With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.
Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/493600
66 BCBusiness May 2015 ILLUSTRaTION By GaRy CLEMENT John Evans's FavoURITEs 1. "Nothing beats Cioppino's Mediterranean Grill & enoteca (1133 Hamilton St., Vancouver; cioppinos.wordpress .com) for dinner with chef Pino Posteraro." 2. "I usually grab a coffee in Giovane Café (1038 Canada Pl., Vancouver; giovanecafe.com) at the Fairmont Pacific Rim, as I live in the tower." 3. "I'm a fan of breakfast meetings either here at La Pentola (350 Davie St., Vancouver; lapentola.ca) or Caffè Artigiano (various locations; caffeartigiano.com)." O pus Hotel founder John deCourcey Evans takes in his stride A-listers such as Lady Gaga and Anthony Bourdain regularly rocking up to his Yaletown establishment. It seems harder to be nonchalant, however, over the infamous story about guest Ben Affleck and some strippers. "Now that was a celebrity happening," the president and CEO of Trilogy Group of Compa- nies muses on the episode in 2003, a year af- ter the boutique hotel opened ( Jennifer Lopez broke off their engagement after the actor was caught at nearby Brandi's Show Lounge). "The National Enquirer was camped across the street, and the whole world was inter- ested in what he was up to." It underscores part of the obvious worldwide appeal of being in the hotel business, explains the 65-year-old Calgary na- tive and UBC commerce grad. "Hotels are coveted," says Evans, whose other Trilogy projects in- clude Vancouver's Westin Grand Hotel and University Mar- ketPlace at UBC. He formed Triology in 1991 after 11 years at Intrawest—where he steered a billion-dollar real-estate development with Joe Houssain—and two years at Strand Proper- ties Corp. "There's all the mystique and intrigue— it's a stage on which people can behave differently from at home, and it's fun and exciting." It's also a business now expanding to Rich- mond after Opus Hotels signed a franchise agreement with MoYeung International Enter- prise Ltd. for the 100-room Opus Hotel Versante, slated to open in 2017 in MoYeung's International Trade Centre development. (A victim of the re- cession, Opus's Montreal location was relatively shortlived, from 2009 to 2012, and Evans says he never found the right deal in Toronto.) The former president of the Urban Develop- ment Institute of Canada and Pacific Region is also leading the charge for CAYET, a new 700-acre development mixing commercial with 650 single- family lots and 600 multi-family units in the Co- mox Valley (he describes it as the "most amenity- rich, affordable place to go in British Columbia"). "Development is always about timing. If the fun- damentals are sound then it will happen—it's only a matter of with what degree of rapidity," he says. As a transit aficionado whose business undeni- ably benefited from the Canada Line (Yaletown- Roundhouse station is opposite the Opus), Evans is hoping for a Yes vote in this month's transit ref- erendum. "This region with the water, mountains and all of the other ob- structions needs to continue to be a model city and environmen- tally conscious, and mass transit is brilliant," Evans says over put- tanesca at the hotel's restaurant, La Pentola. That said, he thinks the issue should have been dealt with by politicians: "We elect people because we think they are learned, that they will do the necessary homework and then make the best decisions—so the conclusion I come to is that this question should not have gone to a referendum." Based in Coal Harbour, Evans also has prop- erty in Mexico and spends time travelling there as well as Arizona, the home of his Mexican/ naturalized American husband, Rene Busta- mante, a computer scientist with whom he has launched a software start-up, Utiya. From a for- mer relationship, Evans has four grown-up chil- dren and three grandchildren. When in Vancouver, Evans spins four days a week and continues to fundraise for the Dr. Peter HIV/AIDS Foundation (he was board chair from 2007 to 2013). "I see most of my life through the growing up and success of my family firstly, then the dates projects opened—and I'm proud of them all," he says. "However, there's no doubt in my mind that the work I've done in the not-for-profit sector has given me a big personal payback." n Room with a View Developer John Evans on celebrity run-ins at Opus Hotels, why transit matters and the virtues of giving back by Lucy Hyslop Next MoNth Lucy talks with Charles Chang from Vega, famous for its vegan protein shakes L u n c h w i t h L u c y