Vancouver All Grown Up
The Vancouver
skyline rises from a sparkling harbor.
The Young city
is all grown up Vancouver has handled its population explosion flawlessly,
preserving its roots and showcasing its beauty
Vancouver has consistently
been ranked among the world's top 10 cities to visit by Traveler and Travel +
Leisure magazines, and it ranks as the world's third-best city for quality of
life in the Mercer Human Resource Foundation's annual survey, based on 39
criteria including housing, health, education, economy, environment, recreation,
politics and public services. What's good for residents is good for travelers.
Vancouver is a bargain also because Canada is one of the few developed countries
where our dollar is still strong.
Vancouver offers the best of both worlds, foreign yet familiar. While many
believe Canada is just like America, don't say that north of the border, for
they are proud of their distinctive culture and separate identity.
Vancouver's modern skyline is dominated by attractive high-rises built during
the last few decades. Real estate values have rocketed in recent years, and its
economy is booming. From 1987 to 1992, following the success of Expo 86, which
attracted 20 million visitors, the city's population increased 17 percent. The
urban population, at about 530,000, is the fastest-growing on the continent, but
this growth was managed in a way that enhanced the quality of life, proving that
such a difficult challenge can be resolved in our modern world.
This is a city of high culture, with a fine art museum in the town center,
many smaller galleries and performing arts centers, beautiful parks, plentiful
shopping, World Class
Events
and you will never go hungry in this city of international cuisine.

Start your visit in the 12-block urban core bounded by Georgia, Granville and
Burrard streets. Walk up and down these main streets, plus Howe, Pender and
Hornby, to get a feel for the city. Vancouver is laid out in a grid, making it
easy to navigate on foot. This central business district is full of office
towers, but at the street level you will find mostly retail shop-fronts. The
urban curse of vast blank walls along the sidewalk, found too often in America,
has been avoided here. This segment of Granville is an automobile-free mall for
pedestrians and city buses, lined with shops and anchored by two major
department stores, the Bay and Sears, so it makes for a great stroll and useful
transit hub.
Pacific Centre:
140 shops occupy two blocks in this underground mall, carrying on the Canadian
tradition of a subterranean city in the heart of town. Before getting lost
underground, remember this is just another mall: Take a quick walk through, then
return to the streets. Die-hard shoppers can return later. Accommodations are
very close to the Mall with Century
Plaza Hotel and Spa,
Days Inn Downtown, Marriott
Pinnacle Vancouver, Delta
Vancouver Hotel, Fairmont
Hotel Vancouver, Hyatt Regency
Vancouver, Sutton Place Hotel,
and Wedgewood Hotel only being steps
away.
Vancouver Art Gallery: This museum, one of the city's focal points, is
located on Georgia between Hornby and Howe. Situated inside a former courthouse,
it is primarily a showcase for changing exhibits but also has a small permanent
collection featuring paintings by Emily Carr and other local artists, along with
a few great European moderns, such as Picasso. You don't have to pay museum
admission if you just want to enjoy lunch or a light snack in the Gallery Cafˇ
and perhaps sit at an outdoor table on the terrace overlooking Robson Street.
Canada Place:
This mixed-use waterfront development at the end of Hornby and Howe is a great
place to enjoy harbor views while picking up free travel information and book
events at the
Trade and Convention Centre. The massive pier, built for Expo 86, looks like
a sailboat, with 80-foot Teflon sails that have become a Vancouver landmark.
About 250 ships leave here each year for popular Alaska cruises. There is no
need to walk the pier because there's no better view from the end.
Three other attractions of interest are the deluxe
Pan Pacific Hotel, a lovely place to
stay; the IMAX Theater, if you want to use precious travel time sitting in a
movie; and a terrific Waterfront
Centre Hotel and food court at the underground Metro station.
A row of glass towers linked by a waterfront promenade is springing up at
Pacific Place. When completed, this $3 billion master-planned community will
provide homes for 15,000 people. Twenty-nine of 50 towers, averaging 30 stories,
have been completed with Hong Kong financing.
Two blocks toward Gastown is Harbor Centre, which has the best observation
lounge for viewing the city, 548 feet above street level. This sky-high,
circular gallery gives you a 360-degree panorama, with vistas of the town,
mountains, inlet and port of Vancouver.
Gastown: Vancouver's first
settlement began mid-19th century in Gastown, the Old Town of stone and brick
buildings. It was the heart of downtown until 100 years ago when the main train
station was built a few blocks west, shifting business away from this district.
It's become a great place for shopping, dining and wandering. This
neighborhood is just three blocks long, on Water Street, but has so much
character and interesting shops that it seems much bigger.
