Downtown Eastside
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The Downtown Eastside (DTES) is the oldest neighbourhood in Vancouver and is noted for high incidences of poverty, drug addiction, and community activism. The neighbourhood has a rich and colourful history and a strong community fabric. In recent years there have been tensions between developers and members of the community relating to proposals for gentrification. It is bordered by Cambie Street to the west, Clark Drive to the east, the waterfront to the north and Pender Street to the south, with Hastings Street running down the middle of the neighbourhood.
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[edit] Social problems
The Downtown Eastside is home to poor and displaced populations including runaways, prostitutes, petty criminals and drug addicts. In addition to this a disproportionate amount of this population are of First Nations descent. The DTES's (and Vancouver's) drug problem has grown steadily worse over the last decade with the most common drugs being heroin, crack cocaine, and - increasingly - crystal methamphetamine. The Downtown Eastside also has the unfortunate distinction, according to a recent article in The Georgia Straight newspaper[citation needed], of having the highest rate of HIV infection in the Western world, largely attributable to the sharing of infected needles by intravenous drug users. However, the opening of North America's first safe injection site, Insite, in this neighbourhood has lowered the spread of HIV (and the number of overdose deaths) considerably, according to a recent article by the Canadian Press.[citation needed] The southwest corner of Main and Hastings Streets continues to be a problem as drug sellers and users frequently occupy the corner, despite recent efforts at increasing police presence at the location. A major police station is only half a block north of the intersection.
The many hotels in the area are "single room occupancy" (SROs), which provide housing for some of the most difficult people to house in Vancouver. Some low income residents and DTES advocacy groups are concerned about the area's increasing gentrification. Many SROs are being closed, and there is concern that they will be replaced with condos and other market housing, displacing the area's poorest residents.
[edit] History
This area was the centre of the City at the turn of the 20th century. City hall, the courthouse and the Carnegie Library were all located here. It was also the main shopping area for the city, centred around Woodward's department store. The surrounding stretch of Hastings Street was a major cultural and entertainment district. Prior to World War II, there was a large Japanese community in Japantown.
As the city centre moved to the West, and suburban shoppers took advantage of new local malls, the DTES began to decline. Eaton's moved its Vancouver flagship store out of the neighbourhood in the 1970s and Woodward's shut down in 1993, around the same time that crack cocaine was becoming a serious problem in the city. The main businesses that remain are pawn shops, run down restaurants, and bargain stores, some of which are a front for drug dealers. Many of the storefronts along the DTES stretch of Hastings Street are empty, often with the entire building for sale.
In the 1980s many of the street prostitutes in other parts of Vancouver, such as the nearby West End, were harassed out of the neighbourhoods they were in and into the DTES and contiguous industrial areas near Vancouver's ports. Many believe that this has exacerbated the problem of violence against prostitutes. The trial of Robert Pickton, a pig farmer accused of the murders of 26 women (mostly prostitutes) from the DTES is currently ongoing.
[edit] Significant locations
Vancouver's historic Chinatown (Pender Street) and Gastown Historical District (Water Street) are popular tourist areas in the Downtown Eastside. Gastown is home to many high-end restaurants, lofts and boutiques. Some see this gentrification creeping east as a promising development while others are concerned that this will only force many of the poorest from the only housing they can afford. However, these two neighbourhoods are not traditionally referred to as part of the Downtown Eastside among Vancouverites.
The Strathcona neighbourhood is also within the DTES and is a historic working class neighbourhood that has retained a very strong sense of community, despite the decline of the general area. However, this sense of community is being threatened by the growing number of wealthy land speculators buying up the neighbourhood in advance of the 2010 Winter Olympics.
[edit] Trivia
- The band Billy Talent wrote their song Standing in the Rain while recording in Downtown Eastside. The band stated that it was hard to believe a place like this could exist in North America.
[edit] References
<references/> 2. Olympic Speculation and Effects on DES housing stock, report prepared for PIVOT legal [2]
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
| Main neighbourhoods [3]: Arbutus Ridge • Downtown • Downtown Eastside • Dunbar-Southlands • Fairview • Grandview-Woodland • Hastings-Sunrise • Kensington-Cedar Cottage • Kerrisdale • Killarney • Kitsilano • Marpole • Mount Pleasant • Oakridge • Renfrew-Collingwood • Riley Park-Little Mountain • Shaughnessy • South Cambie • Strathcona • Sunset • Victoria-Fraserview • West End • West Point Grey Other areas: | Image:Flag of Vancouver (Canada).svg |

