In February 2013, The Gastown Gazette began publishing local news and stories about the ongoing protests against gentrification in the
Downtown Eastside and Gastown area of Vancouver. The
community paper has since gathered provincial and national attention for reports on the neighbourhood. Gastown has become a hub for technology and new media. It has attracted companies such as Zaui Software, Idea Rebel, MetroQuest, BootUp Labs Entrepreneurial Society, SEOinVancouver and MarketR. Popular annual events that take place on the
cobblestone streets of Gastown include the
Vancouver International Jazz Festival and the
Global Relay Gastown Grand Prix international bicycle race. In June 2004,
Storyeum opened in Gastown. It was a lively theatrical 65-minute show that re-enacted the history of BC using eight sets that were all located below street level. Unfortunately, due to mounting debt, the attraction closed its doors in October 2006. The
Gassy Jack statue was toppled on February 14, 2022, by protesters during the 31st annual Memorial March for
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls. In the summer of 2024, as a pilot project, Water Street was converted into a
pedestrian zone with car-free and car-light areas from Richards Street to Carrall Street.
Gastown steam clock Gastown's most famous (though nowhere near oldest) landmark is the
steam-powered clock on the corner of Cambie and Water Street. It was built in 1977 to cover a steam grate, part of Vancouver's distributed
steam heating system, as a way to harness the steam and to prevent street people from sleeping on the spot in cold weather. Its original design was faulty and it had to be powered by electricity after a breakdown. The steam mechanism was completely restored with the financial support of local businesses as it had become a major tourist attraction, and is promoted as a heritage feature although it is of modern invention. The steam used is from a low-pressure downtown-wide steam
heating network (from a plant adjacent to the
Georgia Viaduct) and powers a miniature
steam engine, in the base of the clock, driving a
chain lift. The chain lift moves steel balls upward, where they are unloaded and roll to a descending chain. The weight of the balls on the descending chain drives a conventional
pendulum clock escapement, geared to the hands on the four faces. The steam also powers the clock's sound production, with
whistles being used instead of
bells to produce the
Westminster "chime" and to
signal the time. In October 2014, the clock was temporarily removed for major repairs by its original builder, and it was reinstalled in January 2015. ==References==