Vancouver real estate marketer to vacate historic Chinatown building, make way for Chinese Canadian Museum - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:56 PM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Vancouver real estate marketer to vacate historic Chinatown building, make way for Chinese Canadian Museum

Vancouver real estate marketer and art collector Bob Renniewill be vacating his office in the oldest building in Chinatown to makeway for the new Chinese Canadian Museum, set to open next summer.

Rennie believes the museum will be a good custodian of the building which dates back to 1889

The Wing Sang Building in Chinatown in Vancouver, pictured in this undated handout photo, will soon be home to the Chinese Canadian Museum with funding from the province and real estate marketer Bob Rennie. (Handout by Rennie/The Canadian Press)

Vancouver real estate marketer and art collectorBob Rennie will be vacating his office in the oldest building in Chinatown to makeway for a newChinese Canadian museum.

The Chinese Canadian Museum, scheduled to open next summer, will be located in the Wing Sang Building on 51 East Pender St. currentlyhome to the real estate company Rennie,and the Rennie Museum, which opened in 2009.

In February, the B.C. governmentsaid it will provide $27.5 millionto help support the Chinese Canadian museum project, including the purchase of the building, while Rennie said he willcontribute another $7.8million.

The buildingwillbe owned and operated by the Chinese Canadian Museum Society of British Columbia.

Real estate marketer Bob Rennie presents his last exhibition called 51@51 at the historic Wing Sang Building in Chinatown that runs until November 2022. (Rachel Topham Photography)

Grace Wong, chair of the society, says sheis excited for the museum's opening next year.

"Next summer is a particularly important time because it's the 100th anniversary of the Chinese Immigration Act, but known as the Chinese Exclusion Act because it fundamentally said that we will not let Chinese into this country,"Wong said.

"How poignant 100 years later we would open a Chinese-Canadian museum in the oldest building in Chinatown and for all that it stands for."

But before he packs up, Rennie is holding one more exhibition.

Real estate marketer Bob Rennie in 2018. (ISHOT)

Titled51@51 51 artworks at 51 East Pender the exhibitionfeatures 51 pieces by 36 artists from his vast collection of some 3,000 artworks, including two sculptures inthe rooftop sculpture garden.It runs until Nov. 12.

"The building's been really good to us to showcase our collection," he told Gloria Macarenko on CBC'sOn The Coast, adding that the buildinghas served its purpose and he will find another space.

Renniesays he had no intention of sellingthe Wing Sang Building, havinginvested $22 million in renovating it after purchasing it in 2004.

However, when the society was looking for a space forthe museum, Rennie says hefelt it would be the best custodian for the building, named after prominentbusinessman Yip Sang.

An old black and white photo shows a brick building in chinatown.
Merchant Yip Sang and family stand outside the Wing Sang building, circa 1902. The building will soon serve as home to the Chinese Canadian Museum. (City of Vancouver archives)

Yip, once regarded the unofficial mayor of Chinatown, built the Wing Sang Building in 1889 for hislabour contracting and import and export business.

Renniesays he hopes the museum will be a new landmark to entice people back to Chinatown.

Wong says plans for the museum include turning more of the existing office space into gallery spaces.

"We want to have permanent galleries, temporary galleries, programming space and so forth and that way, more people, both locally, visitors, will all be able to come and we can show the expanse of stories of Chinese Canadians and the history throughout the province," she said.

"We want to reflect the stories of not onlyVancouver but all of B.C. and ultimately across the country."

With files from Jon Hernandez, On The Coast and The Canadian Press