Skip to content
CMHC Home Canada Mortgage
and Housing Corporation
  • Sign In or Register
  • Français
  • MENU
MENU
× Français
  • Home
  • Professionals
    • Project funding and mortgage financing
      • Funding programs
        • Affordable Housing Fund
        • Affordable Housing Innovation Fund
        • Apartment Construction Loan Program
        • Canada Greener Affordable Housing
        • Community (social) housing
        • Federal Lands Initiative
        • Funding for Indigenous housing
        • Housing Supply Challenge
        • Innovation and research
        • National Housing Strategy Project Profiles
        • Rapid Housing Initiative
      • Mortgage Loan Insurance Products
        • Homeowner and Small Rental Mortgage Loan Insurance
          • CMHC Purchase
          • CMHC Improvement
          • CMHC Income Property
          • CMHC Refinance
          • CMHC Newcomers
          • CMHC Self-Employed
          • CMHC Portability
          • Eco Products for Lenders
        • Multi-Unit and Rental Housing
          • MLI Select
        • Default, claims and properties for sale
        • Underwriting centre
        • emili
        • NHA approved lenders
        • Calculating GDS / TDS
        • How to recognize and report mortgage fraud
        • Contact mortgage loan insurance
        • Insured Mortgage Purchase Program (IMPP)
      • Securitization
        • NHA Mortgage Backed Securities
        • Canada Mortgage Bonds
        • Canadian registered covered bonds
        • Blockchain in the housing industry
    • Housing markets, data and research
      • CMHC Reports Calendar
      • Housing markets
        • Housing market reports
        • Mortgage market and consumer reports
        • Fall 2024 Rental Market Report
      • Housing research
        • Consultations
          • Prohibition on the Purchase of Residential Property by Non-Canadians Act
            • Prohibition on the Purchase of Residential Property by Non-Canadians Act – Frequently asked questions
        • Housing research reports
        • Housing surveys
          • Mortgage consumer surveys
        • Research awards and scholarships
        • Understanding core housing need
        • Collaborative Housing Research Network
      • Housing data
        • Data tables
          • Household characteristics data
          • Housing market data
          • Mortgage and debt data
          • Rental market data
        • Housing market information portal
        • Residential Mortgage Industry Data Dashboard
        • CMHC licence agreement for the use of data
        • Housing Knowledge Centre
    • Industry innovation and leadership
      • Housing innovation
      • Our Partners
        • Partnerships
        • Federal, Provincial and Territorial Forum on Housing
      • Industry collaboration
        • Expert Community on Housing (ECoH)
      • Industry expertise
        • Affordable housing
        • Indigenous housing
        • Senior housing
        • Accessible and adaptable housing
        • Developing sustainable housing
        • Resources for mortgage professionals
        • CMHC newsletters
    • Events and speakers
      • Conferences
        • 2024 National Housing Conference
          • About
          • National Housing Conference - Agenda
          • Location
          • InnoZone
          • Details for participants
      • Speakers’ bureau
        • Kevin Hughes
  • Consumers
    • Buying a home
      • Homebuying calculators
        • Mortgage calculator
        • Affordability calculator
        • Debt service calculator
      • Buying guides
        • Homebuying step by step
        • CMHC's condominium buyer's guide
      • Mortgage loan insurance for consumers
        • What is CMHC mortgage loan insurance?
        • Do I qualify for mortgage loan insurance?
        • CMHC mortgage loan insurance costs
        • CMHC's Eco Products
          • CMHC’s Eco Improvement
          • CMHC Eco Plus
        • CMHC — home renovation financing options
        • FAQs — mortgage loan insurance
      • Incentives for homebuyers
      • Newcomers
      • The First-Time Home Buyer Incentive
    • Owning a home
      • Manage your mortgage
        • Mortgage fraud
        • Mortgage planning tips
        • Plan and manage your mortgage
        • Your credit report
        • Your home value
      • Aging in place
        • Housing options for Seniors
        • Housing and finance tips
        • Mortgage financing options for people 55+
        • Preventing fraud and financial abuse
    • Renting a home
      • I want to rent
        • Things to consider before renting
        • Types of housing for rent in Canada
        • Finding or advertising a rental property
        • Visiting the rental property
        • Lease and rental agreements
        • Signing the lease
        • Credit checks and bad credit
        • Rental payments and deposits
        • Roommates and pets
      • I am renting
        • Moving day
        • Landlord/Tenant responsibilities
        • Inspections
        • Maintenance and repairs
        • Complaints and evictions
        • Rent increases
        • When you can't pay rent
        • Renewing or terminating the lease
        • Moving out
      • One-Time Top-Up to the Canada Housing Benefit
      • COVID‑19: eviction bans and suspensions to support renters
  • About CMHC
    • CMHC’s goals, values and commitment to housing
    • Discover Life at CMHC
    • Management and governance
      • Speakers’ bureau
      • CMHC's Annual Public Meeting
      • CMHC’s board of directors and committees
      • Our management committee
      • Pension governance
        • Pension overview
        • Key roles and responsibilities
        • Annual reports
    • Corporate reporting
      • CMHC’s 2023 Annual Report
      • Program evaluation
      • Quarterly financial reports
      • Joint auditors special examination report to CMHC board 2018
      • CMHC’s Insured Mortgage Deferral
      • Corporate Plan Summary
      • Transparency
        • Access to information and privacy protection
        • Accessibility at CMHC
        • Accessibility feedback process
        • Briefing materials
        • Procurement
          • Vendor Diversity Program
        • Travel, hospitality and conference expenditures
    • Contact us
      • Contact mortgage loan insurance
      • Regional offices
      • Granville lsland
      • Indigenous and the North Housing Solutions
      • National office
      • Holiday service hours
  • Media Newsroom
  • National Housing Strategy
    • What is the strategy?
      • About the initiatives
      • How to apply
      • Help and resources
      • The National Housing Strategy Glossary of Common Terms
    • Federal/Provincial/Territorial housing agreements
    • Other funding and financing opportunities
  • The Housing Observer
  • Canada’s Housing Podcast
  • Careers
  • Housing Knowledge Centre
 
