BBBOnline Reliability Seal
Live chat by Boldchat
Find a Cruise
Cruise Lines
Destinations
Travel Tools
Customer Service
Free Cruise Newsletter
 
 
Home > Departure Ports > Vancouver Cruises
Vancouver Cruises
Downtown Vancouver is the commercial core of a peninsula spotted with several major tourist areas. Where once there was rain forest, now there is concrete jungle. But set among the remaining evergreens, with a backdrop of the harbor and nearby snow-capped mountains, even the glass and steel high-rises of this city look good. More>>
 Vancouver Cruise Deals
Alaska Inside Passage: Round-Trip from Vancouver
• Celebrity Mercury: 7-nt Alaska from $669
• Holland America Ryndam: 7-nt Alaska from $831
• Holland America Statendam: 7-nt Alaska from $959
• Holland America Veendam: 14-nt Alaska from $949
• Holland America Volendam: 14-nt Alaska from $1121
• Holland America Zaandam: 14-nt Alaska from $993
• Norwegian Sun: 7-nt Alaska from $699
• Pacific Princess: 14-nt Alaska from $1879
• RCI Serenade of the Seas: 7-nt Alaska from $849

Alaska Gulf: One-Way to/from Vancouver
• Carnival Spirit: 7-nt Alaska from $679
• Celebrity Millennium: 7-nt Alaska from $709
• Holland America Veendam: 7-nt Alaska from $746
• Holland America Volendam: 7-nt Alaska from $831
• Holland America Zaandam: 7-nt Alaska from $823
• Coral Princess: 7-nt Alaska from $599
• Diamond Princess: 7-nt Alaska from $599
• Island Princess: 7-nt Alaska from $599
• Sapphire Princess: 7-nt Alaska from $599
• Regent Seven Seas Mariner: 7-nt Alaska from $4165
• RCI Radiance of the Seas: 7-nt Alaska from $749

Far East, Hawaii, Panama Canal & South Pacific
• Diamond Princess: 22-nt Alaska/Far East from $2107
• Carnival Spirit: 12-nt Hawaii from $999
• HAL Zaandam: 17-nt Hawaii from $1847
• Coral Princess: 17-nt Panama Canal from $1855
• HAL Volendam: 32-nt Hawaii/South Pacific from $4067
• HAL Statendam: 35-nt Hawaii/South Pacific from $5119
• HAL Veendam: 36-nt Panama Canal from $4081

Vancouver Cruise Finder
Sail Date:
Length:
Cruise Line:
 Vancouver Driving Directions
Address 1:
Canada Place Pier
999 Canada Place
Vancouver, BC, Canada

Seattle-Tacoma International Airport to Canada Place Pier:

  • Exit airport and take I-5 North to the Canadian Border. It now becomes Highway 99
  • Continue north until you cross the Oak Street Bridge
  • Turn left on 70th Avenue
  • Turn right on Granville Street
  • Proceed north across the Granville Street Bridge
  • Take the Seymour Street exit
  • Proceed north along Seymour Street to West Cordova Street
  • Turn left on West Cordova Street
  • Turn right on Howe Street
  • You are facing Canada Place

    Vancouver International Airport to Canada Place Pier:

  • Exit airport via Grant McConachie Way
  • Cross the Arthur Laing bridge staying in the right lane
  • Take the Granville Street exit and continue North down Granville Street
  • Proceed north across the Granville Street bridge
  • Take the Seymour Street exit
  • Proceed north along Seymour Street to West Cordova Street
  • Turn left on West Cordova Street
  • Turn right on Howe Street
  • You are facing Canada Place

    Address 2:
    Balantyne Pier
    655 Centenniel Road
    Vancouver, BC, Canada

    Vancouver International Airport to Ballantyne Pier:

  • When entering Vancouver via Highway 99 North (Oak Street), follow North to Park Drive
  • Turn left onto Park Drive and then take a right onto Granville Street
  • Follow Granville Street over the Granville Street Bridge and take Seymour Street exit
  • Proceed North to Hastings Street and turn right
  • Follow East to Heatley and turn left
  • Follow Heatley Street across the Heatley Street Overpass
  • At the bottom of the overpass, turn left into Ballantyne Pier
  • 16 miles to pier, approximate driving time 40 minutes

    Seattle-Tacoma International Airport to Ballantyne Pier:

  • Exit Seattle-Tacoma International Airport and follow the signs marked "Freeways"
  • Enter Eastbound Highway 518 (I-5) moving into the left lane, and exit to I-5 North
  • Proceed North on I-5 to the U.S/Canada Border and pass through Customs
  • From Customs continue north on Highway 99
  • After the George Massey Tunnel, follow the signs to Highway 91 and then to Knight Street Bridge
  • Follow Knight Street (it will become Clark Street) to Hastings Street
  • Turn left onto East Hastings Street and turn right on Heatley
  • Go over bridge and make a left to pier at stop sign
  • 162 miles to pier, approximate driving time 3 1/2 hours

    Parking: Canada Place pier is $12 per day, run by CitiPark
    << Back to top


  • (continued from above)
    Gastown, the city's birthplace, is a neighborhood of hundred-year-old hotels, outfitters, and warehouses born again as restaurants, stores, and condominiums. Chinatown is a contrast of aging clan-association headquarters and slick new Hong Kong-style shops. In Yaletown, spacious redbrick warehouses have become loft residences, trendy boutiques, and nightspots for hip young professionals. The West End, packed with high-rise apartment buildings and modern condominiums, is the most densely populated part of the city.

    At the tip of the peninsula is the 1,000-acre Stanley Park. Sometimes called the West End's back yard, it attracts residents from all over Vancouver and visitors from around the world.

    Because so many people live, work, and play on Vancouver's downtown peninsula, it stays active from early in the morning until late at night. It doesn't become a ghost town after dark, like the centers of some North American cities, so it's a relatively safe place for visitors to be.

    Other parts of the city should not be ignored, though. For example, Kitsilano, a beach-side neighborhood on the south shore of English Bay, includes Vanier Park, where several museums are clustered and special events are held. Granville Island, tucked under the south end of the Granville Street Bridge and accessible from the West End and Vanier Park via small ferryboats, is popular for its public market and galleries. The University of British Columbia, which makes many of its amenities available to the public, is bordered by beaches and forests.

    Vancouver's close association with its natural environment--water, beaches, forests, and mountains--is what makes the city attractive to many visitors. It is possible to ski in the morning, go sailing in the afternoon, and then attend the symphony in the evening. And, throughout the year, visitors can experience the customs of people from various countries who now call Vancouver home.

    This vast range of cultural aspects gives Vancouver a broad appeal and has turned the city into something more than just another pretty place. << Back to top

     

    About Us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Member Login
    ©2003-2008 Vacation Pros, LLC (dba Cruise-Pros.com). All rights reserved.
    BBBOnline Reliability Seal