One of Gastown's attractions is the Steam Clock at Cambie and Water streets.
It produces wonderful sounds like an organ or calliope every hour from steam
vents on top of the clock. Shorter performances run on the quarter-hour, so
there are plenty of opportunities to check it out.
The Landing, Gastown's small and only shopping mall, warrants a visit so that
you can gaze through the large window at the harbor panorama down below.
From Gassy Jack's statue you are in good position to walk along Carrall
Street a few blocks over to Chinatown. Be advised, you are about to pass through
the worst part of town, full of scruffy characters and a few drunks. It's a
touch of the old skid row that sadly lingers today. Once past Hasting, you are
in Chinatown.
Chinatown:
Vancouver is home to the third-largest Chinatown in North America, just behind
New York and San Francisco. It's a great place to get a meal of dim sum.
Chinatown covers about 10 square blocks, centered at Pender and Main, between
Jackson and Columbia. You will find restaurants, herb shops, clothing and more.
Recent renovations include fresh red paint on the buildings, new Chinese-motif
streets signs, scrubbed sidewalks and graffiti-less walls.
Chinatown is still a main market for Asian groceries and cuisine. Fresh
vegetables are brought in daily from nearby farms. Hon's Wonton House is one of
Chinatown's popular restaurants.
A star Chinatown attraction is the Dr. Sun Yet Sen Classical Chinese Garden
and Park, at Pender and Keefer streets. This scholar's garden is a peaceful zone
with ponds, willow trees and paths amidst bamboo groves.
On summer weekend nights there is a Chinatown Night Market, with stalls and
tables set up along Keefer Street between Main and Gore. A lively block party
fills the streets with entertainment through 11 p.m.
Saving the best for last, travel one mile by bus or taxi cross-town from
Chinatown to Robson Street, the hippest place in town. Walking will take 25
minutes through some bland parts of town, although you could swing past the
stunning new public library on Georgia at Hamilton to admire this neo-Coliseum
designed by Moshe Safdie (of Montreal Habitat fame).
Robson Street:
One of the most enjoyable activities in any town is strolling and
people-watching on the busiest street, and in Vancouver that street is Robson,
between Hornby and Nicola. It has an entertaining mix of specialty stores,
coffee shops, bars and restaurants that attract throngs from around the world.
There are so many coffee shops they have two Starbucks at the same intersection,
facing each other across Thurlow Street.
Robson's wide sidewalks are ideal for window shopping, with trees and awnings
to shelter you from the elements. The street was called Robsonstrasse in the
1960s because of the large number of German delis and bakeries, and some of that
European ambience remains.
A couple blocks away is a lovely residential district, the West End. It is
the most densely populated major neighborhood in Canada, yet it is very livable.
Though filled with high-rise apartments, it doesn't feel overly crowded due to a
dynamic balance of a large population but well-planned community that allows
sufficient space between buildings, buffered by trees and greenery. On the west
edge is a long stretch of sandy beach that is extremely popular in summer. Many
a Hotels are on Robson street because of it's
great location to downtown
attractions

Stanley Park: Vancouver, like
most cities, does not have much going on for visitors early in the morning, so
it's a good time to explore the park. The north end of downtown is bordered by
Stanley Park, at 1,000 acres one of the largest urban parks in North America,
larger than New York Central Park's 840 acres and designed by the same landscape
architect, Frederick Law Olmstead.
One efficient way to see Stanley Park is by bicycle, which you can rent near
the park entrance. You can pedal around the popular 6.5-mile seawall perimeter
route, or walk it in a couple of brisk hours, passing several beaches, green
lawns and scenic points. The seawall is alive with joggers, walkers and bikers
along a path that circles the park. In a few hours you will see many of Stanley
Park's attractions including Beaver Lake and Lost Lagoon, and sample some of the
bike routes that criss-cross through the forests. Walkers get a boost from free
shuttle buses operating from mid-May through mid-September, with 15 stops
throughout the park.
Another way to see the park is by taking a standard city tour, which will
usually stop at a collection of totem poles created by Northwest Coast Indians.
The totems were carved and painted by contemporary artists, in the traditional
style, to represent tribal gods and legends. There are several sites to stop for
a meal, such as the excellent Fish House Restaurant along Lagoon Drive, and the
Tea House Restaurant on the shore.
One of the world's largest and best
aquariums is in
Stanley Park. The Vancouver Aquarium Marine Science Centre doesn't put on glitzy
Sea World-type animal circus acts, but instead offers an authentic look at the
natural life of some 8,000 marine creatures from around the world. Displays
include the Canadian Arctic, Amazon tropics, Micronesian lagoon, Canada's
Pacific, B.C. forest streams, Indo-Pacific coral reefs, beluga whales, sharks,
dolphins, otters, manatees and much more.
