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Vancouver’s Most Famous and Interesting Streets

Vancouver Streets

Vancouver’s most famous and interesting streets include Robson, Granville, Commercial, Pender, Water and Broadway, as well as Lonsdale Avenue and others.

Unique and famous for different reasons, some of these roads are lined with shops, others with restaurants and some with various kinds of night life.

 


This article contains information about the following streets:

Commercial | Davie | Denman | Georgia | Granville | LonsdaleMain | Marine | Pender | Robson | Water | Broadway | West 4th | West 41st


 

Vancouver’s Most Interesting Streets

Vancouver’s two most famous, vibrant and popular streets are arguably Granville and Robson. Other streets though are favourites for different people. Honorable mentions include Georgia Street with all its skyscrapers and Hamilton and Mainland in Yaletown with their restaurants.

Below (in alphabetical order) are some of the top most interesting streets and avenues in Metro Vancouver. It’s not a complete list; rather, it’s a work in progress. More streets will be added over time.

 

Commercial Drive (Vancouver)

Commercial Drive is a colourful street lined with cafes, restaurants and eclectic shops. “The Drive” is cosmopolitan with its history of attracting immigrant communities including those of Italian, Asian, East Indian, Latin American and African descent.

Car Free Day and Italian Day on the Drive are major street party events that take place on Commercial Drive in the summer. Especially interesting times to visit the area are when those events are happening. Both of these events take place between Venables and Grandview which is the most interesting section of the street outside of those events as well.

When most people talk about going to Commercial Drive, they refer to the stretch between roughly Venables and 12th.

 

Commercial Drive
Commercial Drive at East 2nd

 

Davie Street (in Vancouver’s West End)

Davie Street might not be Vancouver’s most fashionable, historically-significant or beautiful street, but you could say it’s the most colourful. The crosswalk paint on the roads and banners on poles are frequently rainbow-coloured.

Passing through Yaletown and Granville Street at one end, and then connecting with Denman Street at English Bay at the other, Davie Street is known for its gay subculture. The neighbourhood is also home to a number of good restaurants and interesting stores.

The Vancouver Pride Parade doesn’t go down Davie Street in August. Other events during the week-long Vancouver Pride Festival do, however, including the Davie Street Party (at least in years when it takes place).

 

Denman Street (Vancouver)

Denman Street connects with fashionable Robson Street near one end and then goes south until it reaches Davie Street and English Bay at the other.

If you’re at English Bay and you’re hungry for a meal or want an ice cream, or if you loved Robson Street and just want to keep strolling down a road, then Denman is a nice street to explore. It’s an especially busy and vibrant place in the summer.

Denman Street has its own Car Free Day on the Saturday of the Father’s Day Weekend in June between Davie and Robson. That day is when the street is at its absolute liveliest.

 

West End Car Free Day
Denman Street on Car Free Day

 

Georgia Street (Vancouver)

West Georgia is Vancouver’s real “main street” and arguably the city’s most important downtown thoroughfare. It’s lined with some of Vancouver’s tallest skyscrapers including the 62-storey Shangri-La Hotel and 63-storey Trump Tower (which closed in the summer of 2020 and then went bankrupt). Georgia Street also connects the city with the North Shore via the Lions Gate Bridge and Stanley Park.

In addition to all its skyscrapers, Georgia Street deserves to be in the list of Vancouver’s most interesting streets because it’s home to numerous landmarks.

At the opposite end of the road from Stanley Park, along the 10 or so blocks between the Georgia Street Viaduct and Burrard Street intersection, there is BC Place Stadium, Rogers Arena, the Vancouver Public Library, and Hudson’s Bay department store. Also in the area are the Vancouver Art Gallery, Fairmont Hotel Vancouver and Christ Church Cathedral. Nowhere else are there so many landmarks and historically-significant and architecturally-interesting buildings so close together in Vancouver.

 

Granville Street (Vancouver)

Granville Street is one of Vancouver’s most famous streets, and definitely its most entertaining (although in parts it’s showing its age).

Granville Street begins not far from Gastown, just across the street from Waterfront Station.

Near the start, Granville Street is full of fashionable boutiques, cafes and restaurants. From about Georgia Street until Davie, before False Creek and the Granville Street Bridge, the sidewalks are lined with restaurants, shops, bars, theatres and night clubs.

Major places of interest along the way include the Hudson’s Bay department store, the Orpheum Theatre, Commodore Ballroom and the Vogue Theatre.

If you are looking for neon lights and the city’s entertainment district, then Granville Street is the place to come.

Further along, under the Granville Street Bridge on the south side of False Creek, is world-famous Granville Island. Continue on south a few more blocks from there and Granville Street once again becomes a vibrant boulevard. In that area you’ll find the Stanley Theatre and more restaurants, coffee shops, and boutiques starting at Broadway and continuing for a number of blocks, until about 15th.

 

Commodore on Granville Street
Commodore Ballroom on Granville Street

 

Lonsdale Avenue (North Van)

Lonsdale Avenue is the commercial heart and most interesting street in North Vancouver on the North Shore.

The most interesting parts of Lonsdale Avenue are from Lonsdale Quay to 3rd Street, and then again from around 13th to about 21st.

