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Little Italy | |
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Area in Vancouver | |
![]() East 1st Avenue and Commercial Drive during the "Italian Days" festival | |
Coordinates:49°16′11″N123°04′11″W / 49.26963°N 123.06966°W /49.26963; -123.06966 | |
Country | Canada |
Province | British Columbia |
Region | Lower Mainland |
City | Vancouver |
Little Italy is an area in the eastern part ofVancouver,British Columbia, Canada.[1] It is in theGrandview–Woodland neighbourhood, and is often synonymous with theCommercial Drive area.
Historically this area was an enclave of ethnicItalians and Italian businesses. Today, after a period of steady decline, it is again a multi-cultural, vibrant commercial centre.
Prior to the 1930s, mostItalian immigrants settled in what is today theStrathcona district; however, by the 1940s and 1950s most Italian immigrants to Vancouver settled in the northern Commercial Drive area, and were widely credited with revitalizing the neighbourhood. MostItalian Canadian businesses and cultural facilities are located alongCommercial Drive and, since Italians were in the majority in the adjacent residential areas, Little Italy became a true ethnic Italian enclave. By the 1960s, many Italian businesses also sprang up in the Hastings and Nanaimo areas, but the cultural core remained on Commercial Drive. Ethnic Italians were very influential in this area from the 1940s until the mid-1970s.
By the mid-1970s, a combination ofcultural assimilation, non-Italian immigration, movement to thesuburbs, and aschism within the Italian community[citation needed] led to the decline of Italian influence and concentration in Little Italy. Today, the area is again a vibrant cultural and business centre in eastern Vancouver, but after a succession of other immigrant and cultural groups, the Italian influence has greatly diminished.
On April 6, 2016, the Vancouver City Councillors voted unanimously to declare the area Little Italy. A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held on June 12 to officially recognize an eight-block stretch of Commercial Drive as Little Italy.
Today, there are still many Italian businesses and cultural organizations in Vancouver, and people of Italian ancestry living in theGreater Vancouver area number about 75,000.[citation needed] However, no particular single area is predominantly Italian in concentration.
Burnaby Heights is not predominantly Italian, but Italian-Canadians have a distinct presence in the neighbourhood. East Hastings Street, between Boundary and Duthie, is another commercial hub for the Italian community. There are many Italian cafes, delis, and restaurants along the street, including stores which import goods from Italy. TwoRoman Catholic churches offering masses in Italian, St. Helen's and Holy Cross, are located nearby. Older, first-generation Italians often congregate in nearby Confederation Park to playBocce.