Emerge from the park on the west side at lovely English Bay. For a look at
another popular district, head up Denman Street, a hip enclave of shops and
restaurants that extends nine blocks toward the park entrance. This trendy
street offers a ethnic eateries reflecting the city's cosmopolitan texture:
Italian, Thai, Korean, Mexican, Vietnamese and French, along with typical delis
and bakeries. If you rented a bike, return it now to Spokes, or hang on to it
for more of today's itinerary.
Those on foot can reach our next destination by catching city bus No. 15 at
the start of Robson Street, which takes you south to Cambie Street at Nelson.
Yaletown: This former warehouse
and factory zone has been called the SoHo of Vancouver, home of the hipster and
urban professional scene. Yaletown was a forgotten, run-down industrial district
that has been transformed during the past decade as new apartments, residential
lofts, art galleries, cafes, bars, restaurants and trendy shops have opened.
Most of the action is clustered in the few blocks along Mainland and Hamilton
streets, south of Nelson. The old brick warehouses have been preserved,
including some of the truck-loading docks that now serve as convenient platforms
for sidewalk cafes.
Check out award-winning pubs like Yaletown Brewing, posh restaurants like
Section 3, fancy boutiques like Atomic Model, along with oddball and stylish
shops; and if you'd like to spend the night,
Opus is your best choice to stay. Yaletown is not a touristy neighborhood
(don't bother looking for souvenir shops), but you will have a chance to mingle
with locals.
Yaletown extends to the water's edge at
False Creek, and just across
this narrow inlet you'll find Granville Island, another attractive neighborhood.
Granville Island:
A peninsula rather than an island, Granville is home to 250 shops, restaurants,
galleries and other entertaining venues. Its centerpiece is the famous Public
Market, which has 50,000 square feet of fresh produce trucked in by farmers who
man booths here.
The easiest way to get here from Yaletown is by a tiny shuttle boat, the
Aquabus (www.aquabus.bc.ca),
which can be boarded at the foot of Homer or Davie street. You could take the
False Creek Ferry (www.granvilleislandferries.bc.ca)
from the Aquatic Center or Stamp's Landing, or get to Granville by public bus
No. 50.
Granville Island was once the city's main industrial area, but businesses
moved away in the mid-20th century. Granville became an abandoned mess until it
was reborn as this grand shopping area, offering dining, shopping, entertainment
and fine arts.
One of Granville's main restaurants is Bridges, with indoor dining on two
levels and an outdoor terrace overlooking the marina with its sweeping view of
downtown across the water. Dockside Restaurant, Sammy J. Peppers, Sandbar and
Tony's Fish & Oyster Cafe are more excellent dining choices, and dozens of fine
little bistros and cafes are sprinkled through little lanes.
Other highlights include the Maritime Market, filled with all things
nautical; the Granville Island Brewery for sampling microbrews; Model Ships
Museum; Arts Umbrella and Arts Club theaters; Sea Village, a houseboat
community; fishing docks; and salmon smokehouse.
Granville festivals: Festivals take place on Granville Island
throughout the year, but the most spectacular is the Vancouver Fringe Festival,
which presents about 500 events during a 10-day period in mid-September (www.vancouverfringe.com).
There are many festivals throughout Vancouver during the year, so check
www.tourismvancouver.com for details.

University of British Columbia: Set on a beautiful college campus 30
minutes by public bus No. 4 from the east end of Granville Street, the
University of British Columbia's Museum of Anthropology has Canada's finest
collection of Northwest Coast native art and aboriginal objects from around the
world. Plant lovers will enjoy the university's Botanical Garden, open
year-round with Canada's largest rhododendron collection, a lush forest, and
Asian and Alpine gardens. If it's a warm day, the clothing-optional Wreck Beach
lies on the edge of campus.
Vancouver Museum: Using the latest display techniques, this
100-year-old museum tells the story of Vancouver's history from prehistoric days
through today. Realistic environments give you the feeling of being back in a
trading post, in the berth of a 19th-century passenger ship or sitting in an
Edwardian parlor. The exploration and settlement of Vancouver are overall themes
of the displays, which also feature temporary exhibits, lately covering
skateboards, Sasquatch, ceramics, basket makers and the 1950s. Public bus No. 22
and a transfer to No. 17 brings you here from the university in about 20
minutes. When finished, head for Science World from Heritage Harbour on the
Granville Island Ferry, or take bus No. 22 to the Skytrain metro at Burrard
Street.