At the foot of Lonsdale Avenue, just steps from Lonsdale Quay, are a number of great restaurants. Also, behind the Tap & Barrel Restaurant, is Shipbuilders’ Square which is home to the Shipyards Night Market on Friday evenings in the summer.

This four lane avenue is steep as it starts at the base of the North Shore Mountains. It’s also home to numerous shops and restaurants. Looking for some exercise? Then try walking the 30 or so blocks from Lonsdale Quay to the top of the Avenue.

 

Lower Lonsdale Restaurants
Restaurants on Lower Lonsdale Avenue

 

Main Street (Vancouver)

Main Street is a long street and notable in a couple of sections.

Main connects with West Pender and Keefer downtown and together the three streets form the heart of historic Chinatown.

Further south, Main Street again becomes extra interesting from East Broadway to 16th, and then again from around 25th to 30th. Along these two latter sections Main is a lot like Commercial Drive, with numerous little shops and restaurants.

Car Free Day is celebrated on Father’s Day in June and celebrated on Main Street from Broadway to 30th Avenue. Another big event along Main street is the Vancouver Mural Festival’s Mount Pleasant Street Party in August.)

 

Main Street
Main Street near Broadway

 

Marine Drive (West Vancouver)

Marine Drive is the main commercial street in West Vancouver. (Note: There is also a Marine Drive in the City of Vancouver, and another in White Rock, but they are different.)

Like Lonsdale Avenue in North Vancouver, West Vancouver’s Marine Drive isn’t a destination in itself, especially if shopping is your goal. If you plan to spend some time at the beach or strolling the seawall at Ambleside, however, Marine Drive is just a couple of blocks away. It’s a great place to find something to eat, or a store or two to browse in.

The main shopping sections along Marine Drive in West Vancouver include Park Royal Mall and then from around 14th Street (near the entrance to Ambleside Park) until 19th. Dundarave Village, which comprises just a couple of blocks from around 24th Street to 25th, is also very nice.

Marine Drive continues on west for a long ways after Dundarave. It becomes a very pleasant, rural and scenic road to drive along. In the opposite direction it becomes one of the main streets in North Vancouver.

 

Dundarave Village
Marine Drive in Dundarave

 

Pender Street (Vancouver)

Pender Street from around 100 West Pender to 200 East Pender cuts through the heart of Chinatown. The street and has a variety of interesting Chinese stores and restaurants in the area. It’s not an amazing street, but is home to Chinatown’s Millennium Gate and a number of Asian-looking and other heritage buildings. it’s a neat area.

To see what Pender Street looks like, check out our article about Vancouver’s Chinatown. In that article is a video of the road between 200 East Pender and around 100 West Pender. The video follows Pender through the heart of Chinatown from Gore Street to the Millennium Gate.

 

Robson Street (Vancouver)

Robson Street is definitely Vancouver’s most fashionable street for shopping.

If you’re looking for a great place to window shop, or want to buy something at one of Vancouver’s finest designer clothing stores, Robson Street is where to go. Lululemon, the GAP, Armani, Roots, Guess, and tons of other stores and restaurants are everywhere. The bulk of the stores and restaurants run from where Robson Street meets Granville Street (and even further) to where Robson meets Denman in the other direction.

 

Robson Street
Robson Street at Thurlow

 

Water Street (Vancouver)

Water Street is the main and most well-known commercial street in historic Gastown. It’s where you’ll find the famous Gastown steam clock, some of Vancouver’s finest souvenir shops, lots of attractive old brick buildings, and a number of good restaurants.

Water Street is especially interesting around Christmas time when it’s all lit up. It’s also interesting though again in the late spring, throughout the summer, and then into the middle of fall. In most of the winter though, things can be slow (and not infrequently some of the stores close and new ones don’t reopen until the tourist season returns).

If you’re at Waterfront Station and have a few minutes before catching the SkyTrain or SeaBus, Water Street can be a pleasant short street to stroll down.

 

Gastown at Night
Water Street in Gastown in Winter

 

West Broadway (Vancouver)

West Broadway is a major road that passes briefly through Granville Street at a lively corner and then returns to being just a major traffic artery with a mixture of shops and office buildings in both directions. The street transforms into an especially interesting boulevard though as it runs through trendy Kitsilano (but in an area not close to the beach).

From MacDonald to Alma Street, West Broadway is an exceptional street lined with shops, restaurants and fruit and vegetable stores.

Greek Day on Broadway is a massive street party that takes place along West Broadway in late June. The event happens between MacDonald and Blenheim. During the event the place is particularly fun and lively.

 

West 4th Avenue (Vancouver)

West 4th Avenue is a fairly major street in Kitsilano. It runs parallel to West Broadway not far from Kitsilano Beach. It’s not a fancy area and the buildings aren’t particularly old or unique. Between Burrard and around Vine Street, however, the road is lined with interesting shops and restaurants.

West 4th is at its busiest during the Khatsahlano Street Party in July when the road is full of people, live music and vendors for almost a dozen blocks between Burrard Street and MacDonald.

 

West 41st Avenue (Vancouver)

41st Avenue between Larch and Maple is a great little street in the Kerrisdale area of Vancouver. It’s an affluent neighbourhood with interesting shops. It’s not long or huge or completely amazing, but still a nice little street.

 

Other Information

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