The Oldest Chinatown in Canada
Vancouver’s Chinatown is one of the oldest and largest in North America — established in the 1880s by Chinese workers who came for the gold rush and stayed to build the Canadian Pacific Railway. The neighbourhood’s centrepiece is the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden — the first full-scale classical Chinese garden built outside China (constructed in 1986 by artisans from Suzhou using traditional techniques and materials), a tranquil walled enclave of pavilions, ponds, rocks, and plants designed according to Ming Dynasty garden principles.
A Chinatown tour covers the garden, the historical context (the discriminatory head tax, the Exclusion Act, the community’s resilience and contribution), the heritage buildings (the Sam Kee Building — the world’s narrowest commercial building at 1.8 metres wide), the Chinese Cultural Centre, and the food — the dim sum restaurants, the bakeries, and the herbal medicine shops that maintain the neighbourhood’s culinary heritage.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long is a Chinatown tour?
Approximately 1.5–2 hours covering the garden, the heritage buildings, and the historical narration. Adding a dim sum lunch extends the visit.
Is the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Garden worth visiting?
Yes — the garden is a serene, architecturally significant space that provides a contemplative counterpoint to the city’s energy. Guided tours of the garden run approximately 45 minutes.