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Richard Henriquez: back to the future

Celebrated architect is 91Ƶbuilding stories91Ƶ through historical and cultural narratives
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- Words by Laura Goldstein Photography by Lia Crowe

Look up. A four-ton, 35-foot-high pin oak tree is a lone leafy relic overlooking Vancouver91Ƶs spectacular English Bay. Ordinarily, the green to russet leaves melding into magenta in the fall might briefly capture your attention as you walk along the seawall. Except, this tree is positioned on the jaw-dropping penthouse terrace atop Eugenia Place, an 18-storey condo building on Beach Avenue. The sight commands a full stop. How did it get up there?

91ƵThe tree, brought from Oregon, represents a first-growth forest that covered the area 80 years ago. The saucer-like planter it sits in holds 100,000 pounds of earth. The tree was hoisted up there using a Liebherr crane,91Ƶ says the building91Ƶs architect, Richard Henriquez, founding principal of Henriquez Partners Architects (HPA), from his studio in Vancouver.

In an homage to the origins of the area, which once housed wood-frame cabins and a teahouse, Richard91Ƶs design of concrete-embedded imprints in the lobby and parking lot are a subtle salute to the original site. Landscaped with hand-sculpted, coloured concrete tree-trunk planters filled with indigenous ferns, the building commemorates the vast forests that once enveloped the area.

The down-to-earth architect doesn91Ƶt exude the uber-ego of the many 91Ƶstarchitects91Ƶ who design incredible buildings out of context to their surroundings. That91Ƶs because the dapper octogenarian, with a thatch of white hair and red-framed specs, has a tremendous respect for the history and culture of the community, which he fastidiously researches before embarking upon each architectural project.

Perhaps that tendency grew out of Richard91Ƶs fascinating personal history in Jamaica, where he was born.

91ƵThe first Jews came to Jamaica fleeing the Spanish Inquisition in 1665, and at the time the British had conquered the island. My ancestors arrived from Britain, and that91Ƶs where I was brought up,91Ƶ Richard explains. He laughs, 91ƵI still have a few cousins there who keep the only synagogue going.91Ƶ

A prolific artist and sculptor as an adult, Richard reminisces: 91ƵI made sculptures out of limestone and paintings when I was a child, and at around 10 years old, I91Ƶd already decided that I was going to be an architect like my grand-uncle Dossie. I also remember the smell of paint, because buildings in Jamaica were made of wood and always painted on the outside.91Ƶ

In celebration of Richard91Ƶs 53rd impactful year of work in the City of Vancouver and beyond, a 30-minute documentary was commissioned by Marcon Developments. Richard Henriquez: Building Stories, by All in Pictures, captures Richard91Ƶs passion as one of Canada91Ƶs finest architects through interviews, animation, collage and, above all, the historical context of each building project.

Richard91Ƶs many awards include the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada91Ƶs Gold Medal in 2005, a Governor General91Ƶs Medal in 1994 and the Order of Canada in 2017 for his contributions to architecture in Canada.

91ƵWe got to do a deep dive into the man and his work,91Ƶ enthuses All in Pictures producer Leah Mallen, who is involved with the Architecture & Design Film Festival in Vancouver.

A few of Richard91Ƶs projects include the Sylvia Tower, the Presidio, the aforementioned Eugenia Place, the Sinclair Centre and the BC Cancer Research Centre in Vancouver; the Justice Institute of British Columbia in New Westminster; and the Environmental Science Building at Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario.

The documentary also showcases Richard91Ƶs insatiable creativity as an artist in his own right. His mesmerizing in-home cylindrical Memory Theatre, which he designed, is re-imagined from the 91Ƶcabinet of curiosities91Ƶ made popular in the Italian Renaissance. Wood shelves and cabinets on a glass floor soar upwards towards the beamed ceiling91Ƶs skylight, displaying models, drawings and family mementoes. Memory Theatre premiered at an exhibition at the Vancouver Art Gallery before travelling to Italy for the 1996 Venice Biennale.

Richard91Ƶs workshop in his home91Ƶs converted garage boasts power tools and drawers brimming with collected ephemera such as feathers, skeletal and beach finds from nature that he conjures into sculptures and collages.

In 2021, Richard created COVID Totems, an installation of sculptures on Jericho Beach made from found objects and wood collected by him and his wife of 60 years, Carol Henriquez, during daily walks in nearby Jericho Beach Park.

In the same year, Richard completed a redesign of four storeys and a theatre for Arts Umbrella, an arts academy for young people on Granville Island. Coincidentally, his wife Carol was a co-founder of Arts Umbrella in 1979.

And the acorn doesn91Ƶt fall far from the pin oak tree. Richard and Carol91Ƶs son, architect Gregory Henriquez, managing principal of HPA, is overseeing the current $5-billion-plus Oakridge Park complex with Westbank in Vancouver.

With no intention of slowing down or resting on his laurels, Richard is currently working on Phase II of the Coal Harbour Elementary School on Vancouver91Ƶs waterfront. It will include a childcare facility, a play space on the rooftop, and 60 units of social housing within the upper six levels. The project91Ƶs expected completion date is August 2024.

Richard says, 91ƵTo me, architecture is about creating a unique place in the world. Art tries to connect those things that are not connectable and to explain what it91Ƶs like to be human.91Ƶ

Richard Henriquez: Building Stories is playing at architecture film festivals across Canada and internationally. It can also be seen on Shelter, an architecture streaming service. Visit to learn more.

Story courtesy of , a Black Press Media publication
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