Vancouver
Intro
Located on Canada’s west coast, Vancouver anchors British Columbia’s economy and serves as the country’s main interface with the Asia-Pacific region. The city combines port infrastructure with financial and cultural networks.
Background
Developed from a 19th-century port settlement, Vancouver expanded rapidly through rail, resource exports, and trans-Pacific trade. Immigration and globalization positioned it as Canada’s most outward-facing metropolis.
History
Port founding and rail integration
Resource exports and urban growth
Pacific trade expansion
Immigration-driven diversification
Global city consolidation and housing pressure
Present Day
Vancouver hosts Canada’s largest port, finance, film production, and technology clusters. Urban governance focuses on housing affordability, climate resilience, and infrastructure capacity.
Future Outlook
Vancouver will remain central to Canada’s Pacific strategy. Long-term resilience depends on housing reform, port expansion, climate adaptation, and sustaining openness amid geopolitical shifts.
Map
Articles
Return to Babel: Language, Identity, and Belonging
How identity is filtered — not by law, but by design – and what it means to belong
Event Timeline
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