There are tourist destinations in the city.

 Granville Island 

 Located on the southern bank of False Creek at the base of the Granville Street Bridge, Granville Island is a really popular excursionist draw. It began its actuality as a 8-hectare or 20-acre shallow ridge that was a favorite locale for the autochthonous Squamish clan to place their fish nets during their downtime camping along False Creek. With the destruction of Vancouver from the Great Fire of 1886, beaucoup homeless white settlers moved to a squatter's camp in this general area. The coming great measure of interest shown to the large ridge was with the opening of the Granville Street Bridge on January 4, 1889. This dust not only linked the two sides of False Creek but also created a new manufactured section of the burg. A group of businessmen lead by Hugh Keefer decided that the ridge would make a perfect place for a new sawmill if it could just be filled in, which they incontinently began to do without getting authorization from the burg. Vancouver's harbor master ordered them to stop driving needles into the ridge incontinently. His order only redounded in the needles being driven fleetly with crews working on it day and night. Where the burg failed to stop the piling work, the burg's largest co-owner, the Canadian Pacific Railway, also known as CPR, succeeded by bringing a judge that the ridge was their property and the men were trespassing. Keefer assayed to buy the property from the CPR but was turned down. The CPR felt it had ample land in Vancouver before without creating an isle. 
Canada Place 
 
 Canada Place, located at the end of Burrard Street and extending into the Vancouver Harbor, was originally a pier. It was converted into the Canada alcove for Expo 86, the last World's Fair in North America,. The theme of the Expo was"Transportation and Communication World in Motion-World in Touch"and was to accentuate how Vancouver had evolved into one of the world's major anchorage and transportation bases. The cadre of the Canada alcove was to make the complex appear to be a flashing boat with full white crossings that might set crossing at any moment. After the Expo, the Canadian alcove was renamed"Canada Place"and was converted to amulti-use complex that includes a convention center, a caravansary with beanery and gym, and an IMAX theater. Canada Place is used as a docking point for crossing boats, especially in the busy summer expedition season. 
 Notwithstanding, you'll get to hear the Heritage Bells, If you're visiting Canada Place at noon. The Heritage Bells are actually air cornucopias that are mounted to the roof of the Pan Pacific Hotel at Canada Place. The tune played is the first notes to"Oh Canada", Canada's public spiritual. The Heritage Bells were originally designed in 1967 as part of the BC Hydro's philanthropy to the Canadian Centennial, the 100 date anniversary of the Confederation of Canada, when the first Canadian niches combined to form the Dominion of Canada. 
 

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 Chinese Auditoriums 
The first thing that you notice at the Center isn't the Center itself but the elaborately sculptured white marble Chinese gate before the Center on Pender Street. The posts and the structure of the gate are from the original Chinese gate from Expo 86, Vancouver's World's Fair. The white marble panels at the top of the gate are a gift from from Vancouver's nonrelative town of Guangzhou. The colossi on the panels incorporate the principles of Yin and Yang, or reverses. The front of the center panels show the reverses of virile and womanly, of sun and moon, of the earth and heaven, and of active and yielding. The two side panels show four supernatural critters, which each represent a quarter of the heavenly vault in Chinese tradition. The two critters on the side panel on the right front are the phoenix and the dragon. The dragon in Chinese tradition is considered a really strong and benevolent critter. The dragon not only brings rain from the welkin but also is associated with the virile principle of Yang. Chinese emperors also used the dragon as the symbol of their supreme authority. The phoenix is womanly counterpart or Yin to the Yang of the virile dragon. The phoenix represents"the sweet potion of the gods"that descends from heaven to earth and is representative of the sacred doctrine of Buddhism. The phoenix represents modesty and is a symbol of the Chinese Empress. The two critters on the panels to the liberalism are the White Tiger and the Black Tortoise, once again Yin-Yang reverses. 
 Christ Church Cathedral
The new suburbia lodges edifice over the small Christ Church Cathedral at the corner of Georgia and Burrard Street, but the Church still seems to retain its quiet quality. This church edifice was an idea in the edifice commission of the Christ Church congregation as early as 1888, but the headstone church would not be completed until 1895 due to the lack of deep pocket. Notwithstanding, once the deep pocket was acquired, the construction was completed in only 6 months. During outside of this long construction period, the only portion of the edifice that was completed was the basement. A roof was placed over the basement, and services were held there. Because of this the rude church was given the undignified cognomen of the"Root Cellar."
 
 The Gastown Steam Clock 
The Gastown Steam Timekeeper located at the northwest corner of Water and Cambie Freeways is fair insuperable to miss. The considerably ornate timekeeper weighs over two tons, has four illuminated timekeeper faces for easy viewing at night, and blasts brume into the air from its top every fifteen moments. Its chimes play the same tune as the Big Ben chimes of London's Westminster. Yea more glaring is the crowd of rubbernecks that enclose the timekeeper every 15 moments as they bide for the chimes to play. The timekeeper may appear old, but it was constructed in 1977 by Ray Saunders, a original timekeeper maker. The design is hung on a 1875 design. The brume for the timekeeper is a derivative of underground pipes that supply heat to several suburbia edifices. Normally the spare brume escapes through grates in the sidewalk. Sometimes the megacity puts cultivators above these utterances to add a more cosmetic element. In this case, the megacity choose to use this unique timekeeper that has go a must- see for Vancouver rubbernecks. 

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