News

The most important things visitors can do to stay safe around the Capilano River are staying on trails and following all ...
230-foot-high bridge offers spectacular views of the Capilano River below. Visitors call it thrilling, exciting and an overall great experience. The fun doesn't end once you reach the other side ...
Officials are investigating after raw sewage started spilling into the Capilano River, one of the largest rivers flowing through Metro Vancouver's North Shore. The Squamish Nation, whose ...
Metro Vancouver has launched a new safety education initiative for Capilano River Regional Park, encouraging recreationists to be aware in and around the water. The new website offers safety tips ...
At the mouth of the Capilano River, members of the Squamish First Nation have engaged in rock weir fishing for generations. Using rocks as barriers to trap salmon in small ponds, and simple ...
The Capilano Suspension Bridge, hanging 70 metres (230 feet) above the Capilano River, was first built in 1889 and has been a beloved and awe-inspiring attraction ever since. Over its 130 years ...
It’s still unclear how much sewage entered the Capilano River after a leak last week, near Fullerton Avenue in West Vancouver. The District of North Vancouver reported the sewage was leaving a ...
VANCOUVER—He built it and they came — in droves — but it wasn’t the original goal of George Grant Mackay when he built the Capilano Suspension Bridge in the District of North Vancouver 126 ...
What went wrong at the Cleveland Dam? The deadly release of water from the Cleveland Dam was unscheduled and unexpected, and work is underway to find out what went wrong.
Walk high above Capilano River on the Capilano Suspension Bridge (which you can get to with free daily shuttles from Canada Place), or head up Grouse Mountain to hike and zipline. If you want the ...