Eating 100 pounds of Tent City soil won’t get you high

When the province announced it was building a playground on the Tent City property, it said the soil needed to be removed to deal with “contaminants” including methamphetamines. The media duly reported that information, and why not? We can’t have children running around on meth-y soil in the Garden City. They might get a contact high!

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Displacegrounds, Part 2

When City Council updated its parks bylaws, it banned camping in playgrounds. Since that time, some members of the public have been demanding playgrounds in order to displace homeless campers from Tent City and other locations.

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Displacegrounds, Part 1

At the risk of being unpopular, let me suggest the following: the two proposed play areas for downtown Victoria – at the former Tent City site, and Reeson Park, a.k.a. the Whale Wall – are first and foremost about displacing poor and homeless Victorians. Creating space for children and families is a distant and secondary goal.

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When is a planter not a planter?

Last week the CBC published an article about a Vancouver property management company installing concrete balls to block people from accessing alcoves. Vancouver’s hate balls haven’t rolled across the Salish Sea quite yet, but Victoria is already doing much the same thing.

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Please look away from the spikes

The art at Yates and Douglas is an exercise in pretending Victoria’s downtown is a fun, welcoming place for everyone to enjoy. It might even draw your eyes away from the multiple attempts to police and exclude people from the same space.

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Fake public space coming to a Victoria near you

The corner of Douglas and Pandora is being redeveloped with office buildings and a plaza “for the enjoyment of the general public.” Before that proposal was unanimously approved by Victoria City Council in 2015, the city and the developer agreed that there should be limits on who can use the plaza, and how.

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Walls are in for 2017

Always one for keeping up with the latest trends, Portland Hotel Society is building a wall on the Pandora Avenue side of its Johnson Street Residence. And what a wall it will be! Only the tallest marginalized Victorians will be able to access the valuable stairwell, stones, and no trespassing signs inside.

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Un-sleepable benches

One of the most ubiquitous examples of defensive or hostile architecture in downtown Victoria is the un-sleepable bench, which is intended to decrease visible homelessness in the downtown core. 

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Separation of church and street

Central Baptist Church has walled off a covered area outside its entrance and installed a spiked fence and locked gate. It’s getting a lot of well-deserved attention as a highly visible example of defensive architecture, but it’s far from the only one in Victoria.

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