Cates Park Pier in Snow

Cates Park is a great park for kids in North Vancouver. It has an amazing play structure area for young children, and the beach has both sandy and rocky areas.

The park’s name in the local Tsleil-Waututh Indigenous language is Whey-ah-Wichen which means “faces the wind.”

 


In this article you’ll find the following information about the following topics:

Cates Park Concert Series | About Cates Park | First Nations Heritage | Cates Deck | Other Information


 

Cates Park on the North Shore

Cates Park is at 4141 Dollarton Highway in North Vancouver. It’s not far from Deep Cove.

There is a lot of parking at Cates Park, which is good because the place is popular on sunny days in the summer. The odds are you’ll find a spot to park, although it’s not guaranteed on busy days, like when it’s hot and there’s a live outdoor concert at the same time.

The best way to get to Cates Park is by car, not public transit. Buses do go out there, but it’s a 45- to 60-minute trip from Lonsdale Quay with at least one, but sometimes two transfers.

Cates Park has a boat launch and kayak rentals in the summer.

 

Live Music with Pedwell at Cates Park

 

Cates Park Concert Series

In the summer there are often live band performances on the weekends from 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm on Saturdays between early July and mid-August.

The concerts didn’t take place in 2020, 2021 or 2022. Fortunately, they returned in August of 2023. This past year, each concert showcased about nine singer-songwriters.

2023 dates and performers were the following:

 

August 5th, 2023

  • 4:00 pmEarl Jenkins, Atlin Morgan, Flash Being
  • 5:00 pmNorine Braun, Cherie Summers, Steve Somers
  • 6:00 pmFrankie and the Bass, Scott Crompton

 

August 12th, 2023

  • 4:00 pmSimon Eaton, Ashjuice, Cleo
  • 5:00 pmThe Seagoats, Sash, Juno
  • 6:00 pmJohnny Hatch, Token Rhyme

 

August 19th, 2023

  • 4:00 pmCharlotte Leguy, Daniel Sinclair, Andrew Zaghloul Blues
  • 5:00 pmBritney Cheng, Jennifer Hershman, Matt Murphy
  • 6:00 pmJordana Delgado, Aunya Jayde, Lee Hayes

 

August 26th, 2023

  • 4:00 pmThe_Small_Lebowskii, Sean from the Yukon, Ian Willmer
  • 5:00 pmJack Lenoard, Dean Michael Smith, Math Club
  • 6:00 pmEric Stanger, Jetlag, Phrog

 

Click Cates Park Summer Concerts for more details.

Check out Free Outdoor Music for summer concert venues in Metro Vancouver, including performances at Cates Park in July and August.

 

Dock at Cates Park

 

About Cates Park

There are opportunities for year-round recreation at Cates Park. Amenities at the park include tennis courts, trails, beaches, a playground, picnic tables, kayak rentals, a concession stand and a boat launch.

In total there are about 6 km of trails within the park. The main trail winds along the waterfront and offers great views of Indian Arm and the Burrard Inlet. Trails in Cates Park are also dog-friendly, although our furry friends are required to be on-leash at all times except on the upper section of trails.

One unique feature of the trails along the waterfront are two shacks built along the shore. The shacks were built in the 1940s and ’50s and are reminders of Canada’s literary history. Earle Birney, a poet, and Malcolm Lowery, a novelist, lived in these buildings.

 

Cates Park Boat Launch

 

First Nations Heritage

Cates Park holds important cultural significance to the Tsleil-Waututh people. There are reminders of this significance scattered across the park’s grounds. One of these pieces is the large totem pole that resides next to one of the picnic shelters. There is also a traditional canoe on display close to the totem pole.

North Vancouver is on the traditional unceded territories of the Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations. The Tsleil-Waututh Nation has a reservation near Cates Park. Takaya Tours is a company that’s owned by the band. The company offers kayak rentals and boat tours out of Cates Park.

 

Cates Deck

Cates Park shouldn’t be confused with Cates Deck. The park is in the District of North Vancouver about halfway between the Second Narrows Bridge and Deep Cove. Cates Deck, meanwhile, is a wharf-like plaza in the Lower Lonsdale District of the City of North Vancouver between the Polygon Gallery and Lonsdale Quay.

Cates Deck is a nice kind of plaza. What makes it extra special though is that it’s one of a few places in the City of North Vancouver where you can drink alcohol in public. Adults can drink beer and other alcoholic beverages there, but not at Cates Park.

To learn about the relaxed liquor laws in the City of North Vancouver see our article about North Shore Alcohol-Friendly Parks.

 

Cates Deck in Lower Lonsdale
On Cates Deck in Lower Lonsdale

 

Other Information

Other articles that might be of interest include the following: