Boosting gay tourism
GAY SPACE / Community needs to participate in new master plan, Hurlbut says
Natasha Barsotti / Vancouver / Thursday, February 14, 2013
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Consultations on Vancouver’s first ever tourism master plan are underway, with a brainstorming session held last month that asked 150 members to identify events, trends and up-and-coming neighbourhoods that would make the city “a world-class tourism destination.”
 
The joint project, involving the city, Tourism Vancouver, the Vancouver Economic Commission and the Vancouver Convention Centre, will see a six-month consultation with industry stakeholders, business improvement associations (BIAs) and residents. 
 
Though the Davie Village and Commercial Drive have been cited as tourism opportunities for Vancouver, members of the gay community have yet to be consulted. The city’s LGBTQ advisory committee has asked to be consulted during the next phase of discussions, co-chair Dean Malone says. 
 
“We want to make sure that queer communities are part of the master plan,” Malone says. “They talk about communities, culture, all of those pieces, even going as far as talking about specific areas, and other than Commercial Drive, where queer folks might be found in greater concentrations, we’re not mentioned.”
 
Vancouver Pride general manager Ray Lam hadn’t heard about the master plan. He says Pride would like to be actively involved in the consultations, too.
 
“I’m not sure that it’s that difficult to get a place at the table; we just need to say that we have a voice,” says Rick Hurlbut, who has worked in the gay tourism industry for 20 years.
 
The head of the West End BIA says it’s still early in the planning process, but, Stephen Regan acknowledges, the West End needs attention. 
 
“To that extent, Davie Village needs to be highlighted and the LGBTQ community, where Tourism Vancouver does a ton of work — I was surprised that there isn’t more profile and discussion around that,” Regan says.
 
Malone says there’s a need to impress upon Tourism Vancouver the importance of the queer dollar.
 
Hurlbut says Tourism Vancouver’s online promotion of the Davie Village is positive and prominent but barely funded by the cash-strapped agency. “All we can do is make sure that when the money starts coming back, the BIA and GLBA [Gay and Lesbian Business Association], and whoever else, have already included themselves in the dialogue,” he says.
 
“They want a long-term plan — five, 10, 20 years into the future,” he says. “What you need to do is say, ‘Let’s have a shovel-ready plan for the Davie Village.” 
"I'm not sure that it's that difficult to get a place at the table; we just need to say that we have a voice," says Rick Hurlbut, who has worked in the gay tourism industry for 20 years.
(James Loewen)
 
The community needs to create outdoor venues, develop more festivals and enhance the Village streetscape, he says.
 
“Regardless of how gay-friendly a particular destination may be, unless there’s something going on that’s truly concrete that people can get their minds around, they won’t necessarily make a decision to go to that place — whether it’s a street festival, a fetish fair, a film festival,” he says.
 
Gay tourists choose places with gay cultures they can immerse themselves in, he says. 
 
One way to strengthen Vancouver’s gay culture is to make the Village a physically distinct place, Hurlbut says. Locals and visitors alike need to be able to feel it and see it.
 
He refers to urban planner Alan Herbert’s idea of creating a Davie Common near the Bute and Davie intersection. A plaza would add more space for thoroughfares during street-focused events on Davie, Hurlbut says.
 
He points to San Francisco’s Castro district, which saw the addition of a pedestrian-friendly plaza in 2009 and is now embarking on further improvements to its physical landscape, such as sidewalk widening.
 
That project got a boost when it was announced that $4 million would be secured from bond funds, according to a report on sf.streetsblog.org.
 
“Usually, in the typical planning process, you have a workshop at the beginning where you look at existing conditions and talk about what we want to do, but the community’s already done that work for us,” one Castro resident says in the report. “This is an iconic street, and a really important street for the LGBT community and for the city of San Francisco, so this is a gigantic opportunity to make it really shine as a place that everyone’s really proud of.”
 
Hurlbut says the community has to be prepared to knock on Tourism Vancouver’s door all the time. “You’re not just sitting there to see what everyone else will say and then put up your hand and say, ‘Me too, me too.’
 
“Present a brief, so that the people who, six months from now, are sitting down and taking all this input and making decisions have something you prepared, not an interpretation of what you said.” 


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Reader Comments


 
Good Luck
Problem number one: Rick Hurlbut
Michael Shaunsee, Vancouver BC
02/14/13 9:09 PM EST
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Try again.
First of all, you have to have something people want to spend money and travel here for so push and grab for all the tourism dollars you want, but if I was given a fancy brochure or looked over a trumped up website about Vancouver, only to arrive here and find two dumpy blocks of so-called druggy nightlife. I'd be pissed. Sorry, but the mountains and the ocean everyone goes on about might be pretty but that isn't enough. Other cities in the world have those too. Oh, and have I mentioned the 10 months of rain?
Kevin Dasa, Vancouver BC
02/18/13 9:15 PM EST
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No fun Gay Vancouveer
Vancouver is a wonderful place to visit. Particularly if you are affluent, older, white, and your idea of a great time is dinner in a high end restaurant, followed by a walk on the Sae Wall, all wrapped up in a clean and safe city. And there certainly is a segment of the gay world that might fall in to that demographic. But most people looking for a 'gay destination' are looking for something different than that. I travel the world, and when I think 'gay destination', I think hip, urban, edgy, and adventurous, with liberated night life, friendly locals, exotic beaches, and challenging culture. Definitely not white bread Vancouver. Rio, Paris, Sydney, and my current favourite Buenos Aires: are in a whole different league than Vancouver. My suggestion is that gay Vancouver tourist operators would be well advised to concentrate their advertising in Calgary, Edmonton, Regina and Winnipeg where Vancouver is genuinely perceived as a desirable destination. Even with its proximity to these cities it would be competing with more fun cities like Chicago, Minneapolis, Toronto, etc. But at least it would be competing in viable league. When asked were I go for fun in Vancouver, my answer is usually 'the airport'.
Doug McClelland, Vancouver bc
02/19/13 11:43 AM EST
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Think local before global
Very much agree with Doug. Vancouver has an extremely long way to go in order to even think of becoming a world class travel destination. Although I consider Vancouver my home, I still take every chance I get to leave the city and travel the world. Those in the travel industry should for now just realistically promote to the prairies, those in that part of the country think Toronto and Vancouver are the place to be, hell we wouldn't even have a Pride here if it wasn't for them, they plan their trips for it all year! What they are going to wear, how f*cked up they are going to get, etc. lol And what's even cuter is when they move to 'the big city' of Vancouver and try and become DJ's, wannabe models and such only to be chewed up and spit out. It makes for some amusement to see their faces all lit up at those types of dreams.
Trevor Bains, Vancouver BC
02/22/13 1:13 AM EST
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