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Take Back Your Time music venue closes
Good morning,
I attended my first Whitecaps game this weekend. And before you say it, yes, I’m aware that it’s ridiculous, I hadn’t yet attended a game.
Unfortunately, it was the one game in which the team didn’t score a goal and lost to the San Jose Earthquakes. Regardless, the experience was exceptional. Having a world-class soccer team right here in the city feels really special. Chances are you’ll see me at a few games this spring and summer.
One of the reasons we all chose to live in Vancouver is events like that. But smaller events are the lifeblood of a city; they give it character and define what it means to be here.
Today’s story from Julie Chadwick is about one such venue and illustrates the challenges many of these places are facing. It raises questions about just how these venues can survive in Vancouver
Let’s dive in.
— Geoff Sharpe, Lookout founder and managing editor
PS - If you find this newsletter valuable, please consider forwarding it to your friends. New to the Lookout? Sign-up for free.
WEATHER
Monday: 8 🌡️ 3 | ☁️
Tuesday: 8 🌡️ 3 | 🌧️
Wednesday: 8 🌡️ 2 | 🌧️
THE LOOKOUT RECOMMENDS
Vintage finds: In my hunt to decorate my apartment, I keep coming back to Relove Furniture at286 Keefer St. I managed to score a beautiful smoky glass table, and I suspect, a few more items in the coming weeks. They’re only open on Saturdays and Sundays, but their website has a ton of items.
Great physio: I had a tingle in my knee, which is problematic given I’m about to train for my ultra race this summer (yes I’m aware I’m very much a typical Vancouver person). I turned to Range Physio at 2655 Main St. They also offer a bike fit to get you prepped in the right position for all your cycling summer plans.
Have a small business, location or anything in Vancouver you want to recommend for readers? Hit reply and let us know!
EVENTS
Take Your Time Back and the fight for Vancouver community music venues

Crowd dancing at Take Your Time Back Your Time. Photo by Patrick Powers
Last week, East Vancouver all-ages venue Take Your Time Back announced it would be shutting down its live music shows as of March 22.
Stating in an Instagram post that they had been “confronted by the city,” the collective held a festival this past weekend to mark the end of what has been a vital creative space for emerging artists and musicians, many of whom played their very first shows there.
The announcement comes amidst other venue pressures and shutdowns in Vancouver, in part due to factors like rising rents, neighbourhood gentrification, a citywide crackdown on unlicensed venues and events as reported by the Lookout, and enhanced inspections led by Vancouver Fire Rescue Services and the Vancouver Police Department.
Take Your Time Back had taken over the space from an organization called 648 Kingsway (which is also the venue’s address), who shut their doors in August of 2024 due to an upcoming 40 per cent rent increase. For more than a decade prior to that, the space was run by a group called the Toast Collective, who also cited increasing rent as a reason for their own shutdown in 2021.
“They have been a venue for over 15 years, and there's already an audience and a community, so we wanted to take over that space and keep nurturing that community,” says Anne D., who co-founded the collective with partners Luis Carlos Gonzalez and Dayton Bowen. “It just naturally became a live music space because it's always been that way.”
The collective made the decision to shut the venue space down pre-emptively after their landlord was contacted by a city inspector after receiving an anonymous complaint.
The 112-year-old building had also not been renovated in more than a decade and was in “pretty poor condition,” says Anne, adding that “the space was not going to last forever.”
However, for some in the Vancouver music community, the announcement still came as a surprise.
“It was a big shock for a lot of people,” says musician Joe Baker, who has lived in Vancouver for 27 years and last month played a show at Take Your Time Back with his band Ghost Teeth.

It was a welcoming and vital social space, especially for bands that were just starting out, and occupied a particular niche in the venue ecosystem of Vancouver, he says.
“There needs to be more room for people coming to a space and allowing themselves to kind of forget their troubles for a night and just connect with people,” he says. “A big part of that is cost, because Take Your Time Back has a ‘pay what you can’ system. So, they have a door, they have a set price. They recommend you pay, but they're not going to turn anybody away if they don't have money.”
The collective ran under anarchist principles, and were not motivated by profit when it came to who they booked in the venue.
“A lot of the crowd we have is younger people. They cannot afford to go to very expensive shows. There's a lot of 19-plus shows that they cannot attend, so we’ve got to provide a space for that,” says Anne. “We're trying to get a chance for these people to get their art out there.”

Chris Kitto
This model worked well for musicians like Chris Kitto, who moved to Vancouver two years ago. He says the trajectory for new performers is typically to start with house shows, move into small venues like Take Your Time Back, and then move on to bigger independent venues like Green Auto and Red Gate.
