Other Name(s)
Ioco Grocery Store
Ioco Confectionary/Grocery Store
Ioco Store
Ioco Grocery
Ioco Groceteria
Links and documents
Construction Date(s)
1922/01/01
Listed on the Canadian Register:
2011/10/07
Statement of Significance
Description of Historic Place
The Ioco Grocery Store is a large two-storey Arts and Crafts commercial building with a broad hipped roof, lapped wooden siding at the ground floor level, and shingle siding at the second floor level. It is sited prominently on Third Avenue near the entry to the Imperial Oil refinery in Ioco, an early Company town in Port Moody, British Columbia. Adjacent to and immediately north of the Ioco Grocery Store is the Ioco Hall, another large landmark building. The Ioco Grocery Store is listed as a heritage site within the Ioco Heritage Conservation Area.
Heritage Value
The Ioco Grocery Store, built in 1922, is a testament to the origins of Ioco as a company town and is valued for its economic role in the community. It reflects the ongoing development of the Ioco townsite, which was linked to the growth of the Ioco Refinery. By January 1914, Imperial Oil had selected a location for a refinery on the North Shore of Burrard Inlet. To house its workers, the Imperial Oil Company contracted architects Blackadder and MacKay, and the Dominion Construction Company, one of Vancouver's most successful construction firms, to build forty houses on a site across from the refinery in 1921. The surviving buildings at Ioco represent the life of an early company town in the 1920s. The town included a community hall, two grocery stores, a restaurant, a meat market, churches and a school. As the townsite was remote, its self-sufficiency was paramount to attracting and retaining skilled workers.
The Ioco Grocery Store is further valued for its modest Arts and Crafts styling. The consistent use of this domestic style for all of the town's buildings reinforced both the coherent nature of this tightly-knit, isolated community and the benevolent but paternalistic control exerted by Imperial Oil over every aspect of community life. The Grocery Store is also significant for its association with the first owner, John P. Grant. In 1922, Grant acquired the property and constructed this store, which also had a residence located above. In 1924, Grant sold the store to Swan Goranson and R. Larson, who continued its commercial operations.
Source: City of Port Moody Planning Department
Character-Defining Elements
Key elements that define the heritage character of the Ioco Grocery Store include its:
- location on Third Avenue, near the entrance to the Imperial Oil refinery in Ioco, the historic company town, with views of Burrard Inlet
- location adjacent to the Ioco Hall
- commercial form, scale and massing as expressed by its two-storey plus basement height, broad hipped roof, and symmetrical rectangular plan with central entry
- wood-frame construction, clad in lapped wooden siding with corner boards at the ground level, and cedar shingles with slight bellcast flare at the second floor level
- Arts and Crafts details such as open soffits and exposed rafter tails
Recognition
Jurisdiction
British Columbia
Recognition Authority
Local Governments (BC)
Recognition Statute
Local Government Act, s.970.1
Recognition Type
Heritage Conservation Area
Recognition Date
2002/07/23
Historical Information
Significant Date(s)
n/a
Theme - Category and Type
- Developing Economies
- Trade and Commerce
Function - Category and Type
Current
Historic
- Commerce / Commercial Services
- Shop or Wholesale Establishment
- Commerce / Commercial Services
- Market
Architect / Designer
Blackadder and MacKay
Builder
Dominion Construction Company
Additional Information
Location of Supporting Documentation
City of Port Moody Planning Department
Cross-Reference to Collection
Fed/Prov/Terr Identifier
DhRr-246
Status
Published
Related Places
n/a