Science World: With
hundreds of interactive exhibits in five unique galleries, this is a
crowd-pleaser. IMAX and high-def movies are presented along with laser shows and
other multimedia extravaganzas. Live shows are presented all day at Centre Stage
on fun, educational topics like fire, flight, illusions, sound and electricity.
Get here by metro from downtown
or via Aquabus from Granville.
Capilano Suspension
Bridge: This shaky, pedestrian suspension foot bridge is another
outstanding attraction. It hangs 230 high above a narrow chasm with a raging
river at the bottom, and the adventurous can't resist walking along the bridge
and making it swing back and forth. It's a thrilling experience. Some people
have trouble getting across, while others can do it walking backward with a
smile. It's fun either way.
In a nearby redwood grove is a nature trail with manicured paths and
reflecting ponds. It's a surprise to come across this patch of forest so close
to the city. There is also a fascinating American Indian woodcarving center
where you can watch artists making totem poles and smaller items available for
purchase in their gift shop. You can get here in one hour via city bus No. 240
from Granville Mall, transferring to bus No. 246.
Other activities: There is an endless variety of day trips from
Vancouver that could keep you busy for a week or two: golfing, kayaking,
fishing, white-water rafting, mall-hopping, nature hikes, boat excursions, trips
up nearby mountains and more. One of the outstanding trips by train or tour bus
is to Whistler Mountain, which has become North America's top ski resort and is
a year-round destination due to its natural beauty and Alpine-style village
atmosphere.
An easier trip is to the 3,700-foot summit of Grouse Mountain, affording a
beautiful view across the city and beyond. Reaching Grouse Mountain is easy with
a SeaBus ride across the harbor from Waterfront Station to Lonsdale Quay, then a
short ride on bus No. 236 to the cable car that brings you to the top.
Another trip is to Victoria on Vancouver Island, which could be reached in
three hours by bus and ferry, or in 30 minutes by seaplane. Victoria is such a
beautiful place that it is worth spending another three days there,
If you go...
Hotels
Across the street from the Vancouver Art Gallery is the impressive
Fairmont Hotel Vancouver, the
grand dame of city lodgings. It was built by Canadian Pacific as one of its
deluxe railway hotels, but now they are all operated by Canada's Fairmont chain,
the country's leading luxury hotel group. The current building was opened in
1939 and has recently undergone a $50 million renovation to bring it back up to
five-star standards. Fairmont has a second luxury hotel, The
Waterfront Hotel Vancouvert,
a few blocks away at Canada Place. Downtown offers several other excellent
hotels, including the Sheraton
Vancouver Wall Centre Le Soleil Hotel
, Century Plaza Hotel and Spa,
Blue Horizon Hotel,
Park Plaza Hotel and
Westin Grand Hotel Vancouver to name
a few
Restaurants
Downtown
Beyond Restaurant and Lounge 1015
Burrard at the Century Plaza Hotel
» 900 West: Hotel Vancouver, 900 Georgia St. W. 604-669-9378
www.hotelvancouver.com.
» Boathouse, English Bay: 1795 Beach Ave. 604-669-2225.
www.boathouserestaurants.ca
» Caffe de Medici: Four Seasons Hotel, 791 W. Georgia. 604-844-6715.
» Cin Cin: 1154 Robson St. 604-688-7338.
» Il Giardino: 1382 Hornby St. 604-669-2422.
» Piccolo Mondo: 850 Thurlow St. 604-688-1633.
Granville Island
» Bridges: 1696 Duranleau St. 604-687-4400;
www.bridgesrestaurant.com;
» Dockside: 1253 Johnston St. 604-685-7070;
www.docksidebrewing.com.
» Sammy J. Peppers: 1517 Anderson St. 604-696-0739
www.sjpeppers.com.
» Sandbar #9, The Creekhouse:1535 Johnston St. 604-669-9030
www.sequoiarestaurants.com/sandbar_main.html.
» Tony's Fish & Oyster Cafe: 1517B Anderson St. 604-683-7127.
Chinatown
» Foo's Ho Ho Restaurant: 102 E. Pender St. 604-609-2889.
» Gain Wah Restaurant: 218 Keefer St. 604-684-1740.
» Hon's Wun-Tun House: 268 Keefer St. 604-688-0871.
» Fish House: 8901 Stanley Park Drive. 604-681-7275.
Yaletown
» Milestone's Grill & Bar: 1109 Hamilton St. 604-684-9111
www.milestonesrestaurants.com.
» Yaletown Brewing Co.: 1111 Mainland St. 604-681-2739.
www.drinkfreshbeer.com.
» Cioppino's: 1133 Hamilton St. 604-688-7466.