🌺 Casa Mia: A Mansion of Music, Mischief, and Vancouver Legend
In 1975, I was in the hospital having surgery. I was in a two bed ward and the nice older lady I was with told me her son bought Casa Mia but had sold it. She said it needed a lot of repair work. She also said, if he owned a couple of animals, he could claim it as a farm and pay very low taxes, which he did. She also said he founded "Happy Honda" that existed at that time in North Burnaby. I don't remember her name, but she was a lovely lady and I loved this story. I believed it at the time and it probably was true but I could never verify it. It doesn't really matter. Every time I drive down SW Marine Drive, I remember that lady.
If you drive along Southwest Marine Drive — that elegant ribbon of road once known as Vancouver’s “Millionaire’s Row” — you’ll eventually come upon a grand pink‑hued estate perched above the river. It’s easy to miss if you’re not looking for it, but once you see it, Casa Mia has a way of staying with you.
It isn’t just a mansion. It’s a time capsule. A whisper of jazz-age glamour. A reminder that Vancouver’s history is far more colourful than its polite exterior suggests. And at the centre of it all is the Reifel family — brewers, builders, philanthropists, and, depending on who you ask, a little bit of trouble.
🍸 A Mansion Built on Beer, Grit, and Guts
Casa Mia was completed in 1932, during the depths of the Great Depression — a time when most Vancouverites were tightening belts, not commissioning Spanish Colonial Revival palaces. But the Reifels were not “most Vancouverites.”
The family fortune came from brewing and distilling. They ran the Canadian Brewing and Malting Company, the BC Distillery, and several other ventures that kept Vancouver well‑supplied with beer — even during the awkward years of prohibition, when “near beer” was the only legal option.
Let’s just say the Reifels understood supply and demand better than most.
George C. Reifel, the man behind Casa Mia, wanted a home that reflected both his success and his taste for the theatrical. So he hired architect Ross A. Lort, who delivered a mansion that looked like it had been plucked from the hills of Santa Barbara and dropped gently onto Marine Drive.
🎶 The Ballroom Where Vancouver Learned to Dance
Step inside Casa Mia and you’re greeted by a sweeping staircase, ornate plasterwork, and a sense that the walls have stories they’re dying to tell. But the real magic lies downstairs.
Hidden beneath the main floor is a full Art Deco ballroom, complete with a sprung dance floor, gold‑leaf ceiling, and acoustics designed for big-band music. It wasn’t just a room — it was a stage.
And the Reifels knew how to use it.
They were the same family behind the Commodore Ballroom, the Vogue Theatre, and the Studio Theatre. Vancouver’s nightlife — its pulse, its rhythm, its swagger — was shaped by the Reifels long before neon signs lit up Granville Street.
So when they threw a party at Casa Mia, it wasn’t a quiet affair. Politicians, entertainers, business leaders — they all passed through those doors. The ballroom became a kind of unofficial cultural salon, where deals were made, gossip flowed, and Vancouver’s future was shaped over cocktails and jazz.
🎨 A Disney Surprise in the Nursery
One of Casa Mia’s most charming secrets sits upstairs: a nursery painted in 1938 by artists from Walt Disney Studios. Imagine being a child waking up to Snow White and woodland creatures dancing across your walls — a private fairytale created just for you. It’s one of the few Disney‑designed residential murals in Canada, and it remains protected to this day.
🕰️ From Family Estate to Heritage Treasure
The Reifels lived in Casa Mia until 1965, after which the mansion passed through several hands. By the early 2000s, its future was uncertain — too large for a single family, too important to lose.
Heritage advocates stepped in, and after years of planning, Casa Mia found a new purpose:
a seniors’ residence that preserves the mansion’s historic heart while adding modern care facilities behind it. Today, the ballroom still gleams. The Disney murals still charm. And Casa Mia continues to watch over Marine Drive, a grand old dame with stories to spare.
🌟 Why Casa Mia Still Matters
Casa Mia isn’t just a house. It’s a reminder of a Vancouver that dared to dream big — sometimes too big, sometimes boldly, always colourfully. It tells the story of a family who shaped the city’s nightlife, its architecture, and even its scandals.
It shows how heritage can be preserved not by freezing time, but by giving old places new life.
And it stands as a testament to the idea that behind every grand façade, there’s a human story — full of ambition, creativity, contradictions, and heart.