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Vancouver
Frequently ranked among the world's most liveable cities (Mercer Quality of Living world top 5), between the Pacific Ocean and North Shore Mountains, one of North America's most beautiful cities with an exceptional Asian-fusion scene.
Vancouver (662,000 inhabitants within city limits, 2.8 million with its Metro Vancouver metropolitan area) is the economic and cultural metropolis of British Columbia and Canada's 3rd largest city (after Toronto and Montreal). Located on a peninsula between Burrard Inlet to the north and the Fraser River delta to the south, wedged between the Pacific Ocean to the west and the North Shore Mountains to the east (Grouse 1,231 m and Cypress 1,469 m, often snow-capped in winter), with its glass skyline facing the sea, Vancouver is one of North America's most beautiful cities — frequently ranked among the world's most liveable cities (Mercer Quality of Living, world top 5 over the past decade).
The city stands out for its assumed multiculturalism — 40% of the population of Asian origin (North America's 2nd Chinatown after San Francisco, Indo-Canadian communities notably Punjabi in Surrey, Japanese, Filipino, Korean communities), its integration of nature into the urban fabric (Stanley Park 1,000 acres in downtown, 28 km seawall trail around the peninsula, urban beaches at English Bay and Kitsilano, skiing 30 min from downtown, kayaking on Burrard Inlet), its exceptional gastronomy scene (one of the world's best Asian-fusion, remarkable Pacific seafood) and its relaxed West Coast atmosphere (yoga, athleisure fashion, indie coffee, Sunday brunch, biking culture).
Neighbourhoods to explore: Downtown (skyscrapers, Robson Street shopping, BC Place, Rogers Arena for Canucks NHL), West End (elegant residential facing English Bay, Davie Village LGBTQ+), Gastown (historic 1860 neighbourhood, paved streets, iconic Steam Clock 1977, gourmet restaurants L'Abattoir, Wildebeest, distilleries), Yaletown (former railway neighbourhood restored into trendy skyscraper district, breweries, cafés), Chinatown (North America's 2nd, Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden first traditional Chinese garden outside China, dim sum restaurants), Granville Island (peninsula under Granville Bridge, Public Market with exceptional local produce, breweries, art galleries, theatres — the must-do), Kitsilano ("Kits", trendy seaside neighbourhood west of False Creek, Kits Beach, raw fish restaurants, yoga studios), Mount Pleasant (Main Street, indie cafés and shops), Commercial Drive ("The Drive", multicultural Italo-Portuguese-Ethiopian).
Flagship activities: Stanley Park (1,000 acres in downtown, North America's largest urban park after Central Park, seawall trail 10 km around the peninsula flat and accessible — Vancouver's iconic experience by bike or on foot 1h30 — Pacific Ocean and North Shore Mountains view, Pacific coast Indigenous totems, English Bay, Sunset Beach, Vancouver Aquarium), Granville Island Public Market (morning, exceptional local produce, Pacific seafood, breweries, galleries — 10am-7pm, free, walk from Downtown via Aquabus mini-ferry CAD 4), Capilano Suspension Bridge Park (in North Vancouver, 25 min by bus from downtown, 137 m long suspension bridge at 70 m above the canyon, Treetops Adventure in canopy, Cliffwalk overhanging balconies, CAD 70 adult — Vancouver's most visited attraction), Lynn Canyon Park (free alternative to Capilano, more authentic, 50 m above Lynn canyon, free North Vancouver park), Grouse Mountain ("Skyride" cable car to 1,250 m, CAD 75, panoramic Vancouver and Pacific Ocean view, bears in enclosure, skiing in winter — North Shore must-do), VanDusen Botanical Garden (botanical garden 22 ha, CAD 13, plant maze, Festival of Lights in December), Museum of Anthropology (UBC) (one of the world's best anthropology museums, exceptional Pacific coast Indigenous collection with monumental Haida totems, CAD 18, at University of British Columbia 25 min from centre), Queen Elizabeth Park (city's highest point at 152 m, panoramic view of Downtown and North Shore Mountains, Bloedel plant conservatory).
