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FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 2014
W E S T M I N S T E R
t 13th Augus ide for de tails
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SUMMER IN THE CITY
◗ BAILEY BRIDGE
Cities reach a deal BY NIKI HOPE REPORTER
nhope@royalcityrecord.com
it was $1,000,” he says about the flowers and soil purchased each year. “Why do we do it? Just the joy of doing it.” But that’s just the beginning, as the flowers require daily watering and deadheading to keep them looking spiffy all summer long. “We try and keep it really multi-coloured,” Hay says. “This year, we spent a bit more because we tried some flowers we didn’t have before. They were really beautiful.” Libby Manor’s planter boxes have made it a bit of a landmark in the Brow of the Hill neighbourhood, with people often stopping by to comment on the flowers and others
The cities of New Westminster and Coquitlam have managed to bridge their differences in the ongoing Bailey bridge saga with an agreement that means a two-lane crossing in the Braid Street industrial area. New Westminster had been pushing for the controversial corridor to retain a singlelane crossing when the aging bridge was replaced, but an arbitrator recently sided with Coquitlam’s call for a twolane bridge. “Obviously, we had to work with what the provincial arbitrator had decided there, and I think it was in the best interest of both municipalities to work together to basically put forward what the arbitrator had made in their decision,” said acting mayor Jonathan Cote. “It was important for New Westminster to kind of sit down and work with Coquitlam and get this process moving forward. I think in those discussions we were able to utilize the work we’d already done with respect to the replacement of the singlelane bridge, which was the work we had already started, so that bridge will be able to be used.” The city’s main concern with a two-lane crossing was that a second lane would encourage even more traffic
◗Flowers Page 4
◗Bridge Page 5
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Colours of the city: Dave Hay is the manager and head gardener at 508 Eighth St., where the luxuriant display of flowers attracts attention from residents and visitors alike.
It’s just bloomin’ beautiful
BY THERESA MCMANUS REPORTER tmcmanus@royalcityrecord.com
A local apartment is decked out in flowers, but the welcoming atmosphere doesn’t end at the front door. In a neighbourhood home to many of New Westminster’s lowrise rental buildings, Libby Manor sets itself apart from the others with the flower baskets that adorn its Eighth Street frontage each spring and summer. “We are well known for doing this,” says building manager Dave Hay. “I get compliments wherever I go. People talk to you as they walk by – ‘Oh, how nice the building
looks.’” A former tenant of Libby Manor started the patio gardens years ago, a tradition that Hay and Christina Leong have carried on. “We have been doing it for years and years. Mary thought she would get some flowers growing. The couple next door thought that was cool and they got some planters going,” Hay recalls. “Before you knew it, we got the whole front going.” Each spring, Hay scrubs down the white planters that line the first-floor patios of the building and gets to work planting assorted annuals to brighten up the building. “This year, we spent $1,200 on it. Last year
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