Learn about Argyle school redevelopment plan

The Lynn Valley Community Association is hosting an evening information session for local residents wanting to know more about the planned redevelopment of Argyle Secondary School.

The event will be held on Thursday, April 17 at 7 p.m. at the LV rec centre at the corner of Frederick and Mountain Hwy. All are welcome to attend.

In attendance will be provincial MLA Jane Thornthwaite,  Superintendent of Schools John Lewis, school trustees Franci Stratton and Lisa Bayne, DNV Councillor Robin Hicks, and federal MP Andrew Saxton.

Bring your questions and comments!

 

Public hearing on LV mall redevelopment April 15

After many years of consultation and re-consultation, design and re-design, and the approval of a new Official Community Plan, Bosa Developments’ proposed redevelopment of Lynn Valley Mall is going to public hearing on Tuesday, April 15 at 6 p.m. in North Vancouver District Hall council chambers.

For a great brochure about the evening event, which includes information for speaking, submitting a comment in advance, or live-streaming the hearing that night at www.dnv.org/watchlive, click here.

For our links to background information, review material and staff report on the project, click here.

 

African charities host sale at MNH

Five different local charities, with many Lynn Valley members, have joined together to host a sale and awareness-raising event on Sunday, April 13, from 2 to 4:30 p.m. at Mollie Nye House.

Organizers encourage you to bring family and friends to shop, learn about local people are making a global difference, and perhaps get involved yourself! Details on the poster below.

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Mountain bike gear swap coming soon!

We are happy to pass along this press release from the North Shore Mountain Bike Association, most of whose directors live in Lynn Valley. Scroll down for info on how to sell your gear that day. For further information about the gear swap, contact Rachid at [email protected]

2014 Annual NSMBA Bike + Gear Swap set for April 12

The Lynn Valley-based North Shore Mountain Bike Association is proud to announce that the 2014 edition of the NSMBA Bike + Gear Swap will be held on April 12, 2014 at Jaycee House, 1251 Lillooet Rd. in North Vancouver.

This is a great opportunity to clear out your closet, garage, or basement and also pick up some great deals on new and lightly used bikes and gear all while helping the NSMBA. You will find adult and children’s Mountain, Road, Cruiser and BMX bikes and gear.

Come for the swap, stay for the day! Our friends at Endless Biking will be running free biking clinics and demos at their open house, just down the street; they’ll teach you how to ride like a pro.

Further details available at www.nsmba.ca/swap and on twitter #NSMBAswap

Sellers

Individuals who wish to sell items are invited to drop them off at Jaycee house on April 9, 10, and 11 between 7 and 10 p.m. The drop-off fee will be $2 per item. The selling fee will be 15% from the proceeds of each item sold, to a maximum of $120, which includes all credit card and administration fees.

Discounts are available for high-volume sellers. Cash and unsold items can be collected from Jaycee House starting at 6 p.m. on April 12.

Buyers

NSMBA members will have first crack at the items, with pre-shopping from 9:45- 10:30 a.m. on the 12th. General admission begins at 10:30 a.m., with a cash entry fee of $2. Purchases can be paid for using cash, Visa, MasterCard, and debit.

Questions about the Gear Swap can be directed to Rachid Nayel via e-mail at [email protected].

Raffle

Entries can be purchased now at www.nsmba.ca/swap or at the event. Prizes have been graciously donated by Whistler Bike Park, BLACKSPIRE, Rocky Mountain Bicycles, The BicycleHub, Cycles Lambert, Bikeroom, Derek Dix, Hilton Hotels and Scandinave Spa Whistler.

About the NSMBA

The NSMBA is a registered Canadian charitable organization and is a voice for the mountain biking community of the North Shore. We protect and maintain the trails as environmental leaders, focussed on sustainability through education & action. We develop trail networks that provide challenge and progression while fostering mountain bike culture and a community that embraces our sport as a positive force. All of the proceeds from this event, which is our largest annual fundraiser, will be reinvested in our community to promote the goals of the organization.

Buy, sell, and support charity at huge LV garage sale event!

Declutter your home or re-feather your nest (or both!) by taking part in a Super-Sized Community Garage Sale on Saturday, May 10.

The event is being hosted by Reachout To Africa, (R2A) a North Vancouver Christian registered charity that works to support vulnerable children and communities impacted by the AIDS pandemic in Southern Africa.  The sale will take place in Hillside Baptist Church at 870 Lynn Valley Rd. and run from 10 a.m. to 3.30 p.m.