“Vancouver is one of the only cities where you can slowly work your way up. It feels like in other cities, you have to already be breaking through, whereas in Vancouver, you can slowly work up with entry-level venues,” he says.
This was what made Take Your Time Back so crucial for new artists, they were easy and cheap to book, and didn’t charge the deposit fees that a lot of other venues did, says Kitto.
“They were like friends to us,” he says. “It just felt like this real community space — more than just a venue.”
After more than a decade of loving and losing Vancouver-area venues, music enthusiast Kristina Rothstein decided to document many of these spaces in what became a podcast series called In Search of Lost Venues.
In each episode, she wanders around Vancouver neighbourhoods with musicians to visit their favourite now-shuttered establishments and document the memories and nostalgia that emerge. For her, that venue was The Sugar Refinery, a late ’90s-era vegetarian restaurant and music space at 1115 Granville Street.
“I would think a lot about what that place was for other people. And so I think that's why I wanted to investigate and walk around and see how it felt for everyone else,” she says.
When a community space like that is lost, it can be jarring because people often just expect things to always be there, says Rothstein. For many people, these places not only represented an incredibly important moment in their lives but have become spaces that are no longer recognizable when they return, even if it’s only been a few years.
“There's a place that you went to that felt really special and kind of singular in a way that that experience will never be recreated, and the things that the people did there will never happen again,” she says. “I wanted to do something that was investigating the city and trying to come to terms with that incredible flux that happens everywhere, but specifically in Vancouver.”
Apollo Ghosts’ Adrian Teacher shared his memories with Rothstein about playing shows at 648 Kingsway when The Toast Collective were running it, and how the entry door would basically open out next to the band while they were playing.
“I remember playing a few times literally onstage and the door opens and somebody’s like, ‘Oh, hey, what’s up?’” he told Rothstein, with a laugh. “It just seemed so easy, it was a really easy spot to just do it yourself, which Vancouver is losing at the moment, right? It only seems like there are a few real places to play these days.”
Over the process of researching all these lost venues, Rothstein has concluded that she can’t imagine the city’s arts scene fully stagnating or being stamped out, but she feels that it also “isn't supported or assisted,” especially when it comes to new and emerging things.
A number of Vancouver-based arts venues have struggled or shut down over the last five years, including venues like the Little Mountain Gallery, a non-profit comedy club which reopened in 2023 after it was renovicted by a development, or Black Lab, a Hastings Street punk space which was shut down in 2024 and The Red Gate Arts Society, which is still going but has been evicted several times before settling into its current location on Main Street.
These challenges are partly due to financial issues associated with COVID-19 restrictions, but also due to pressures from rental costs and new developments. Two new condo towers are currently being considered for 602-646 Kingsway and 603-617 E 16th Ave, right next to 648 Kingsway, and Anne says that when they first started using the space, they used the laundromat in the complex across from them, but that has all since been torn down for condos.
However, hope remains that art and music will find a way.
“These things have to come and go,” says Kitto. “And all I can hope for is that there will be another one that pops up soon.”
Take Your Time Back aims to find partners to help run another space where they can run music shows again, but they also still put on art shows, yoga classes, workshops and a book club as part of an “ecosystem” of community events that Anne says will still continue on in an arts space they also run next door.
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THE VANCOUVER NUMBER
$1 billion
No, that’s not an Austin Powers reference (shout out to all my fellow millennial readers). It’s what the Vancouver park board says is needed to fix Vancouver’s aging recreation facilities. A motion will be brought forward at the next park board meeting on Apr. 7, but ultimately city council has to approve the budget. An auditor general’s report identified that 72 per cent of community centres, pools and rinks were in poor or very poor condition. Read more. [CBC]
Dig deeper: For those looking to understand more details about the Auditor General’s report, you can read Nate’s story from last September.