  • Home
  • The Housing Observer
  • Rebuilding Vancouver’s Black Community
  • Save
  • Share

Rebuilding Vancouver’s Black Community

Stephanie Allen and the Hogan’s Alley Society want to reimagine a lost part of the city.

Save Icon

SAVE TO MY FOLDER

Rebuilding Vancouver’s Black Community

SAVE
Close this Window   |   Manage my Folder
Save Icon

SAVE TO MY FOLDER

Rebuilding Vancouver’s Black Community

Done Done!
Close this Window   |   Manage my Folder
Share icon

Share via

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Mail
  • print
  • CopyLink

SuccessCopyLinkVersionLink copied

Share icon

Share via

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Mail
  • print
  • CopyLink

SuccessCopyLinkVersionLink copied

share icon

Mail-blue Share via Email

Did You Know?

You can include an email signature?

Register | Sign In

×
Google Captcha Loader
share icon

Mail-blue Share via Email

Done Done!
Close this window
In the early 20th century Hogan’s Alley was home to Vancouver’s only Black community. By 1970, the community was destroyed to make way for the Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts.
Hogan’s Alley’s was home to The Fountain Chapel, the city’s only Black church. Local resident Nora Hendrix, grandmother of Jimi Hendrix, was the driving force behind the purchase of the church.
L to R: Stephanie Allen, Randy Clark and June Francis, Hogan’s Alley Society at the site of Clark’s grandparents’ restaurant, Vie’s Chicken and Steak House, where Nora Hendrix worked as the cook.
L to R: June Francis, Stephanie Allen and Randy Clark at Nora Hendrix Place, a temporary modular housing facility for Vancouver’s Black and Indigenous communities. Mural: Ejiwa (Edge) Ebenebe.
L to R: June Francis, Randy Clark and Stephanie Allen in front of Anthony Joseph’s mural on Dunsmuir Viaduct celebrating prominent residents of Hogan’s Alley.

Share this story

Tweet

February 23, 2021

Rebuilding Vancouver’s Black Community

Stephanie Allen and the Hogan’s Alley Society want to reimagine a lost part of the city.

Hogan’s Alley was the informal name for Park Lane, a laneway situated in Strathcona, the heart of Vancouver’s only Black community. Starting in the early 1900s, Hogan’s Alley was home to many Black residents, businesses and the city’s only Black church.

Its residents included Nora Hendrix, the grandmother of famed musician Jimi Hendrix, who lived in the community starting in the 1920s. Hogan’s Alley thrived until a series of decisions resulted in displacement of the community by 1970. The area was razed to build a viaduct to support a highway travelling through downtown Vancouver.

“It was an approach of regarding some places and lives as deficient or substandard. The idea that they must surgically remove blighted areas of town that were compared to cancers in the urban landscape,” says Stephanie, who sits on the board of the Hogan’s Alley Society.