Vancouver's gastronomy scene is among North America's most exceptional — particularly renowned for Asian-fusion cuisine (legacy of massive Chinese and Indian diaspora). To try: dim sum at Sun Sui Wah (Chinatown, Cantonese dim sum CAD 25-50/person) or Kirin (3 addresses, more upscale), sushi at Tojo's (chef Hidekazu Tojo, inventor of the California Roll, omakase CAD 200), Miku (aburi flame-seared sushi, CAD 80-130), Minami (Yaletown, modern version), ramen at Marutama Ramen (Robson Street, tonkotsu ramen CAD 15-22) or Santouka (Robson), izakaya at Guu with Garlic (Robson Street), Indian at Vij's (modernist institution, CAD 50-100/person) or Sula Indian (authentic Indian cuisine), Pacific seafood at Boulevard Kitchen (Sutton Place Hotel, CAD 80-150), Blue Water Cafe (Yaletown, high-end seafood CAD 90-160), Bar Oso (Spanish). Fine dining: Hawksworth (Rosewood Hotel Georgia, Michelin star, tasting menu CAD 195), St. Lawrence (Quebec gastronomy in Vancouver, CAD 90-150), Burdock & Co (creative locavore).
Winter brings rain (Vancouver is nicknamed "Raincouver" for its 200 mm/month in November-December, 200-300 rainy days per year), but also skiing accessible 30 min from downtown: Grouse Mountain (lift pass CAD 80-110/day, night skiing Friday-Saturday), Cypress Mountain (host of 2010 Olympics freestyle skiing, lift pass CAD 100-130), Mount Seymour (the most economical, CAD 80-100). Complementary: VanDusen Festival of Lights (December 1-January 3, 1 million lights, magical), Stanley Park Bright Nights (illuminated mini train, mid-November-early January), free skating at Robson Square (skate rental CAD 5). Vancouver is one of the few cities in the world where you can ski in the morning on Grouse, kayak in the afternoon on Burrard Inlet, and dine gastronomic in the evening in Yaletown — the same day.
What we love
- ✅Canada's most dynamic city, world top 5 quality of life (Mercer), between Pacific Ocean and mountains
- ✅Stanley Park: 1,000 acres in downtown (2nd N.A. urban park), iconic 28 km seawall trail bike/walk
- ✅Granville Island: Public Market, breweries, galleries (must-do walk via Aquabus from Downtown)
- ✅Exceptional Asian-fusion scene: Chinatown dim sum, Tojo's sushi (California Roll inventor), Miku, Marutama
- ✅Integrated outdoor life: skiing 30 min (Grouse-Cypress), Burrard Inlet kayaking, Tofino surfing 5h, North Shore hiking
What to know
- ❌Near-constant rain in winter: 200 mm/month November-December, 200-300 days/year — nicknamed "Raincouver"
- ❌High cost: Vancouver among Canada's most expensive cities (hotels CAD 250-450/night in summer)
- ❌English only (very little French unlike Montreal)
- ❌Visible homelessness crisis in Downtown Eastside (Hastings Street, to cross without lingering)
- ❌YVR airport 12 km from downtown but ferries to Vancouver Island (Tsawwassen) 1h drive away
Situation
Où se situe Vancouver ?
Ouvrir la carte en grand sur OpenStreetMap →Frequently asked questions
How many days in Vancouver?+
Where to stay in Vancouver?+
What are the must-sees in Vancouver?+
Is Vancouver really that rainy?+
Capilano Suspension Bridge or Lynn Canyon?+
Our verdict
Vancouver is Canada's most dynamic city — metropolis facing the Pacific between ocean and mountains, frequently ranked among the world's most liveable cities, exceptional Asian-fusion scene (Chinatown dim sum, Tojo's sushi California Roll inventor, Miku aburi flame-seared), Stanley Park (1,000 acres downtown, iconic 28 km seawall trail), Granville Island, Capilano Suspension Bridge, Gastown Steam Clock. Our advice: 3-4 nights minimum to grasp the city — stay at Downtown (Coal Harbour for sea view, Robson Street for convenience) or at Yaletown (trendy, breweries) or at Gastown (historic charm, gourmet restaurants). Prefer May to September for climate (surprisingly dry in summer, 40 mm/month in July drier than Lisbon — book 2-3 months ahead), avoid November-February for persistent rain (200 mm/month, nicknamed "Raincouver"). Combine with Whistler (2h by Sea-to-Sky Highway, 2 nights) and Vancouver Island-Victoria (1h35 by ferry, 3 nights) for a complete West Canadian trip over 7-10 days. Add the Rockies (Calgary 1h30 by plane, CAD 200-400 return) for full 14 days. Direct Paris-Vancouver flight 10h, €650-1,400 return depending on season. YVR airport 25 min from downtown by Canada Line SkyTrain (CAD 9, ideal).
Nearby






"Janvier : mois le plus pluvieux (169 mm), ciel gris dominant, températures douces (1-7 °C). Ski Grouse-Cypress accessible."
Expert on Vancouver · 1 contributions