For a truly west coast mountain experience, you have to check out the new meeting and event room at Mt Seymour. Being of the avid outdoorsy type, we've always appreciated the proximity of the north shore mountains and how quickly one can be transported from a busy urban environment to stunningly beautiful vistas, a range of accessible outdoor activities, and clean, fresh air. Mt Seymour offers an event space suitable for corporate meetings, wedding & gala receptions, team building events, and more. Combine that with unbeatable views and the natural park setting and you've got the foundation of a pretty unique event / activity experience. Contact us to discuss event ideas utilizing this exclusive venue. We met Jiny and 1DUCK at the Indie I Do Wedding show last January. They were busily planning, researching, and trying to manage the 100's of details that go into planning a wedding. They chose the beautiful Coal Harbour Community Centre as a location and reFresh helped with staging, setup, and lighting & table decor. It was a beautiful reception held on one of those sunny weekends in Vancouver when the air is clean, the sky is a rich blue, and the North Shore mountains leap into the air. More photos Live horse racing at Hastings Racecourse takes a break during the dark, rainy months of winter. When the season starts up again in the spring, crowds come from far and wide to be a part of the energy and excitement of the annual Opening Weekend. Hastings Racecourse threw a great party and reFresh Events added a colourful & classy feel to the venue with the use of 3 colour silk fabric bunting. A balloon arch and balloon clusters also added height to the colour and a some playful fun - who doesn't love balloons anyways? More photos We have created a new wedding decor prop for couples that would like to incorporate their passion for biking into their event. We sketched and modelled a wedding arch design and commissioned local bike artist Steve Mitchell (bikeartist.ca) to add his design style and fabricate the structure. Steve works with recycled and reclaimed bicycle parts and built our bike arch out of a simple steel frame and dozens of chain rings in various sizes. The colour of the raw steel picks up hints of light beautifully and the chain rings really add a not-to-feminine yet not-to-masculine feel to a space. We are very pleased. The bicycle wedding arch was on display at the Indie I Do (indieido.com) wedding show and is now available to rent. Please contact us for details and design ideas. info@refreshevents.ca With the Olympic games here in Vancouver, sustainability seems to be a buzz word given to just about everything. It got me thinking: what is sustainability and how can we make it last. When I consider it, I ask: will people in a hundred years be able to do this? Will my great-grandchildren be able to do what I do or have the choices I have? If not, what choices do I have to make now in order to give future generations the same options I had. Unlike some, I don’t believe technology will inevitably save the day (or the world). We can and should invest in green technology. That is a public choice that will provide us better options down the road, but it will not be equal to or greater than the poor choices we make today. I believe that our choices make our future and all come with a cost - paid now or paid later. If paid later, usually with interest. To me, sustainability means making choices that can be repeated for generations. So what will help make us good choices now? This is tantamount to the original question – how do we keep sustainability sustained? This is a tough question. Fear? But it begets gloom, despair, and paralysis. Not a good choice. Knowledge helps. At this point, however, it seems that we all get that our present situation is not repeatable, expandable, or sufficient for future generations. Call it collective intuition, but we know things can’t go on as they do. Action is best. Not necessarily the world shattering, lets start a green revolution kind of action (revolutions seldom last), but more simple stuff. Make one extra right choice a week and keep it. Make little changes in your routine. And, demand one extra right choice in your world: be it your city councilor, or bank, or workplace, or grocer, or contractor, or whoever. Be change and demand change. Not much to ask, really. Little changes change everything. And, they are sustainable.
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