British Columbia

Flooding destroys Vancouver Chamber Choir's 48-year-old music library

More than a metre of water engulfed the basement after a pipe burst at the Hodson Manor, a city-owned heritage house the choir uses as its production office, damaging compositions, music scores, photos and records that date back to 1971.

Pipe burst Friday in choir's office, damaging compositions that were never published commercially

Storage boxes were soaked after the pipe burst. The office stored thousands of choir performances of works by Canadian composers. (Submitted by Vancouver Chamber Choir)

The Vancouver Chamber Choir says a flood has destroyed its nearly half-century-old music library and archives.

A pipe burst Friday at the Hodson Manor, a city-owned heritage house in Fairview that the choir has used as its production office since the 1980s.

More than a metre of water engulfed the basement office, damaging compositions, music scores, photos and records that date back to 1971, according to the organization.

The choir had stored 334 new choral works by nearly 150 composers and arrangers across Canada. Many of the compositions were provided directly by the composers and never published commercially.

"The flood is devastating," executive director Steven Bélanger said in a release. "But we intend to salvage what we can and work diligently to move forward with the upcoming concert season, as planned."

The choir's office is situated in the basement of the Hodson Manor, a city-owned heritage home built in 1894. (Christine Leviczky Riek/Vancouver Heritage Foundation)

The choir was about to start digitizing its physical copies before the flooding happened. A restoration team is now cataloguing the contents of the office and Bélanger said a small portion of the material might be salvaged.

Insurance adjusters are still assessing the damage and the cost of the damage isn't yet known, Bélanger said. 

For now, the choir will operate out of the main floor of the heritage house. It's not clear when staff will be able to return to their former office.

"The damage is extensive," Bélanger said. "I can't imagine anything but complete demolition and reconstruction."