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George Wainborn Park

Parks in VancouverVancouver stubs
George Wainborn Park, Vancouver (2012) 1
George Wainborn Park, Vancouver (2012) 1

George Wainborn Park is a 2.5-hectare park along False Creek, located in downtown Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It was opened in 2004 and named after George Wainborn, who served as Vancouver's Parks Commissioner for 33 years. The site of park was once home to Robertson Hackett Sawmill Company Limited since late 19th Century. Ron Baird's Spirit Catchers statue stood here for duration of Expo 86 next to Great Ramses Exhibit and McBarge before being relocated to Barrie, Ontario.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article George Wainborn Park (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

George Wainborn Park
Seaside Bike Route, Vancouver Downtown

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Wikipedia: George Wainborn ParkContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 49.2724 ° E -123.1294 °
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Seaside Bike Route
V6Z Vancouver, Downtown
British Columbia, Canada
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George Wainborn Park, Vancouver (2012) 1
George Wainborn Park, Vancouver (2012) 1
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VIFF Centre
VIFF Centre

The VIFF Centre (formerly the Vancouver International Film Centre and the Vancity Theatre) is a movie theatre in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, which houses the 175-seat Vancity Theatre, the 41-seat Studio Theatre, as well as the offices for the Vancouver International Film Festival. Located at 1181 Seymour Street in Downtown Vancouver, the theatre can accommodate seminars, live performances, film, video and multimedia presentations. The building, designed by Hewitt and Kwasnicky Architects, opened in September 2005 just in time for the 2005 Vancouver International Film Festival. In December of that year, the Vancity Theatre formally launched year-round repertory cinema programming. The theatre is sponsored by and named for the Vancity credit union, although prior to the complex's launch the theatre was stuck in a dispute that might have threatened the sponsorship, or even forced VIFF to refund Vancity's entire donation to the project, because it was deemed to be in conflict with the city's official naming rights policy at the time.Renovations in 2019–20, which were completed in time for the 2020 Vancouver International Film Festival, added a 41-seat Studio Theatre for smaller audience presentations, a new media lab to present new media and virtual reality projects, an education suite and a video wall in the complex's atrium.The annual Game Design Expo, hosted by Vancouver Film School's Game Design program, takes place in the Vancity Theatre.