Vancouver Magazine
Protected: Get a Slice of This! 3 Tips for Hosting the Best Family Pizza Night
Best Thing I Ate This Week: Crispy Vietnamese Crepe Cake at Hai Chi Em
December’s Best Food Events in Vancouver—Where to Dine This Month
5 Winemaker Holiday Hacks Direct from Nk’Mip Cellars
The Best (Actually Thoughtful) Bottles of Wine to Gift This Year
Breaking: Vancouver Cocktail Week Will Return for a Fifth Year in March
Your Guide to Vancouver’s 2025 Craft and Holiday Markets
You’re Invited to the 2026 Power 50 Awards!
Let’s Go Out! The Best Places to Go Dancing in Vancouver
Snowmobiles and Fondue Might Just Be the Perfect Whistler Night Out
I Tried It: Bioluminescent Kayaking on the Sunshine Coast
Why Osoyoos Is a Must-Visit in the Fall
Vancouver Designer Allison Dunne Weaves Art, Philosophy and Humour Into Dunne Cliff Knitwear
The Haul: Photographer Donnel Garcia Stocks Up on Oversized Sweaters and Tibetan Incense
The Vanmag Wish Book: What 14 Interesting Vancouverites Want for Christmas
Try as we might to narrow down our “best neighbourhood” criteria to a few universal factors—as we did in this year’s Neighbourhood Ranking—the fact is that neighbourhoods can be beloved for reasons that are not necessarily one-size-fits-all. So we’ve done some further calculating to offer some data-based suggestions for finding the right ’hood for your lifestyle.
54 percent of Railtowners are unattached: chat up that cutie at Ask for Luigi.
South Granville residents had the highest voter turnout at the last provincial election: 67 percent made it out to the polls.
The people of Dunbar are the most educated lot—66 percent of the adult population rocks a post-secondary degree.
Gastown has 150 restaurants and coffee shops per 10,000 people. (No stats so far on how good the lighting in each is for Instagram shots, though.)
There are 6.3 pet care services or vet clinics per 10,000 people in South Cambie , so a medical professional or solid grooming session are always within paw’s reach.
With tons of green space, long-term residents and an educated population, Seymour/Deep Cove is the most livable neighbourhood on the North Shore.
People like to settle in and stay awhile in Hastings-Sunrise : 65 percent of residents have lived in the same home for at least five years.
Kids rule in West Point Grey (as do schools and parks): 15 percent of the neighbours are under the age of 15.
The vast majority of Gastownians have ditched their wheels: 74 percent of them bike, transit or walk to work.
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