Downtown Transportation Plan The Transportation Challenge
Downtown Transportation Plan The Transportation Challenge
The Vancouver Transportation Plan, 1997, recognized that road capacity is finite and that even
if more roads were to be built they would soon be congested with more cars. That solution is to
reduce the demand for auto trips by providing further transportation choices, particularly transit.
Congested roads also affect the liveability or the desirability of being downtown. This is especially
important because of the residential neighbourhoods in the downtown peninsula. Reducing traffic
congestion and resulting air and noise pollution, creating more pedestrian friendly streets,
providing more sustainable choices like transit and bicycling will help keep downtown an
attractive place for businesses and residents alike.
The downtown transportation system must also address it’s role as an entertainment and
recreation destination. Downtown is home to the region’s largest sports venues (BC Place stadium
and GM Place arena). It is also the region’s primary tourist destination with major convention
facilities and over 55 percent of the region’s hotel rooms. The tourist industry is anticipated to
grow 6 percent annually to 2021 (Colliers International). The cruise ship industry currently attracts
over one million passengers annually.
To the benefit of Vancouverites, downtown Vancouver is economically successful and already very
liveable. Vancouver has been ranked as the most liveable city in the world. To maintain this
status in the future, efforts must be taken now to avoid the transportation problems facing many
other major North American cities. The Downtown Transportation Plan is the means to this end
and will help guide transportation decisions to 2021.
The importance of future transportation planning is demonstrated by the current success of the
existing downtown transportation system. For more than half a century, Vancouver has nurtured
an economically healthy and liveable downtown. In the 1940s and 1950s, the focus was on
adjusting to increased auto use. It was apparent then that, while road access is important for
commerce, attempting to satisfy all demands for road space would require unacceptable trade-
offs with the objective of a liveable downtown. Plans for downtown expressways were formulated
in the 1960s but were later suspended because of the disruption they would have created, both in
terms of land occupied and neighbourhoods affected.
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Building public transit links (particularly rapid transit) to the downtown peninsula then became
paramount to maintaining suitable access. A passenger ferry from Lonsdale Quay in North
Vancouver to Waterfront Station began operating in 1974. The region’s first rapid transit line,
SkyTrain, was opened from downtown to New Westminster in 1985, with an extension to Surrey a
few years later. In 1992, the region’s first commuter rail line was opened from Mission to
Waterfront Station.
The result of the past efforts is a highly accessible downtown. This success is reflected by its
large concentration of residents, employment and trips within the city. With 560 hectares,
downtown comprises about five percent of the city’s total land area. However, it is home to 13
percent of the city’s residents, accommodates 39 percent of the city’s jobs, and receives 21
percent of the city’s trip destinations. In the future, more residents, more employment and more
trips destined to the downtown are anticipated. The Downtown Transportation Plan builds upon
the success of the past to meet the needs of the future.
This section provides the context for the development of the Downtown Transportation Plan.
Section 2.1 provides the city and regional context for downtown transportation planning.
Section 2.2 sets forth a vision for downtown and for a downtown transportation system.
Transportation objectives were an explicit aspect of the new land use policies. Orienting new
office development to transit was one objective of office land use consolidations and deletions.
They included consolidating zoned office capacity around rapid transit stations, bringing overall
office and transportation capacity closer together and increasing housing on the downtown
peninsula to reduce commuting times and congestion, and reducing the need for inner city
neighbourhoods to accommodate through commuters to downtown. By calling for streets to be
the “focal point of public life,” the Central Area Plan calls for public realm improvements to
foster movement on foot.
The Central Area Plan was followed in 1995 by CityPlan, the City of Vancouver’s overall guide to
future planning, development and civic decisions. It acknowledges that the public wanted to
emphasize transit, walking and biking to slow traffic growth in neighbourhoods and improve the
environment. CityPlan reinforced the vision for downtown. Finally, and perhaps most importantly
for this report, it recommended the undertaking of a City of Vancouver Transportation Plan.
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Downtown Transportation Plan The Transportation Challenge
Also in 1995, a Vancouver Greenways Plan that identified conceptual multi-use and richly
landscaped corridors providing greater priority to pedestrians and cyclists throughout the city,
including downtown, was approved. The purpose of Greenways is to expand the opportunities for
urban recreation and to enhance the experience of nature and city life.
The City of Vancouver Transportation Plan (1997) set forth transportation policies for both the City
as a whole and downtown for the period to 2021. It specified that growth in trip demand would be
met by the existing road network. It recommended greater transportation choice and a more
balanced downtown transportation system. It nonetheless acknowledged that the car would
continue to be the major form of transport for trips by people travelling outside neighbourhoods,
especially for trips for which transit does not offer a good alternative. It stressed the importance
of good truck access to the city and of improving delivery access to the Port of Vancouver and the
International Airport. This Downtown Transportation Plan is viewed as fulfilling the overall policy
guidelines set forth in the Transportation Plan for downtown trips and transportation facilities.
The 1995 Livable Region Strategic Plan (LRSP), which was formulated jointly with Transport
2021, guides decision-making for the Greater Vancouver Regional District (GVRD). The LRSP
supports complete communities focused around town centres, a better balance in the distribution
of jobs and housing and more effective transportation services. It envisages a compact
metropolitan region in which a larger share of population is accommodated in the municipalities
on the Burrard Peninsula and northern areas of Delta and Surrey. The plan calls for greater
transportation choice as a way of minimizing congestion and dependence on private automobiles.
The GVRD is commencing a review of the LRSP in 2002.
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The key to maintaining an alive downtown is that it is both a place of commerce and of residence.
The integration of residential neighbourhoods with the commercial core assures the presence of
people on downtown streets outside of normal business hours. Residential neighbourhoods also
complement the commercial objectives for downtown by providing a reservoir of workers and
shoppers and entertainment venue visitors.
The objective of this Downtown Transportation Plan is to support and facilitate these important
downtown functions. The vision for Vancouver is to be the most liveable city in the world. One of
the most important aspects of a liveable city is its transportation system, especially in its
downtown.
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Downtown Transportation Plan The Transportation Challenge
Figure 2-A
Vancouver’s Metropolitan Core
Business/Commercial
Areas
Triangle West -
Coal Harbour Central
Waterfront
False Creek
North - City Gate
Downtown
South
Yaletown -
Roundhouse False
Creek
Flats
Southeast
False Creek
Broadway Corridor
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The Transportation Challenge Downtown Transportation Plan
Vancouver has made significant progress toward sustainability and has been consistently rated as a
leading city in terms of liveability. City Council has adopted plans that place high priority on
creating a downtown where people have access to affordable transportation to move them
between home, work, and places of leisure.
The Downtown Transportation Plan will make progress towards achieving sustainability by
providing recommendations that:
• Help promote more efficient systems for moving goods and people;
• Encourage more sustainable transportation modes such as walking, transit, and cycling;
• Reduce vehicle kilometres travelled by providing jobs, entertainment venues and commercial
and retails services in close proximity to where people live;
• Encourage alternative approaches to car travel including carpools, vanpools and car sharing
networks;
• Increase safety by reducing the potential for conflicts between modes;
• Enhance access to information that increases the efficiency of goods and people movement
through ITS; and
• Reduce average commuting times for downtown trips.
In short, the movement towards becoming a sustainable city requires policies and plans to provide
guidance and incentives for people to modify their behaviour and pattern of travel. The Downtown
Transportation Plan provides the mechanism for that change to happen.
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