Purpose LGBT community Executive Director CJ Rowe Type of business community centre | Region served British Columbia Website Qmunity.ca Phone +1 604-684-5307 | |
Location 1170 Bute StreetVancouver, BC V6E 1Z6 Hours Open today · 10AM–6PMMonday10AM–6PMTuesday10AM–6PMWednesday10AM–6PMThursday10AM–6PMFriday10AM–6PMSaturdayClosedSundayClosedSuggest an edit Similar Him Health Initiative For Men, Three Bridges Communi, CBI Care Point Medical, Coal Harbour Medical, BC Centre for Disease Control Profiles |
Qmunity (officially QMUNITY, BC's Queer Resource Centre Society), formerly known as The Centre, is an LGBTQ community centre located on Bute Street in the Davie Village neighbourhood of the West End of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. As of 2012, it is led by executive director Dara Parker.
Contents
Qmunity 2016
Activities and programs
Qmunity houses or operates a number of programs and initiatives, including the Vancouver Pride House; Gab Youth Services, a program targeted toward LGBT youth; and the Transgender Health Program, a program operated in cooperation with the Vancouver Coastal Health regional health authority and which moved to Qmunity after Vancouver General Hospital's Gender Clinic closed in 2002.
Pride House Vancouver
The Vancouver location of Pride House was housed within Qmunity. During the 2010 Winter Olympics, the Vancouver and Whistler Pride Houses served as venues for LGBT sportspeople, coaches, visitors and their friends, families and supporters, and became the first Pride Houses at an Olympics. Although both Pride Houses offered information and support services to LGBT athletes and attendees, the Whistler location in Pan Pacific Village Centre had a "celebratory theme", while the Vancouver venue emphasised education about Vancouver's LGBT community and, for non-Canadian athletes, information about immigration to and asylum in Canada, including "legal resources" from Egale Canada and the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (IGLA).
Notable visitors to Pride House Vancouver include openly gay Canadian Olympic swimmers Mark Tewksbury and Marion Lay, as well as Vancouver mayor Gregor Robertson and American political satirist Stephen Colbert.