Walking Downtown Vancouver and the West End

Walking Downtown Vancouver and the West End
Fairmont Hotel VancouverThe Fairmont Hotel Vancouver is a great place to start and finish near by at Cathedral Place.

It should take 2 to 3 hours, not including museum, shopping, and eating stops.

Vancouver's West End is often called the densest residential district east of Manhattan. How true that is is anyone's guess but what is unique is how green Vancouver's downtown streets are. Every high-rise is surrounded by trees and shrubs and flowers.  Remember to look up as you wander downtown Vancouver

The Fairmont Hotel Vancouver At 900 W. Georgia Street.  It's worth stepping inside for a moment to experience the Gatsbyesque ambience of the lobby.

Leaving by the Burrard Street exit, turn left. When you reach the corner, turn right, cross Burrard Street, and you're on Robson Street.

The shops on this corner get more foot traffic than any other in Canada with high-end clothiers and new restaurants and gift shops with signs in Japanese. Whether you're into shopping or not, Robson Street is still a great place to walk and people-watch.

Head down Robson Street and, turn left on Denman the perfect place to Take a Break

If Robson Street is the place Vancouverites go for hyperactive shopping sprees, Denman is where they go to sit back, sip a latte, and watch their fellow citizens stroll past.

English Bay When you're ready to continue the walking tour, go two blocks farther downhill and you're at English Bay

This is the place to be when the sun is setting, or on one of those crystal-clear days when the mountains of Vancouver Island can be seen looming in the distance -- or any day at all, really, so long as the sun is shining. 

Every January 1, shivering Vancouverites in fancy costumes surround the bathhouse here at the very foot of Denman Street (entrance at beach level) to take part in the annual Polar Bear Swim.

The GabriolaWhen you're finished looking around the park, head up Davie Street on your left at no. 1531 you'll see The Gabriola

This was the finest mansion in the West End when it was built in 1900 for sugar magnate B. T. Rogers. Since 1975, it has been turned into a restaurant of one sort or another. The wrought-iron tables in the garden are particularly fine spots to sit out on summer days.

 

Continue on up Davie Street until you come to Granville Street head left, this street come to life at night has it has been designated the Granville Mall Entertainment District . You will see many places to eat shop and browse with an ever changing display of people walking the strip of Clubs, pubs and night spots.

Vancouver Art GalleryContinue along Granville and turn left on Robson where you will find the Robson Square to one side and the Law Courts on the other, check them both out, then head North down Hornby street to the Vancouver Art Gallery

To continue, go round the gallery by the left-hand side and proceed down Hornby Street. Cross Georgia Street and have a glance inside the Hong Kong Bank building (885 W. Georgia St.) at the massive pendulum designed by artist Alan Storey: The lobby doubles as an art gallery and frequently features interesting exhibits.

Cross to the west side of Hornby, and carry on about halfway down the block, then turn to your left and walk up the short flight of stairs to a small outdoor courtyard. On the north side at 639 Hornby St. is the Cathedral Place

Cathedral PlaceOften overlooked by Vancouverites -- and just a few steps away from busy Georgia Street -- sits the peaceful and quiet Cathedral Place. As for the Cathedral place courtyard itself, it has the formality and calm of a formal French garden, the perfect spot to sit for a bit and enjoy a bit of peace.

 
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Walking Downtown
Best Western Chateau Granville Vancouver
Coast Plaza Hotel Vancouver
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Comfort Inn Downtown Vancouver
Empire Landmark Hotel, Vancouver downtown
Fairmont Hotel :: Vancouver downtown