Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver's beached barge to be disassembled: city

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Feb, 2022 05:49 PM
  • Vancouver's beached barge to be disassembled: city

VANCOUVER - A barge that had been the subject of jokes and the star of many photos after becoming stuck on a popular Vancouver beach during a severe storm in November is on its way out.

The City of Vancouver says a process is underway to remove the grounded barge from English Bay by taking it apart in pieces.

It says in a statement that engineers determined the barge can't be refloated and a local firm, Vancouver Pile Driving Ltd., has been contracted for the deconstruction and removal.

The statement says the process is expected to take 12 to 15 weeks and will be complex, involving site security, tides and measures to protect the sensitive marine environment around the barge.

Environmental, archeological and structural assessments are underway, and Fisheries and Oceans Canada has advised the company to avoid affecting fish.

After the storm, Vancouver's parks board installed a sign naming the location Barge Chilling Beach, in a tongue-in-cheek nod to the city's Dude Chilling Park that was originally named as a prank.

The city statement says Vancouver Pile Driving will lead the project with support from government agencies. including Fisheries and Oceans Canada, the Canadian Coast Guard, the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority, the City of Vancouver and the Vancouver Parks Board.

Ahead of deconstruction work, the area around the barge is being converted into a work site with fencing, detours and signs.

"Ever since it became stranded at Sunset Beach in last November’s wind storm, removing the now-famous English Bay barge via the water was planned," the city says in the statement.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Real estate 'cooling off' period planned for B.C.

Real estate 'cooling off' period planned for B.C.
British Columbia's government says it will introduce legislation in the spring aimed at giving homebuyers a chance to change their mind on the purchase of a home. The so-called cooling-off period would allow purchasers to back out with no or diminished legal consequences.

Real estate 'cooling off' period planned for B.C.

Vancouver gallery gifted $100 million for new home

Vancouver gallery gifted $100 million for new home
The Vancouver Art Gallery at the Chan Centre for the Visual Arts will be a multifunctional art centre and community space, promising to provide increased space to support artists and the region's cultural sector in British Columbia.

Vancouver gallery gifted $100 million for new home

VPD arrests suspect after windows smashed in West End

VPD arrests suspect after windows smashed in West End
The officers were familiar with the man because he’s a suspect in dozens of other mischiefs in the downtown core. In fact, he was arrested earlier that same day after allegedly breaking a window at a business near Robson and Bute Street.    

VPD arrests suspect after windows smashed in West End

COVID-19 cases rising for B.C. kids aged 5 to 11

COVID-19 cases rising for B.C. kids aged 5 to 11
The province says 550 cases were diagnosed this week in that age group from 14,295 total cases in the province between Oct. 26 and Nov. 1. Fifty-six of those children went to hospital, and four of them received critical care.

COVID-19 cases rising for B.C. kids aged 5 to 11

VPD investigates South Van home invasion that results in senior assaulted in broad daylight

VPD investigates South Van home invasion that results in senior assaulted in broad daylight
At 4:30 p.m. on October 29, VPD officers were called to a home near East 35th Avenue and Victoria Drive after an unknown man entered the home through the unlocked front door. The 89-year-old home owner was assaulted when he confronted the suspect. The suspect fled before officers arrived.

VPD investigates South Van home invasion that results in senior assaulted in broad daylight

Tories call for Afghan safe house funding

Tories call for Afghan safe house funding
The Conservative opposition is calling on Liberal government to give urgent funding to Kabul safe houses that are providing refuge to 1,700 Afghan interpreters and their families. On Friday, those safe houses are set to close because the money keeping them open will run out.    

Tories call for Afghan safe house funding