Remebering Art Cowie

Rest in peace, my friend.

Rest in peace, my friend.

I am personally saddened and shocked to hear about the passing of Art Cowie, “a landscape architect, land planner, politician, PNE director, developer, commentator and writer,” over the weekend.

I had the pleasure of managing Art’s campaign for City Council in 2002 when he co-founded and subsequently ran for the one-election wonder party, vcaTEAM.

Often enamoured with his place in this city’s political landscape, but but always better informed than 90 per cent of the city representatives that I have met over the years, Art was truly an elder statesman in Vancouver.

I remember sitting down with Art on a rainy Sunday afternoon for our first face-to-face meeting so he could size me up as a potential candidate to manage his campaign.  I was a young, 24 year-old political upstart who at first was very intimidated by Art’s knowledge about density, row housing, building heights and sight corridors, and mixed-use development.  But I guess he saw something he liked and hired me on.

Over the ensuing months, I realized the depth of Art’s knowledge about planning and design and discovered some of his fantastic visions for the city, many of which can be retrieved on his website where he regularly published many of these concepts for public consumption.

Art was a member of the Park Board, City Council and the BC Legislature. He was elected on 1971 as the sole TEAM member on the Vancouver Park Board. Since then he has been Chair of the Park Board several times and served on City Council. Art was elected to the BC Legislature in 1991 as a Liberal, representing Vancouver-Quilchena. In the Fall of 1993, he voluntarily gave up his seat for Gordon Campbell, allowing the current Premier to get into the legislature seamlessly.

He was always opinionated, regularly full of energy and ready to tackle whatever task was in front of us, and most importantly, committed to the concept of public service.

Thank you for your contributions, Art.  They will not soon be forgotten.

For anyone who knows the details of Art’s funeral arrangements, please send along a note.

2 Responses to “Remebering Art Cowie”

  1. Art touched a lot of people in many different spheres….landscape architecture, planning, urban design, development and of course politics. He loved politics, almost as much as he loved rowhouses. The funeral arrangements have not yet been finalized but it will likely take place in very early December.

  2. John and Jane Sproule says:

    We have both spent many hours listening and talking with Art over the years. You have been an inspiration to both Jane and I with your energy and whit and appreciation of life, your political views, your love for the earth and water, small houses and arguing. You will be missed.

    We would appreciate knowing when a service is planned for Art.

Leave a Reply

Thu Mar 18, 2010

March 2010
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
  
 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31  

FACT OF THE DAY

An article titled Vancouver Politics by Paul Tennant in The Vancouver Book (1976), describes the entry of TEAM onto the civic political scene in 1968. TEAM, wrote Tennant, “sought to be a moderate reform group appealing to persons of all political ideologies.”

On their left was COPE (the Committee of Progressive Electors), also formed in 1968, and on their right was the NPA (the Non-Partisan Association), which had been a power in city politics for nearly four decades, and which “held that the affairs of the city should be run by those with the necessary knowledge and experience, i.e., those with a professional-managerial background, in order to run the city in a business-like way.”

The reformers, on the other hand, “felt that civic decision-making should be open to the public, with leadership coming from a cross-section of the population, and rule going to the working class majority. This group was concerned about land use, they advocated city control, and preferred to structure politics around the neighborhood concept.”

Quote OF THE DAY

“It was very diverse, and we got together by word of mouth. There were professors, business people, labor, lawyers and from all across the city. It was a coalescing of people around the idea we should do something.” – former City Councillor Setty Pendakur on the formation Vancouver’s reform movement and its political manifestation – TEAM – came into being in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s.

Archive

Tags