A collection of artifacts that tell the story of 100 years of mental health care at Riverview Hospital is being put into storage but not abandoned.
Heritage advocates are lobbying for museum space in Coquitlam to showcase hospital equipment, furniture and uniforms, and the health authority responsible for Riverview is also looking for space to house the collection.
"We are working with the historical society to find an appropriate location," said David Weir, spokesperson for the Provincial Health Services Authority. "There needs to be an appropriate location to house the collection," Weir said.
Weir said the health authority has to vacate the buildings it leases from the provincial government through Shared Services B.C. as part of a long-planned closure of the hospital involving the relocation of patients and services to new facilities being developed in B.C. communities. For years, the health authority has leased space in the Industrial Services Building on the Riverview lands for the items collected by the Riverview Historical Society, but that building is closing at the end of May.
"Because we lease the space, we have a deadline to get out of the hospital buildings," explained Weir, who said the remainder of the hospital will close by summer, including the administration buildings.
The scheduled closure of Riverview Hospital for this summer has raised numerous concerns about the future of the 244 acre site. But the immediate concern is what to do with the historical collection, which chronicles the change in methods and philosophy of mental health care over a century and has been the subject of much study by students and others working in the field.
In March, the Coquitlam Heritage Society renewed its call for a museum to house the collection as well as other archival material languishing in basements throughout the city. Coun. Craig Hodge, a former president of the society who currently chairs the Riverview Lands Advisory Committee, agreed the city needs a permanent museum to store Coquitlam's heritage artifacts and the hospital collection.
HERITAGE ASSETS
"The city is aware that throughout the city there are a number of heritage assets that the city has to preserve so they will be there for the future," Hodge said.
Although the city has Mackin House in Maillardville, a period home reflecting life in the early days, it is unsuitable for storing a large collection, Hodge said. However, he predicted the city's 125th anniversary in four years could provide an opportunity for developing a strategy for preserving and exhibiting Coquitlam's historical items.
"We have an opportunity to bring heritage to the forefront," Hodge said.
Meanwhile, the executive director of the Coquitlam Heritage Society hopes the city will find a space for a museum. Jill Cook said the society is working with the city on a museum proposal but it's a long way from fruition. "We are currently on neither the A nor B list for capital projects so there is much work to do," said Cook in an email message.
For Anna Tremere, founder of the Riverview Hospital Historical Society, packing the collection for storage is an immediate concern and a big job. "We have to find sufficient space for all the items," was all she would say about the future of the collection.
Meanwhile, the province is looking at the heritage value of Riverview Hospital buildings and is paying $95,000 to a consultant for a Heritage Conservation Plan, due in the fall. Although the study won't make recommendations for the property, it will guide future planning.
Although the site has to be vacated by this summer, some mental health care will continue in recently-built Connolly, Cottonwood and Cypress Lodges.
dstrandberg@tricitynews.com