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1 hour
Daily Tour
6 people
English
Private Special Vancouver Tour for Kids,  we’ll focus on what’s cool to the kids—starting with the totem poles of Stanley Park. After learning about West Coast Native culture and spotting wildlife in the park, head to the Horse Drawn Carriage Tour for a lot of fun and sightseeing. Science World has a lot of hands-on exhibits, fun demonstrations, weird and wacky apparatus, and a good deal to keep kids entertained for 3 or 4 hours. One of the city’s nicest beaches.
Kitsilano Beach has a fantastic kids’ playground, a basketball court, Olympic size swimming pool, drift logs to play around, and, of course, a wide sandy beach. After lunch, continue to Granville Island’s Kids Market—the only market in the world where adults are only allowed when accompanied by a kid! Up for sale are wooden toys, art supplies, kites, puppets, stuffed animals, and more. There’s also a giant indoor Adventure Zone and a 50-year-old caboose that’s now a bakery for dogs and cats.
Canada Place, a famous landmark and location for top-notch events, is situated in the centre of Vancouver's waterfront and is proudly Canadian. The Pan Pacific Vancouver Hotel, the Vancouver World Trade Center, and the virtual aviation experience FlyOver Canada are all located there.
Granville Island is a peninsula with a shopping area in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada's Fairview district. It is situated beneath the southern end of the Granville Street Bridge across False Creek from Downtown Vancouver. In the 20th century, the peninsula served as an industrial manufacturing hub.
In Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, a non-profit organisation called Science World operates a science centre of the same name. It is situated near the mouth of False Creek and offers a variety of ongoing interactive exhibitions and displays, as well as areas with different themes over time.
Kitsilano Pool was initially marketed as "America's Largest Swimming Pool" when it debuted on August 15, 1931, under the leadership of Vancouver Park Board chairman Fred Crone and BC Provincial Attorney-General R.L. (Royal Lethington) Maitland. The original pool had an oval form, was 2-8 feet deep, covered 2.3 acres, and had a size of 660 by 200 feet (200 by 60 metres). It also had 1.3 million litres of water in it. [3] At the time, the project cost $50,000. The pool occasionally included marine life, including mud sharks and octopuses, and was fed with tidal water from English Bay.
On the south side of the First Narrows of Burrard Inlet, near Stanley Park's northernmost point in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, lies a point known as Prospect Point.
The most popular tourist destination in Vancouver, British Columbia, and possibly all of Canada is the First Nations Totem Poles in Stanley Park. At two different sites in Stanley Park, there are several lovely totem poles.
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