THE AGENDA
🌧️ Yes, it wasn’t just you imagining it; last week was brutal for rain, with some areas, including the North Shore mountains, hitting 300 millimetres. Read more. [CityNews]
🚓 A Vancouver police cruiser was involved in a crash with another vehicle, and the cruiser struck a pole at Granville and West 13th, after responding to a crime in the area. The officers had non-life-threatening injuries, and the driver of the other vehicle was not injured. Read more. [CityNews]
🏒 Congrats (kidding) to the Canucks, who hit 23 home losses this season, a new record franchise… Luckily, Marco Rossi, who came to the team from the Quinn Hughes trade, has played well, with three goals and seven assists in five games. Read more. [CTV]
🏗️ The Keefer Rooms building at 222 Keefer St., built in 1912 but having been empty since September 2022 due to a fire, was bought by B.C. Housing for $8.2 million in 2023, and has recently submitted a redevelopment proposal to the city council. The proposal seems to indicate that the existing building will be stripped down and retain usage for SROs. Read more. [Vancouver Sun]
🗳️ The municipal party Vancouver Liberals, led by Kareem Allam, announced two new city councillor candidates, Michael Qu, an entrepreneur and RCMP auxiliary constable and Jessica Walton, a political strategist who has worked for the BC NDP. Read more. [Urbanized]
📈 And you thought Vancouver grocery prices were high before… Prices are expected to continue to rise due to the war in Iran. It’s hard to avoid high grocery prices, but shopping at smaller, family-run places tends to always be cheaper, at least for fruits and vegetables. Read more. [Urbanized]
📸 All parking enforcement officers for the city will use body-worn cameras after a pilot showed safety improvements with the public. Read more. [Urbanized]
EVENT GUIDE
The Vagina Monologues: Live Theatre Performance | Waterfront Theatre | Mar. 24, 5-7 p.m. | Bold, hilarious, and deeply moving women’s stories | Tickets $75+
Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival | Various locations | Mar. 27-Apr. 12 | Events and workshops, including Blossom Block Party, Sakura Days Japan and more
4×4: Four Bands for Four Bucks | Fox Cabaret | Mar. 26, 7 p.m. | Four emerging bands for $4, what’s not to love? | Tickets $4
The Vegan Market | HI Vancouver Jericho Beach | Mar. 26-Apr. 23, 6-9:30 p.m. | PLant based pop-up with drinks and food from 45 different businesses | Tickes $4
Vancouver Pro Stand-Up Series | Underground Comedy Club | Mar. 26-Apr. 23 | A series of comics from popular stand up shows, Netflix and more | TIckets $20
Sake Experience | Everything Wine | Mar. 26, 6:30-8 p.m. | Curated Japanese sake parirings with snacks | Tickets $52
Izakaya After Dark | Modus Coffee on Broadway | Mar. 27, 5:30 p.m.-11 p.m. | Pop-up dinner, featuring handmade noodles, sake and other dishes | Tickets $17
Friends of Friends Art Party | The Kent | Mar. 28, 7:30 p.m. | Dance, drink and take home art from local designers | Tickets $22
Spring Pop - Up Market | Mar. 28-29, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. | Heritage Hall | Pop-up event featuring makers, artists, and more selling goods, treats and home decor | Free
Submit your event and it could appear here and reach 30,000+ Vancouver locals.
DEVELOPMENT
Behind the scenes of the city’s new permitting pilot

Originally published Feb. 13 2026
Last month, the city launched a new pilot program aimed at reducing vacant storefronts in the Downtown Eastside and surrounding neighbourhoods. The Temporary Occupancy Permit Pilot offers businesses, including artist studios, a simplified permitting and inspection process that exempts them from potentially onerous building upgrades for up to two years.
The pilot is the result of a grassroots effort by David Duprey, founder of the Narrow Group, Michael Wiebe, a former city councillor who’s launching Small Business Vancouver, and Landon Hoyt, Executive Director of the Hastings Crossing Business Improvement Association (BIA), among others, to reduce permitting barriers for new businesses.
“Vancouver is a really special monster when it comes to how much bureaucracy and how much red tape we have. So anything I can do to get involved with lessening that I'm stoked on,” Duprey told Vancity Lookout.
NEW VANCOUVER JOBS
Discover your new dream job in Vancouver:
Social media manager at Canucks Sports & Entertainment
Senior relationships manager at BMO
Manager, major gits and events at Vancouver Opera
Terminal attendant at BC Ferries
Manager, community centre operations at City of Vancouver
COMMUNITY HIGHLIGHTS
Mount Pleasant is getting another vintage store from a local vintage veteran. [Vancouver is Awesome]
The Broadway Subway construction team went a little overboard with the pylons.
West Georgia is getting a new restaurant called Bam Bam by the team behind the award-winning Nemesis. [Vancouver is Awesome]
The Straight has an excellent review of Harm, a new one-woman play. [The Straight]
Okay, the cherry blossoms in Stanley Park are going crazy…
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VANCOUVER NEWS QUIZ
How many home losses have the Canucks had this year? |
PHOTO OF THE DAY
Of course, today’s photo of the day is of the cherry blossoms, because they’re impossible to ignore right now. Spring really is finally here!
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