Super Sized Garage Sale Poster

There are many ways to support the cause – and do a spring-cleaning of your home at the same time. The charity welcomes the donation of goods in advance of the sale, and states that tax receipts can be issued for items valued over $50.

People can also choose to book a table and sell their own items. The cost is $25 for the table, along with 15 per cent of the sale proceeds. All monies raised will go to R2A.

Of course, plenty of shoppers are also a necessity!  Bring the whole family – there will be buskers and a food concession (coffee shop, burgers, hot dogs, drinks, cookies and cinnamon buns), face painting and a secure supervised playground for the kids. All this will take place on Hillside Baptist’s all-new parking lot off Lynn Valley Road.

Adding to the good times will be a music concert that evening, featuring a couple of up- and-coming local gospel bands at Hillside. Tickets will be $15; more details will follow in the days to come.

So start looking around the items your garages and storage rooms and contemplate whether they might be doing more good out in the world, earning money for this important cause. To make arrangements to drop off your donations, call 604-307-1069 or email [email protected]

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Got a wall? Here’s a workout!

This just in from D’Alton McCarthy, the local trainer behind Body by D’Alt.

SEDENTARY ? NO TIME TO EXERCISE ? DON’T ENJOY THE GYM?

IF YOU HAVE A WALL… I HAVE AN EXERCISE FOR YOU…

These two exercises, used on a wall, can give you a great and safe work out in under five minutes – one that’s good for beginners, but gives more fit folks a challenge, too.

If you are a healthy beginner, start with a five-second invisible chair (also known as a chair sit) followed by a wall push up. I have included pictures of the correct form and optimum positioning.

Here's the advanced position - beginners can choose a more shallow squat.

Here’s the advanced position – beginners can choose a more shallow squat.

Follow this up with a 10-second invisible chair and two wall push ups…then a 15-second chair sit and three wall push ups…then a 20-second chair sit and four wall push ups …then a 25-second chair sit and five wall push ups, ending with a 30-second chair sit and six wall push ups.

Starting position for wall push up.

Starting position for wall push up.

Slowly move towards wall, then return to start position.

Slowly move towards wall, then return to start position.

If you are new to exercise, start with the first three to four rounds.

The most important thing to remember is that you are better off doing less with proper form than doing too much with bad form.

In the following month add one more round, or opt for the more challenging position.

Good luck!

– D’Alton McCarthy

LV mall proposal goes to public hearing

This in from the North Van District website:

The rezoning proposal for the Bosa development (1175 Lynn Valley Road and 1280 East 27th Street) received first reading at Council on Monday, March 24, 2014. The development proposal has been referred to Public Hearing, which is the community’s formal opportunity to provide input to Council.

The Public Hearing will be held on April 15, 2014 at 6 pm at District Hall. The Agenda for the Council Meeting, including the Report to Council and attached bylaws, is available for review (Agenda Item 9.1) by clicking here [scroll to page 47]. For further information on the Development Application, click here.

(For our blog post about the recent public information night Bosa hosted regarding the project, click here.)

Time to spring clean your garden, Lynn Valley!

Spring has sprung! And now that it’s here, Endless Summer Landscapes offers up some essential spring cleaning tips to help LynnValleyLife readers beautify their properties, lawns and gardens. (Learn more about this local company by reading its LVL Merchant Profile!)

Prune away dead and damaged branches

  • Where tree or shrub branches have been damaged by cold, snow, and wind, prune back to live stems; use a handsaw for any that are larger than half an inch in diameter.
  • Shaping hedges with hand pruners, rather than electric shears, prevents a thick outer layer of growth that prohibits sunlight and air from reaching the shrub’s center.
  • Prune summer-flowering shrubs, such as Rose of Sharon, before buds swell, but wait to prune spring bloomers, like forsythia, until after they flower.

wheelbarrowCut back and divide perennials as needed

  • Prune flowering perennials to a height of four to five inches, and ornamental grasses to two to three inches to allow new growth to shoot up.
  • Dig up perennials, such as daylilies and hostas, to thin crowded beds; divide them, leaving at least three stems per clump, and transplant them to fill in sparse areas.
  • Cut back winter-damaged rose canes to one inch below the blackened area. On climbers, keep younger green canes and remove older woody ones; neaten them up by bending the canes horizontally and tipping the buds downward. Use jute twine or gentle Velcro fasteners to hold the canes in place.