Neighbouring communities protested and the highway was never built. However, Hogan’s Alley was destroyed, its residents scattered to other parts of the city. Many businesses were lost entirely. It was the first and last time there was a concentrated Black community in Vancouver, Canada’s third largest city.

Hogan's Alley was at the heart of #VAN’s #Black community. By 1970, it was destroyed to make way for a highway. CMHC played an unfortunate role in funding this displacement. Today they’re working with Hogan’s Alley Society to reimagine the area.

CMHC played a role in the destruction of Hogan’s Alley. Under the National Housing Act, CMHC funded up to 75% of what was incorrectly termed “community urban renewal”. This paved the way for the City of Vancouver to raze Hogan’s Alley.

“It had impacts on a number of Black communities in Canada,” says Stephanie, noting the same program was often used to redevelop poorer or less desirable areas of cities, which disproportionately impacted communities with more Black residents.

In June 2020, CMHC publicly apologized for its role in the forced resettlement of Black people in Hogan’s Alley.

“CMHC rejects racism,” says Evan Siddall president of CMHC. “We are committed to working with government and community partners to atone for our past racism and insensitivity. This includes our role in funding the forced resettlement of Black people in Hogan’s Alley in Vancouver as well as other communities in Canada. We know we need to do better and we will do better.”

In 2015, Vancouver City Council voted to demolish the Georgia St. and Dunsmuir St. viaducts and undertake a large-scale redevelopment of the area that includes the former Hogan’s Alley.

Around the same time Hogan’s Alley Society developed a proposal for a non-profit community land trust on the former Hogan’s Alley block and submitted it to the City of Vancouver in 2018.

The proposal includes rental housing, supportive housing, space for small businesses, non-profit organizations and a cultural centre for People of African Descent.

It is also part of the society’s larger goal: to change the way housing is delivered in Canada. “We are committed to partnering with the Hogan’s Alley Society and Vancouver’s Black and African diaspora communities to ensure their long-term involvement and investment in the future of this area,” says Gil Kelley, general manager of planning, urban design and sustainability, City of Vancouver.

“The Northeast False Creek planning process has become a unique opportunity for cultural healing and redress in Vancouver.”

A key focus for the city is prioritizing the needs of people who face anti-Black racism and persistent social and economic exclusion. This includes working with the Black and African communities to acknowledge and address historical wrongs, identify and remove barriers to full participation and cultural expression.

“Our aspiration is to once again make the Hogan’s Alley block a focal point for the Black Community,” says Kelley. “One that is welcoming and inclusive to all – a place ‘from the community, for the community’.”

CMHC has committed to working with the Hogan’s Alley Society and other partners to maximize the housing and community outcomes for the Black community in Vancouver. With more work and learning ahead, CMHC commits to exploring all options together with the Hogan’s Alley Society to help build a stronger Vancouver where everyone can feel they belong.

 “We’re ready to move forward,” says Stephanie.

Eliminating housing discrimination in Canada is an essential, strategic requirement for CMHC to achieve the aspiration that, “by 2030, everyone in Canada has a home that they can afford and that meets their needs.” CMHC is taking concrete actions to eliminate racism and embed equity into its culture, programs, and policies so that they reflect the lived experiences of all Canadians. Progress reports on CMHC’s anti-racism and equity work will be provided through the Annual Report and Corporate Plan.


Was this page relevant to your needs?

Thank you for your feedback!

How Can We Help?

Suggest an Improvement

Report a Bug

How Can We Help?

Suggest an Improvement

Please share your suggestion.

Google Captcha Loader

How Can We Help?

Report a Bug

Please describe the problem.

Google Captcha Loader

Thank you. Your feedback has been submitted.

Date Published: February 23, 2021

Discover related content using the tags below:

  • Success Stories
  • Funding
  • Research
  • Housing Needs and Conditions

By Topic

  • Professionals
    • Project funding and mortgage financing
    • Housing markets data and research
    • Industry innovation and leadership
    • Events and speakers
  • Consumers
    • Home buying
    • Owning a home
    • Renting a home

About Us

  • CMHC's Story
  • Management and Governance
  • Our Partners
  • Corporate Reporting
  • Contact Us
  • Careers

More

  • CMHC Newsletters
  • CMHC Library
  • Housing Observer
  • Media Newsroom
  • CMHC and Accessible Housing
  • CMHC on Twitter
  • CMHC on LinkedIn
  • CMHC on Facebook
  • CMHC on Instagram
  • CMHC on YouTube
Privacy Policy    |    Terms and Conditions    |    Transparency    |    Accessibility Plan    |    Accessibility Feedback     Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) ©2025 
Canada
loader icon