Vancouver
Canada Place
Canada Place is a building situated on the Burrard Inlet waterfront of Vancouver, British Columbia. It is the home of the Vancouver Convention Centre, the Pan Pacific Vancouver Hotel, Vancouver's World Trade Centre, and the virtual flight ride Fly Over Canada.
Stop: 20 minutes - Admission included
Coal Harbour
Coal Harbour is the modern part of the city lined with glass skyscrapers overlooking Burrard Inlet. ... It's also where you'll see massive skyscrapers, yachts in the marinas, and people walking and jogging along the seawall between downtown and Stanley Park.
Stop: 30 minutes
Commercial Drive
Commercial Drive is a roadway in the city of Vancouver in British Columbia, Canada that extends from Powell Street at its northern extremity, near the waterfront, south through the heart of the Grandview–Woodland neighborhood to the Victoria Diversion near Spartacus Books and Trout Lake.
Stop: 25 minutes - Admission included
Gastown
Gastown is a mix of "hip" contemporary fashion and interior furnishing boutiques, tourist-oriented businesses (generally restricted to Water Street), restaurants, nightclubs, poverty and newly upscale housing. In addition, there are law firms, architects and other professional offices, as well as computer and internet businesses, art galleries, music and art studios, and acting and film schools.
Stop: 20 minutes - Admission included
Gastown Steam Clock
We weave a path into Gastown, discovering back streets and alleyways, to arrive in the heart of Gastown at the famous steam clock. Along the way you'll hear the tragic stories of the woman in the well and the Great Vancouver Fire, and discover Gastown in the 1800s
Stop: 20 minutes - Admission included
Chinatown
Vancouver's Chinatown is the largest Chinatown in Canada. It's famous for its restaurants, stores, Sun Yat-Sen Garden and annual Chinese New Year Parade. The area is located primarily along Pender, Main and Keefer Streets, between Gastown and the Downtown Eastside
Stop: 30 minutes
Robson Street
When you comes to Vancouver nightlife, Davie Street in downtown Vancouver is the place to be. Packed with clubs, bars, and restaurants.
Stanley Park Drive
The most famous places to visit in Vancouver and as you will enter it you will be blown away by all the greenery and beauty this place has. Stanley Park was the first area that was explored in Vancouver and it is an abode to everything related to nature. Stanley Park is the oldest park in Vancouver where you can spend a quiet evening with your partner while soaking in the view of the golden sunset. There are beaches in the park where you can relax and take a stroll on the shimmering white sand beaches. If you are hungry then the park also has amazing options for you and your partner.
Stop: 2 hours
Granville Island
Downtown Vancouver's Granville Street is ground-zero for hard-partying Vancouver nightlife. Stretching, roughly, from Nelson St. to Robson St., this area of Granville Street is packed with bars and nightclubs, making it easy to club-hop from one destination to another Granville Street attracts twenty- and early-thirtysomethings looking to drink, mingle, dance, and show off their party clothes.
Weekends are busy on Granville Street: Be prepared for entrance lines at the hottest clubs.
Stop: 60 minutes - Admission included
Yaletown
High-tech yuppies, pretty young things, and a fair number of celebrities (Vancouver is Hollywood North, after all) populate the most stylish Vancouver nightlife Yaletown, on Hamilton Street and Mainland Street.
Yaletown's nightlife is ultra-trendy, epitomized by the celebrity hotspot the always-crowded Bar If you want to dress up, sip cocktails and see-and-be-seen, this is the Vancouver nightlife district for you
Stop: 45 minutes
Meals included:
Lunch: Any time Starbucks meal Card
Accommodation included:
3 or 4 star Best western or similar