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Coquitlam (2011
census population 126,840) is a city in the
Lower Mainland of British Columbia, Canada.
Coquitlam, mainly a suburban city, is the
sixth-largest city in the province and is one of
the 21 municipalities comprising Metro
Vancouver.
Neighbourhoods
Coquitlam's geographic shape can be thought of
as a tilted hourglass, with two larger parcels
of land with a smaller central section
connecting them.
Southwest Coquitlam comprises the original core
of the city, with Maillardville and Fraser River
industrial sector giving way to the large
residential areas of Austin Heights,
colloquially referred to as "The Bump" due to
its high and flat plateau topography. These
older residences, with larger property
dimensions, are increasingly being torn down and
replaced with newer and larger homes. The
Poirier Street area was the city's original
recreational centre with the Coquitlam Sports
Centre, Chimo Aquatic and Fitness Centre, and
sports fields located there, while City Hall was
previously located further south in
Maillardville.
The Austin Heights area contains Como Lake, a
renowned urban fishing and recreation area, and
headwaters for the Como watershed. The watershed
represents one of the last urban watersheds in
the Tri-Cities that supports wild stocks of coho
salmon as well as other species at risk such as
coastal cutthroat trout (both sea-run and
resident) and bird species such as the great
blue heron and green heron. It also contains
Mundy Park, one of the largest urban parks in
the Metro Vancouver area.
Lafarge Lake at Coquitlam Town Centre
In 1984, the provincial government sold 57
hectares (141 acres) formerly attached to
Riverview Hospital to Molnar Developments.
Shortly afterward, this land was subdivided and
became Riverview Heights, with about 250 single
family homes. The remaining 240 acres (0.97 km2)
of this still-active mental health facility has
been the subject of much controversy between
developers, environmentalists, and
conservationists. In 2005, the city's task force
on the hospital lands rejected the idea of
further housing on the lands and declared that
the lands and buildings should be protected and
remain as a mental health facility.
Coquitlam Town Centre, was designated as a
"Regional Town Centre" under the Metro
Vancouver’s Livable Region Strategic Plan. The
concept of a town centre for the area dates back
to 1975, and is intended to have a high
concentration of high-density housing, offices,
cultural, entertainment and education facilities
to serve major growth areas of the region,
served by rapid transit service. It is in the
town centre that many public buildings can be
found, including City Hall, a branch of the
Coquitlam Public Library, R.C.M.P. station,
Coquitlam's main fire hall, the David Lam Campus
of Douglas College, the Evergreen Cultural
Centre, City Centre Aquatic Complex, Town Centre
Park and Percy Perry Stadium. Coquitlam Town
Centre is currently undergoing an update of the
Town Centre plan.
In 1989, the provincial government sold 570
hectares (1,409 acres) of second-growth forested
land on the south slope of Eagle Mountain, known
locally as Eagle Ridge, to developer Wesbild.
This resulted in the closure of Westwood
Motorsport Park in 1990, and the creation of
Westwood Plateau, which was developed into 4,525
upscale homes, as well as two golf courses.
With development on Westwood Plateau completed
and the opening of the David Avenue Connector in
2006, Coquitlam's primary urban development has
now shifted to Burke Mountain in the
northeastern portion of the city. - Source
Wikipedia