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Vancouver releases concept plans for post-viaduct False Creek

City releases concept plans for post-viaduct Northeast False Creek

Scott Brown
The Province

The City of Vancouver and Vancouver Park Board have revealed conceptual plans for the future of Northeast False Creek, including a new park and the removal of viaducts.

In 2015, Vancouver City Council approved a $200-million plan to remove the Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts, which connect False Creek with downtown Vancouver. 

The plan’s early draft includes a new 11-acre park and the replacement of the viaducts with an at-grade street network.

“The early draft plan for Northeast False Creek is based on some of the most extensive public consultation that the City has ever done,” says Gil Kelley, Vancouver’s general manager of planning. “We are excited by the opportunities for a really active waterfront area, design ideas for a dynamic urban village that we have worked on with landowners in the area, how the new park is shaping up, and the replacement plan for the viaducts.”

A key feature of the concept is an elevated Dunsmuir Park — dotted with places to enjoy mountain and ocean views — which will allow cyclists and pedestrians to travel from downtown to east Vancouver. 

The plan includes a total of 14.3 acres of new parkland and open spaces in Northeast False Creek.

The full draft plan and the concept design for the new park will be shared at a June 10 open house on Carrall Street (between Keefer Street and Expo Boulevard) where residents can review the plan in detail and provide feedback.

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