Clean up around plants

Rake out fallen leaves and dead foliage (which can smother plants and foster disease), pull up spent annuals, and toss in a wheelbarrow with other organic yard waste.

Now is a good time to spread a pelletized fertilizer tailored to existing plantings on the soil’s surface so that spring rains can carry it to the roots. Add a 5-10-10 fertilizer around bulbs as soon as they flower to maximize bloom time and feed next season’s growth.

Use pins to fasten drip irrigation lines that have come loose and a square-head shovel to give beds a clean edge and keep turf grass from growing into them.

Compost yard waste

  • Dump collected leaves, cuttings, spent foliage, and last season’s mulch into your compost pile.
  • Shred leaves and chip branches larger than half an inch in diameter to accelerate decomposition, or add a bagged compost starter to the pile. Keep the pile as moist as a wrung-out sponge, and aerate it with a pitchfork every two weeks. Just don’t add any early spring weeds that have gone to seed—they might not cook completely and could sprout.

Prep damaged lawn areas for spring seeding

Spring is a good time to test the soil’s pH so that you can assemble the right amendments.

  • Remove turf damaged by salt, plows, or disease to prepare for the seeding that should follow in a few weeks.
  • Work in a ½-inch layer of compost to keep the new seed moist, increasing the germination rate. Begin seeding once forsythia starts blooming in your area.
  • In warmer climates, April is a good time to add the first dose of fertilizer.
  • Remove dead turf with a square metal rake, then flip it over to spread turf soil.

rock wallNeaten up hardscape surfaces

  • Rake escaped gravel back into aggregate walkways and patios, and order more gravel to spread in large depressions, which often form near the driveway’s apron.
  • Refill joints between flagstones by sweeping in new sand or stone dust; water with a hose to set it, then repeat.
  • If the freeze-thaw cycle has heaved pavers out of place, remove them and replenish the base material as needed before setting pavers back in.
  • Use a pressure washer with a low pressure tip to remove slippery algae spots or leaf stains from patios and walkways.

Patch or replace and paint worn wood

  • Remove badly rotted or damaged pickets, boards, or lattice, then scrub wood structures clean with a mix of two gallons water, two quarts bleach, and one cup liquid soap; let dry.
  • Patch rotted sections with wood epoxy; install new wood as needed.
  • Check wobbly fence posts to see if they need replacing. Scrape off old paint, then sand wood all over with 60 grit to prep for a new finish coat, brush on a new coat of paint or stain.

 

Friday Night Live switches it up for April

Just when you thought one family couldn’t possibly house any more artistic talent, Joel Grinke shows up to prove you wrong.

IMG_2662Joel is older brother to Matt Grinke, the uber-talented pianist whose off-the-cuff accompaniment to Friday Night Live’s hilarious improv has the cast performing their scenes in genres that range from Shakespearean madrigals to Gilbert-and-Sullivan inspired choruses.

Joel is also the actor who will be stepping into the shoes of Alan Marriott, FNL coordinator, when Alan is off in England to teach theatre improv for the month of April. (For a tongue-in-cheek dramatization of Alan’s reluctant handing over of the FNL reins, check out this YouTube video!)

IMG_2659Joel and his varied creative team will bring a new look and feel to the show for the four weeks they have the run of the stage. The Studio 58 grad describes it as “Johnny Carson meets the Muppet Show” (referring to the anticipated on-stage appearance of a giant fish for one of the acts). As is usual for Friday Night Live shows, a different guest artist will be featured each night, but unlike Ad Libretto’s audience-inspired improv antics, the April Creative Team is doing more of its writing in advance, and promises some interesting storylines ahead.

Upcoming guests are Dave Morris on April 4, an “improvising legend” in his own right, musician and actor Jeff Gladstone on the 11th, and Colin Easton – who is spending one year meeting a new random person every day and posting their story on Facebook as part of The Stranger Project 2014 – on April 18.

IMG_2679Another highlight to look forward to in April is a new partnership with the Black Bear Neighbourhood Pub. Starting April 4, each week one FNL audience member will win a $25 gift certificate – so who knows, you might come for the entertainment and walk out with post-show pub fare as well!

Friday Night Live opens its doors at 7 p.m. at Lynn Valley United Church, with the show beginning at 7:30 p.m. Complimentary refreshments come along with your $10 ticket (kids 12 and under are free, family max is $25). For more info, visit www.fnlnorthvan.com, or find them on twitter @fnlnorthvan, or on their Facebook page.

