Routes Canada British ColumbiaVancouver
Queen Elizabeth

Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Queen Elizabeth

Length4.2 mi
Elev. Gain367.4 ft
Est. Steps10000

Park

Created by VICI
Introduction
Queen Elizabeth is a 4.3 mile (10,000-step) route located near Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. This route has an elevation gain of about 367.4 ft and is rated as medium. Find the best walking trails near you in Pacer App.

Hillcrest Park

Park
Hillcrest Park is located in the Riley Park-Little Mountain neighbourhood of Vancouver, British Columbia. It is located immediately north of Queen Elizabeth Park and west of Riley Park. Next to Hillcrest Park is the site containing Nat Bailey Stadium, home of the Vancouver Canadians baseball team; the Millennium Sports Centre, home to both the Phoenix Gymnastics Club and the Pacific Indoor Bowls Club; and the Vancouver Racquets Club.

Queen Elizabeth Park, British Columbia

Park
Queen Elizabeth Park is a 130-acre municipal park located in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, on Little Mountain (British Columbia) (elevation approximately 152 metres or 500 feet above sea level). Its surface was scarred at the turn of the twentieth century when it was quarried for its rock, which served to build Vancouver's first roadways.

Bloedel Floral Conservatory

Place
The Bloedel Floral Conservatory in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, is a conservatory and aviary located at the top of Queen Elizabeth Park.

Hillcrest Centre

Sports
The Hillcrest Centre is a community centre with ice hockey and curling rinks, and an aquatics facility, located at Hillcrest Park in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Construction started in March 2007; it hosted the 2009 World Junior Curling Championships prior to the Olympics. During the 2010 Olympics, it was named the Vancouver Olympic/Paralympic Centre and had a capacity of 6,000 people to host curling at the 2010 Winter Olympics; for the 2010 Paralympics, it hosted the Wheelchair Curling event.

Little Mountain (British Columbia)

Mountain
Little Mountain, elev. 127m, is a mountain in the central part of the city of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It is best known as the location of Queen Elizabeth Park and Nat Bailey Stadium, but as a name is also used for the surrounding neighbourhood and, occasionally, in the name of electoral districts (e.g.

Bud Kerr Baseball Museum

Place
The Budd Kerr Baseball Museum is located in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada inside Nat Bailey Stadium, the home of the Vancouver Canadiens. The museum, which opened on June 18, 2008, is dedicated to the more than sixty years of baseball that have been played in that stadium. The museum is named for Budd Kerr, the team's official historian until his death in 2009, and celebrates the players who have spent some of their careers there including: Rich Harden, Sammy Sosa, and Tim Raines, who helped open the museum.

Riley Park–Little Mountain

Place
Riley Park–Little Mountain is a neighbourhood in Vancouver, British Columbia. Its boundaries are 41st Avenue to the south, 16th Avenue to the north, Cambie Street to the west, and Fraser Street to the east. The main commercial thoroughfare of the neighbourhood is Main Street.

Scotiabank Field at Nat Bailey Stadium

Sports
Scotiabank Field at Nat Bailey Stadium (known as "The Nat" and commonly by its previous name Nat Bailey Stadium) is home to the Vancouver Canadians of the Northwest League in the summer.

Wheelchair curling at the 2010 Winter Paralympics

Place
The wheelchair curling competition of the 2010 Winter Paralympics was held at the Vancouver Olympic/Paralympic Centre in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, from 13 March to 20 March 2010. Ten teams competed in a single event, a mixed tournament in which men and women competed together.

Duck Pond

Water
Route Details

Length

4.2 mi

Elev. Gain

367.4 ft

Est. Steps

10000
Created by
VICI
Open in AppOpen