Metrotown runs from the Burnaby Lake SkyTrain Station to the mansion.  By car, take Sprott St. Exit, drive straight through Canada Way, past Burnaby City Hall and Central High School, turn left into Deer Lake Ave.  The mansion is at the top of the hill on your right.

Century Gardens (Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada)

Century Gardens

Century Gardens, within the northern border of Deer Lake Park, near the neighborhoods of Buckingham Heights and Middlegate, was a originally a Mixed Style Victorian garden made for the mock Tudor-style Fairacres Mansion (now Burnaby Art Gallery).

Check out “Burnaby Art Gallery,” “Fairacres Mansion” and “Deer Lake Park

 

The single best place in the city to admire and celebrate Burnaby’s official flower (adopted as the official emblem in August 1966), this circular garden, with a path system, has over 2,000 rhododendrons that burst into bloom in spring (March to July).

One of two developed rhododendron gardens (the other are plantings on Burnaby Mountain along Centennial Way) dedicated on June 18, 1967, in celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Canadian Confederation, it features the developments of some of the Pacific Northwest’s accomplished rhododendron growers.

A garden within displays each of the winning plants, as well as samples of all the competition entries, of the May 1992 Burnaby Rhododendron Festival  (the festival was first held in 1989).  The winner was John Lofthouse (his plant developments are extremely well known) and honorable mention went to Gene Round (an accomplished grower).

Water feature

The winning entry was the R. Burnaby Centennial, a “Leona” x “Etta Burrows” cross.  The compact truss consists of 14 to 16, five-lobed flowers which are raspberry red in color centered with a lighter red stamen, style and black anthers.  Foliage is pointed, medium in size and shiny, dark green in color.

Camperdown Elm (Ulmus glabra camperdownii)

A new entrance to the garden features Hak Chu/Pak Chu, supersized concrete replicas of white Pak Chu and black Hak Chu, public art created by Vancouver born and raised Nathan Lee in 2000.  It is based on fan-tan (translated as “repeated spreading out”), a game, long played in China, based on pure luck and randomness.

Fairacres Mansion (now Burnaby Art Gallery) in the background

It involves using hak-chu and pak-chu as counters (where white pieces are worth one-fifth the value of the black pieces).  In the 1990s, a single white pak chu was discovered under the Fairacres Cottage, indicating an early Chinese community on this site.

Hak Chu/Pak Chu (Nathan Lee, 2000)

Century Gardens is also lined with numerous varieties of colorful flowers, including an extensive rose garden.  This flower paradise can be viewed from the wooden boardwalk that encircles Deer Lake Park. The annual Burnably Rhododendron Festival includes guided rhododendron and perennial walks in Century Gardens.

Century Gardens: 6344 Deer Lake Ave., Burnaby V5G 213, British Columbia, Canada.

How to Get There: Bus 144 Metrotown runs from the Burnaby Lake SkyTrain Station to the gardens.  By car, take Sprott St. Exit, drive straight through Canada Way, past Burnaby City Hall and Central High School, turn left into Deer Lake Ave.  The Fairacres Mansion is at the top of the hill on your right.  Beside it is the garden.