LATEST NEWS
January 7, 2010
Developer of Victoria's Dockside Green moving on
VANCOUVER
Saying the pace of construction is too slow and it’s time to spread his build-it-green philosophy internationally, the frontman behind Victoria’s Dockside Green has sold his quarter share in the $650-million residential/ commercial/light industrial project.
In November, Joe Van Belleghem, with partner Jack Julseth, began discussions to sell their Windmill West’s Dockside Green holdings to Vancity Credit Union.
“It wasn’t a surprise,” said Vancity’s CEO Tamara Vrooman.
A few days before Christmas, Vancity’s 100 per cent ownership of the project was announced leading to speculation that Van Belleghem, who had become the public face of the multi award-winning and globally recognized project, was seeking greener pastures.
“It’s time for me to move on,” Van Belleghem said from Victoria.
While he may have built Canada’s first LEED Gold building in Canada — in 1999 at the Vancouver Island Technology Park — Van Belleghem is also a profit-driven entrepreneur, who may have been constricted by his minority ownership role at Dockside.
“With two different parties as owners, there are different opinions as to the speed of construction,” he said.
Raised in Kenora, Ont. the former chartered accountant, who donned the developer’s hat in Winnipeg in 1988, turns 50 in 2010.
The half-century mark has prompted Van Belleghem to re-evaluate what he’s doing and how he can share information from the groundbreaking project beyond local audiences.
Van Belleghem is a founding member of Canada’s Green Building Council.
Before Christmas, he returned from meetings in New Jersey. His expertise may guide projects in Asia, Australia and Europe.
Dockside Green offices were closed over the Christmas holidays and 10 staff, including sales, construction management and marketing, were laid off.
The sales office will reopen in early January, Vrooman said from Vancouver.
“We need to take a little bit of time to see what’s there,” she said. Prior to taking her Vancity post in 2007, she served as B.C.’s deputy minister of finance from 2004 to 2007.
While Vrooman isn’t anticipating major changes at Dockside Green, she said she hopes that 2010 delivers better results than 2009.
Several large developments in the Victoria area have been shelved over the past two years.
One-third complete since construction started in 2005, Dockside Green sits on six hectares of former industrial land on Victoria’s Inner Harbour.
When finished, original plans called for 26 buildings, totalling 1.3-million square feet, including commercial, office and light industrial space. More than 2,500 new residents will live in three neighbourhoods.
It’s the largest re-development of municipal land in the capital city’s history.
But in today’s market, where the federal government is hinting that it wants to cool frantic residential buying, Vrooman said Dockside Green will be phased in based on the market plan, community needs and the ability to plan for changing conditions.
Vancity has hired Vancouver-based developer Gordon Smith, known for his work with Jimmy Pattison and Surrey Central City, to replace Van Belleghem.
Dockside has won three international awards for its LEED platinum design and earned two 2009 honours in the Victoria Real Estate Board’s Commercial Building Awards. Dockside’s goal is to achieve LEED Platinum for every building in the development, a North American first.
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