VancouverTransit

Transportation Lore of Vancouver

These entries are to document @Cariad's look at the various lore about transit in Metro Vancouver.

You can find its new location at Cariad's personal blog:
https://cariadheather.medium.com

cariad@keigher.ca if you wish to contact me.


Cariad's Personal Website
cariad.keigher.ca/

The theme of Expo 86 was transportation and many, many countries took advantage of the show to demonstrate their developments in this field. Of course, the star of the show was Canada's SkyTrain, but Japan showed its maglev train, America its cars, and the United Kingdom showed its conventional rail.



In a few years, you'll be able to ride SkyTrain all the way into Langley, passing by one of Cloverdale's quiet landmarks: the Honeybee Centre. However, if you go just the building, you'll notice a road that runs on an angle, which is odd considering most of Surrey's roads tend to run in cardinal directions save for Fraser Highway and a few others.

Harvie Rd. is a shortcut from Port Kells to the rest of Surrey, but its origins as a road do not come from being a shortcut but instead a railway. There are a few roads that do not conform to the grid system and they too share this history as well.



This is now on my Medium

The intersection of Commercial Drive and Broadway is today a major interchange station between SkyTrain's Millennium and Expo lines, and the rapid bus 99 B-Line. Historically, this area has been of major importance the two BC Electric Railway's interurban lines which served east Vancouver (the Central Park and Burnaby Lake lines) merged with the street car serving Commercial Drive to then feed into downtown.

However, this produced a major choke point as having three different rail services interlining on a single street created serious congestion challenges for the BCER. A solution proposed in the 1920s was a proposal to extend the Central Park line from Victoria and Hull all the way to Main Street.