Series S594 - Granville Street Bridge construction photographs by Lew Parry Film Productions

[Aerial view looking west over Granville Island] City officials at Ground Breaking Ceremony for building of the Granville Street Bridge. City officials at Ground Breaking Ceremony for building of the Granville Street Bridge. City officials at Ground Breaking Ceremony for building of the Granville Street Bridge. City officials at Ground Breaking Ceremony for building of the Granville Street Bridge. Excavation for M7. Excavation for M7. Excavation for M4 West. Excavation for M4 West. Excavation for M4 West. Excavation for M7-Drilling for Blasting. Excavation for M7-Drilling for Blasting. Excavation for M7-Drilling for Blasting. Excavation for M4 West. Sheeting for M4. Pier M4 Pier M4 West. Pier M4 East Pier M4 Unwatering Excavation for M4. Unwatering M4 East Unwatering M4 East Pier M4 General view. Pile-driving M4 West. Pile-driving M4 West. Pile-driving M4 West. Pile-driving M4 West. Bridge site. Moving rlwy. tracks on Granville Island. Moving rlwy. tracks on Granville Island. Pouring concrete M4 West. Pouring concrete M4 West - different view. M4 West. Pouring M4 West. Pouring M4 West. Building cribbing for M3 West. Building cribbing for M3 West. Sheeting piling for M3 West. Reinforced steel for shaft of M4 West. Pier M4 West. Pier M4 West. Pier M4 West. Pier M4 East. Driving sheet piling, M3 West. General view of work on Granville Island. Pier M4. Pier M4. Site of M5 (Inside Wright's Ropes Warehouse) Pier M4 Pier M4
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Granville Street Bridge construction photographs by Lew Parry Film Productions

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  • Source of title proper: Title based on contents.

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COV-S594

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657 photographs : bw acetate negatives, colour negatives, and silver gelatin prints ; 20 x 25 cm or smaller

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(1886-)

Administrative history

Since its foundation, Engineering Services (or, as it was referred to until 1995, the Engineering Department) has been the largest department in the City administration, providing many of the City's mandated functions for developing and maintaining the City's infrastructure of roads and bridges, waterworks, sewers and sanitation.

The Vancouver Incorporation Act required the appointment of an engineer, and the City did so under Bylaw #1 (1886). Despite technological changes, the department has remained remarkably consistent in functional responsibilities: over the years, the Engineering Department/Engineering Services has been responsible for the construction and maintenance of streets, lanes, sewers, water works, and bridges, as well as for traffic management, sanitation, garbage collection, and parking. With the rapid growth of the city, the Department’s role changed from a supervisory role (overseeing and inspecting the work of contractors) to having full-scale operations divisions.

The City Engineer first reported to the Board of Works (1886-1956), then to the Board of Administration (1956-1974), and subsequently to the City Manager (1974-).

There were a few instances of major reorganization in the history of the Engineering Department. Following a departmental review by external consultants in 1954, the department underwent a major restructuring of its organizational framework. Formerly, divisions had been based on the type of operation each performed. The review called for three basic divisions. One major division was for administration and design and the other for operations. Each of these divisions would oversee the different functions as they related to design or operation. A third division for traffic management continued to exist in the same fashion as before the rearrangement. This structure remained in place for only a few years.
Another major reorganization occurred in 1966 when the Electrical Department was incorporated as a division within the Engineering Department (impetus for this change came from the formation of the Permits and Licenses Department which took over inspection activities while Engineering took over engineering and works aspects.)

The following individuals have served as City Engineer (from 1995, the City Engineer was also referred to as “General Manager” of the then renamed Engineering Services):
• John P. Lawson, 1886-1890;
• Henry B. Warren, 1890-1891;
• Thomas H. Tracy, 1891-1905;
• William A. Clement, 1905-1911;
• Frederick L. Fellowes, 1911-1924;
• Charles Brakenridge, 1924-1946;
• Charles A. Battershill, 1946-1949;
• John C. Oliver, 1949-1956;
• Randolph M. Martin, 1956-1971;
• Gordon H. Lawson, 1971-1974;
• William H. Curtis, 1974-1991;
• David Rudberg, 1991-[2004]
• Tom Timm, [2004]–2010
• Peter Judd 2010–2015

Functions, occupations and activities:

The broad range of functions of the Department has included:

  1. Streets and bridges design and maintenance, including snow/ice removal and sanding;
  2. Sewerage and drainage planning and maintenance,
  3. Water supply and distribution,
  4. Refuse collection and disposal,
  5. Transportation planning and traffic management, including accommodating for special events,
  6. Street lighting and utilities,
  7. Inspection responsibilities (until the creation of the Permits and Licenses Department),
  8. City planning responsibilities (under the direction of the Town Planning Commission) until the creation of the Planning Department in 1954,
  9. Street Decoration (in conjunction with the Street Decoration Committee) since 1954.

Custodial history

Scope and content

Series relates to the formal documentation of the construction of the Granville Street Bridge, as contracted by the Engineering Department.

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Immediate source of acquisition

Transferred from Engineering Department in 1979.

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Photographs in this public records series have been assigned catalogue numbers begining with the prefix "CVA 228"

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Item level description available on worksheet 1, photographs have been hardcopy subject indexed.

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