 

LV United Church hearing adjourned until April

A full house packed North Vancouver District council chambers on Tuesday, March 18 for the public hearing regarding the redevelopment of the Lynn Valley United Church property.

Proposed church renderingProposed church renderingAt stake is the rezoning that would allow the church to proceed with plans for a new church building facing Mountain Highway, bordered on the north and west by a four-storey multi-family complex. Included would be 75 one, two and three bedroom units, four of which would be sold to the North Shore Disability Resource Centre at cost for use as affordable, accessible rental housing for their clients. Also included would be enhancements to the riparian area around Hastings Creek.

At the outset, North Vancouver District Mayor Richard Walton apologized that the public hearing was inadvertently called during the spring break vacation, the result of trying to schedule an evening in between councillors’ other travel commitments. Having heard that some of the church neighbours living in the complex at 3275 Mountain Highway were unable to speak due to the school holiday, council voted at the end of the evening to continue the matter with further submissions accepted at a second hearing night on Tuesday, April 1.

Proposed church rendering

Over the course of last night’s proceedings, council heard many presenters from the church passionately speaking about their vision for the church and its ministry in the future. Rod Pearce pointed out that the church members had not spent six years developing the proposal for personal gain, but to provide Lynn Valley with an amenity that will play many roles in benefitting the wider neighbourhood, from flexible meeting and performance space to community-building programming.

“Lynn Valley United [will] in reality [be] a community centre and community amenity. But it is a community centre that receives no public funding. In fact,” he said, pointing to amenity contributions and long-term residential tax revenues, “this project will provide significant revenue for the public coffers.”

Shauna Gringke says the congregation has been learning to “do church differently” over the past few years, through such offerings as the ongoing Friday Night Live musical improv nights. “We’re generating momentum on this journey,” she said, noting that local businesses are starting to proactively approach the church to sponsor upcoming FNL seasons, recognizing the shows as unique and uplifting community gatherings.

Other people speaking in support of the project included those advocating for local disabled citizens; Suzanne Klassen of the North Shore Disability Resource Centre noted that the Metro Vancouver housing waitlist for people in wheelchairs has increased 400% over the past seven years, and called the project a “tremendous opportunity” for people to live “comfortably and securely in their own community.”

LVUC blueprintWhile expressing support for the redevelopment, a number of parents from the Rainbow Corner daycare housed on the church property spoke to their deep concern about the potential loss of daycare spaces in Lynn Valley. They were informed by North Vancouver District staff, however, that the church’s developer, Marcon Developments, and North Vancouver District had worked together to plan for a new daycare on site at the Lynn Valley Recreation Centre at Mountain Highway and Frederick, with the modular building financed by the developer. Should the project be approved, it was noted that the new daycare would be in place prior to the demolition of the current church building.

“Branches” resident Hazen Colbert was concerned that without a re-look at the underground parking proposal, some residents of the new complex might end up relying on street parking. A reallocation of residential versus visitor parking stalls in the planned underground lot, he suggested, would “have considerable impact on public peace.”

During the latter part of the hearing,  council heard from some of the residents of the 36-unit Hastings Manor, located beside the church’s gravel parking lot. One resident brought a petition with 28 names on it, which he said represented those people in Hastings Manor who objected to the redevelopment.

Jonathan Lindsay said people in his building would be “highly affected” by the erection of a neighbouring complex, which would be half a storey in height above Hastings Manor, currently the tallest building in the area. Some of the impacts he described included the loss of sunlight, privacy, and some of the trees at the rear of the property, and an increase in parking difficulties, given that his own building does not have enough stalls and residents often rely on street parking.

Two other speakers claimed that the church trying to make money at the expense of its neighbours, and that although planners met with the Hastings Manor strata council on two occasions and had a neighbourhood information night, their concerns have not been adequately addressed. One speaker described the proposal as “ridiculous,” and said that the church should not be trying to force council to change bylaws to accommodate its vision.

As the public hearing was adjourned at the end of the evening, Mayor Walton advised the assembly that council may still receive written input on the matter. Oral presentations may also be made on Tuesday, April 1, when at 7 p.m. the hearing will take up where it left off. While people may not redeliver the same information they have already presented to the hearing, new speakers and previous speakers who have new information to impart will be accommodated. For more information about North Vancouver District’s public hearing process, and how to present, click here.

For project drawings, description, and a staff report on the proposed redevelopment, scroll to page 175 of these council minutes.