Tourism Vancouver - Official Visitors' Guide

2015/2016

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Photography: W A L K I N G T O U R 26 1 CANADA PLACE/JACK POOLE PLAZA With its five tall sails and bowsprit jutting out into Burrard Inlet, Canada Place – a convention centre and cruise ship terminal – resembles a massive sailing ship. Take a tour of Canada by foot (along the Canadian Trail illustrated promenade) or by air (with a ride on flight simulator FlyOver Canada). Then follow the promenade north toward the iconic cauldron that was lit for the 2010 Olympic Winter Games and the Vancouver Convention Centre West, with its impressive six-acre "living roof." 2 WATERFRONT STATION This Beaux Arts edifice was originally built to accommodate passengers travelling the Canadian Pacific Railway; look high up on the walls to see oil paintings depicting scenes you might encounter on a trans-Canada trip by rail. Leaving the front doors, turn left down cobblestoned Water Street, Gastown's main thoroughfare. Most of this neighbourhood's original construction was fuelled by Klondike gold in the boom years between the Great Fire of 1886 and the First World War. 3 STEAM CLOCK A quirky urban timepiece and iconic Vancouver photo-op, the steam clock at the corner of Water and Cambie streets gives a steamy rendition of the Westminster Chimes every 15 minutes, drawing its power from the city's underground steam-heat system. THE CITY BY FOOT Take a peek into Vancouver's storied – and sometimes scandalous – history on a walking tour of downtown, starting from the Visitor Centre Jack Poole Plaza Waterfront Station Photos: TVan/Clayton Perry; Darren Kirby [Flickr]; Mikano [Wikipedia]; TVan/A. Rios

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