The Rebirth of Robson Square. Maybe. Kind of.

Robson Square ice rinkSome months ago the Vancouver Public Space Network held a competition in which entrants were supposed to design a public square for Vancouver's citizens to gather in the downtown core. But, wait a tic--don't we already have a public square?

Built in 1980 by the late Arthur Erickson (the man who designed the SFU campus), Robson Square is a labyrinthine maze of concrete, waterfalls, benches, shrubs, and tilted glass, that covers the area from Nelson street up to the Vancouver Art Gallery across from Robson street. There is no doubt that it's an interesting and often beautiful area; it's a reprieve and oasis from the city streets below. The only thing is that it isn't really used.

Yesterday, I went back to Robson Square to check out the first phase of its reopening--the underground ice rink, which hasn't been there for many years. It was an Olympic dreamworld down there, with LED lights in our official pastel green and blue colours, a jazz band performing at one end, and the Olympic logo plastered around competing for space with the large GE logos stamped onto the surface of the ice and set to remain for a few months (it is the GE plaza after all). It was the first time I had seen people taking the time to come off the consumer flow of Robson to walk down the stairs and check out what was happening beneath the street.

Could this be the rebirth of our public square?

I guess it all depends on how they use the space from now on and after the Olympics. The ice rink will be an attraction if they keep it up, and will bring in tourists and residents who want to skate. The ice was packed with tripping 5 year-olds and teenagers attempting to take self-portraits for their Facebook profiles while trying not to fall down. Personally, I have never understood the thrill of being corralled in a space and made to slowly rotate in a circle with a group of other people. At one point, the guy on the speakers made everyone skate in the opposite direction, causing a few collisions and shouts of "wrong way!". Entertaining from the sidelines, anyway.

I have to admit, it looks nice. The rink, while not nearly as big as those in New York or Toronto, is still a decent size. Being under the street makes it a bit dreary, but they have spruced that up with the lighting system, which makes the ice glow a cool blue. Although, you can't really combat the fact that the rink is underground, hidden and away from street view and the people above. The area suffered from much under-use, considering its location below one of our busiest streets. But why would anyone have gone down there before? To watch the breakdancers that sometimes practice there? To check out the UBC downtown campus? To renew their driver's license? Fun...

Erickson was a good architect, but he did a disservice to this city when he built our public square underground and hidden behind a maze of elevated concrete paths and trees. I often walked around in it on hot summer days, when the streets just a few feet away were teeming with people, and found the place empty. This, when just across (or above) the street, dozens of people were sitting cheek to cheek on the steps of the art gallery, which has become the popular place to hang out. On a totally anecdotal side note, I have known two friends who have been jumped and beaten pretty badly while walking through Robson Square at night. The place does offer many nice hidden areas.

Robson Square pathway
One of the paths leading towards the court house.

Even though, the rink area was filled, the rest of Robson Square on this mild, but wet Sunday was completely empty. I worked for almost two years right next to Robson Square, but never once chose to take my lunch in there. The thing is, it feels too disconnected. If you want to people watch (which is what the VAG steps are good for) then you won't find much to do inside Robson Square.

Nov09Robsonsquaresteps.jpgThe empty Robson Square steps on the same day I counted over a dozen sitting on the VAG steps.

So, I guess we'll have to see after the Olympics and when the summer creeps up what exactly the fate of the redesigned Robson Square will be. If they can convert the ice rink into a kind of roller rink then perhaps you'll still find people under there during the summer months. But if the rest of Robson Square remains as closed off as it always is, then my guess is it will remain a place to walk through perhaps, but not sit down and enjoy the city from. All in all, I wonder where the 40m slated for the redesign went (the ice rink upgrade only cost $2m with GE covering a third of the cost). On the plus side, at least we didn't get the clamshell.

Reader Reviews and Comments

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No.

Robson Square sucks. It's cold, and unfriendly, and underground.

Posted by: Bill Smolick at November 30, 2009 10:47 AM | Quote Comment

Bad design happens when the people responsible for approving the design are incompetent... like so many other city employees who have risen in the ranks due to "seniority", rather merit.

Posted by: guru at November 30, 2009 2:18 PM | Quote Comment

Time to demolish the ugly concrete. Build a park.

