Coquitlam
Port Coquitlam
Port Moody
Lots to look forward to in the year ahead
City looks to balanced growth in coming year
Is this beer bag the ultimate Port Moody invention?
PAGE 9
PAGE 7
T H U R S D AY
|
JANUARY 6
|
PAGE 11
2022
With Every Purchase, a Portion Will Be Donated to Children’s Hospital! FROM DECEMBER 1ST 2021 - JANUARY 31ST 2022
This event is only taking place at Budget Blinds of Tri-Cities, Ridge/Meadows, New Westminster, and Surrey Call for more details or visit our website.
Tri-cities: 604-944-3375
budgetblinds.com
ICE FOLLIES
PROPERTY DEMOLITION
100-yearold lodge at Riverview to be razed EXCLUSIVE: Valleyview Lodge set for wrecking ball JANIS CLEUGH jcleugh@tricitynews.com
The rain and warm temperatures earlier this week may have washed away most of the snow and melted the ice, but Coquitlam residents were quick to take advantage of last week’s cold snap to participate in a true Canadian winter ritual, skating on a frozen Como Lake even as city officials warned the ice wasn’t thick enough. Alas, it isn’t expected to reappear anytime soon as temperatures are forecast to go back above freezing well into next week. MARIO BARTEL/THE TRI-CITY NEWS
PRE-KINDERGARTEN TO GRADE 12
Join our OPEN
HOUSE
JANUARY 22 | VIA ZOOM | 9:30 AM & 11 AM FEBRUARY 05 | IN-PERSON | 9:30 AM-11:30 AM RSVP at www.bcchristianacademy.ca |604.941.8426
A Coquitlam city councillor and heritage advocate is sounding the alarm over the imminent demolition of Valleyview Lodge at səmiq̓ʷəʔelə/Riverview. The Tri-City News has learned the 100-year-old structure is scheduled to be town down by BC Housing — the agency in charge of the 244 public acres along Lougheed Highway — this
month, once the City of Coquitlam has OK’d the demolition permit. Carol De Paoli, the acting director of land development at səmiq̓ʷəʔelə/ Riverview, told the Tri-City News last week the Lodge — a Tudor-style building painted in white and orange — is in bad shape. Constructed in 1922 for the Boys Industrial School of Coquitlam or BISCO, a place where “troubled youth” worked at Colony Farm, the three-storey structure was repurposed in the 1950s as the Essondale School for the Aged and renamed as SEE
1920S BUILDING, PAGE 3