Vancouver Magazine
Bennies, Bubbly and Bites: Easter Weekend in Vancouver
April’s Best Food Events in Vancouver—Where to Dine This Month
EatWild Asks a Big Question: Is Hunting the Most Ethical Thing a Meat Eater Can Do?
The Wine List: Put This Unassuming Italian Wine Region On Your Radar
6 Very Delicious Zero-Proof Cocktails to Try Next
Hit These Hot Happy Hours Before March is Over
Capture Photography Festival Returns to Vancouver
Doxa Documentary Film Festival Unveils its 25th Anniversary Lineup
Protected: Casino.org Helps B.C. Players Navigate Online Casinos with Confidence
5 Reasons to Visit Osoyoos This Spring
Indulge in a Taste of French Polynesia
Beyond the Beach: The Islands of Tahiti Are an Adventurer’s Dream
Real Weddings: This Vancouver Cemetery Is a Surprisingly Chic Wedding Venue
The Haul: Nettwerk Music Co-Founder Mark Jowett’s Magic Pen and Favourite Japanese Sneakers
15 Small, Independent Vancouver Brands to Shop Instead of the Shein Pop-Up
Despite what’s on the cover, there’s more to the inside pages than a stack of pastrami. From combat training for the big screen to sexual therapy, with prison education and a documentary filmmaker’s opinion of unsavoury police entrapment in between, our October 2007 issue could be summarized as action-packed. But more important was the chronicled rise of the gig-based economy by everyday workers in the back pages. “It was as if we were off to join a cult,” wrote Timothy Taylor. Some 10 years later we’re still documenting that shift.—Christine Beyleveldt
Among the chief concerns of the day was the Lions Gate Bridge solution. As guest editor Douglas Coupland put it then: “One of these days a Volvo full of nuns and puppies is going to fall right through what remains of the driving surface.” We got our act together and rehabilitated the bridge at the turn of the millennium, although the more radical ideas, including a double-decker bridge and a gondola crossing, were scrapped.
Vancouver prides itself on being one of the greenest and most beautiful cities on earth today. So it hit a nerve when writer Sean Rossiter chastised the city’s shoddy waste management efforts all those years ago and called out the real reason Stanley Park hadn’t fallen to developers (it was created as a military reserve). We didn’t even have a recycling program yet!
Before the days of the smart phone or, heck, even the internet, there were 28 great things to do in the fall rather than two (pumpkin spice lattes and Netflix). Vancouver’s Oktoberfest, for one, with its boozy weekends, was “a much louder and wilder affair” than its Munich namesake, we’re told.
Get the latest headlines delivered to your inbox 3 times a week, and you’ll be entered to win a Nanoleaf Renter Bundle, which includes 1 x Smart Multicolor Floor Lamp and 1 x Smart Multicolor Lightstrip.
These lights have customizable colours, can react to the beat or your music and can be controlled through an app. Prize value is $200 CAD.
Each newsletter subscription = 1 entry. Giveaway closes February 28. 2026. The winner will be contacted by an @canadawide.com email. The contest is only open to Canadian residents, excluding Quebec.