Posted by: stu at November 30, 2009 2:22 PM | Quote Comment

I disagree with the previous comments. I have always appreciated the solitude and nature of the park. It's a beautiful structure that needs to be explored and re-discovered.

Posted by: escubio at November 30, 2009 4:19 PM | Quote Comment

If nothing else, it's an amazing place to play manhunt. It is disappointingly bare a lot of the times, but I've often used it as a place to escape the crowds during the day, especially that small grassy patch surrounded by the shrubs. It's a tiny oasis hidden from the hustle and bustle below. I quite like it.

Still, I recognize we also need a more traditional public square, one where people can do the people watching and public gathering that public squares are best for.

Posted by: Tessa at November 30, 2009 9:19 PM | Quote Comment

I suppose nobody cares about such banal details as corporate sponsorship by one of the dirtiest companies around. This is the same company that irradiated the scrotums of inmates to test the effects of nuclear radiation; insider trading; fraud; groundwater contamination, PCBs, safety violations, illegal sale of fighter jets to Israel, nuclear contamination, worker intimidation, overcharges on mortgage insurance, airplane crashes...

http://www.cleanupge.org/gemisdeeds.html

Posted by: sean Orr at November 30, 2009 10:55 PM | Quote Comment

Since when did Beyond Robson start sucking corporate dick! Seriously! What the eff is with these American Apparel ads as well. You lose credibility as a hipster blog the minute you advertise yuppie bullshit!

Posted by: Anonymous at November 30, 2009 11:32 PM | Quote Comment

I think everyone is missing the point of what Robson Square is about. You are right, the rink area is wasted, dark and hidden and it is completely disconnected from Vag and the rest of the area. But inside Robson Square is supposed to be a piece of solitude in the city. If you sit in the central area by the steps, you have great view points of the city plus a bit of solitude. It is not supposed to be Stanley Park or Rockefeller Square.
For those of us old enough to remember, the area of downtown in the late 70's was a mix of beaten up old houses, mixed use buildings, office towers, and small plants or factories near the rail lines. When Robson Square was built, it was like a piece of Mecca inside an industrial style city....a very different city from today. Hell, Robson st was even that interesting at the time, it was old mom + pop shops and a few delis....Graville was the place to be with the theatres and record stores....
Anyways, enough with the history lesson. It is what it is, I think it is a great place to hang out and read a book, if you want to people watch you can sit on the steps of Vag or go to Starbucks. Ice rink, great to see its return, I hope it lasts....

Posted by: mpm at December 1, 2009 7:54 AM | Quote Comment

@ MPM

I agree that the 'idea' behind Robson Square is such that it offers an oasis from the city. The fact is though, that good idea or not, most times the square is left empty while other areas are filled with people. Is this because nobody knows Robson Square is there? Or because they don't want to go in there?

@ Sean

I think most people do care about banal details like corporate sponsorship, so thanks for sharing that link. It's strange to me that GE is even there, considering (if the numbers for cost are correct) they only paid around $650,000 for the 2m ice rink, when the overall budget for Robson Square was 40m. With that small of a donation, couldn't we have afforded to keep this place free of corporate money? Hardly warrants changing the name to the GE Plaza, anyway.

Posted by: Jake Tobin Garrett at December 1, 2009 8:21 AM | Quote Comment

Not being an expert skater, I don't enjoy being watched by hoards of complete strangers. So I look forward to trying out the new rink. And people, it just opened up - give it time, hopefully, people will now remember it's down there and make more use of it.

Posted by: CB at December 2, 2009 8:10 AM | Quote Comment

I worked for a year up the street from there. On non-wet non-Sundays there were always a fair number of people at lunch. I went there precisely because it was peaceful compared to street level.

Posted by: Wrenkin at December 6, 2009 11:16 AM | Quote Comment

Decent size? It's a joke... about 1/2 the size of a hockey rink. With the # of people that are usually on (even at the most unpopular times), it's pretty difficult to "skate". Instead, you're reduced to gliding.

Posted by: CG at December 14, 2009 10:03 PM | Quote Comment

I haven't been down there so I'm not sure what it's like but it would be great if it can be converted into a public market of sorts. I enjoy cities with outdoor style marketplaces.

Posted by: Will at December 25, 2009 12:00 PM | Quote Comment

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