Unless you have a keen interest in BC sports heroes represented by shirts, trophies and faded photos, this modest exhibit inside BC Place stadium isn't likely to detain you. An...
777 Pacific Boulevard SouthHoused in the same building as the Vancouver Museum, the Space Centre is a small but well thought-out attraction that appeals most to school-age children. Much of this...
1100 Chestnut StreetCanada's largest teaching museum, and arguably Vancouver's only truly world-class cultural institution, the Museum of Anthropology began life in the 1920s in the basement of...
6393 NW Marine DriveImpossible to miss, the huge silver golf ball that is Science World is a significant part of the Vancouver skyline. It's also one of the best destinations on a rainy day for...
1455 Quebec StreetThe VAG is still best known for its extensive collection of works by the 1920s modernist Emily Carr, Canada's most celebrated female artist, who willed more than 150 paintings...
750 Hornby StreetThe main attraction here is the St Roch, the first vessel to have navigated the Northwest Passage in both directions. Regular guided tours follow a short video presentation...
1905 Ogden AvenueGiven that Vancouver doesn't have a great deal of history to call its own, you'll find only token gestures towards pre-history (ie before 1880) in this modest museum primarily...
1100 Chestnut StreetThe most noteworthy items in the museum, which is housed in the old Coroner's Court building, are the autopsy pictures of Errol Flynn, who died in Vancouver in 1959 in the arms...
240 E Cordova Street