First bridge (1889) The first Granville Bridge opened in 1889, crossing from Beach Ave to 3rd Ave and was part of the scheme to clear Granville Street through to the North Arm of the Fraser River, where a bridge crossed to the farming community of Eburne. Granville Street was called Centre Street south of False Creek (until 1907) and the new slit through the forest heading south was initially known as North Arm Road. The long, low timber trestle bridge opened on January 4, costing $16,000 to build, and was designed by the
Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR). It had a
swing span near the downtown side, was wide enough for two wagons, had a wide separated path on the west side for pedestrians, and was barely above high tide – children swam from it in the summer. Two years after it was built, the CPR cleared the Fairview Slopes and opened them for settlement; the street railway company (predecessor of the
BC Electric) ran a single-track on a trestle on the east side of the bridge for the "Fairview Belt Line" which connected Granville Street, 9th Avenue (now Broadway) and Main Street with downtown, hoping it would help spur development, which it did.
Second bridge (1909) (center) and Mayor Douglas (on Lady Gray's left) at the opening of the new Granville Street Bridge, Vancouver, 6 September 1909. The second bridge was completed in 1909. It was a longer, medium-level steel bridge with a
through truss swing span. During
World War I, on April 29, 1915,
a fire broke out on the bridge that was thought to be an arson attack. Four Germans were arrested.
Third bridge (1954) On February 4, 1954, the current Granville Street Bridge opened to traffic after five years of planning and construction; its dedication ceremony was attended by 5,000 spectators after it had been delayed a week due to heavy snow. The
Vancouver Sun arranged for the first driver across the 1909 bridge, Sidney Annoot, to repeat her feat in 1954. The city government self-funded the bridge project, which cost $16.5 million (equivalent to $ in dollars), with "no formal assistance given by any other government body" according to mayor
Frederick Hume. A million vehicles crossed over the bridge in its first month. The eight-lane structure was constructed from 1951 to 1954 on the same alignment as the first bridge. Steel plate girders salvaged from the second bridge were made into barges for constructing the foundations of the
Oak Street Bridge. Initially only four lanes were open to traffic until the completion of the loop ramps on the north side on July 16. The bridge's wide design was meant to accommodate a future freeway that would serve downtown; those plans were cancelled in the 1960s. Recent improvements to the bridge include
increasing its earthquake resistance, and installing higher
curbs and
median barriers.
21st century In December 2017,
Vancouver City Council approved a plan to remove the "Granville Loops" - a pair of
cloverleaf off-ramps connecting the bridge with Pacific Street - and open up the land to redevelopment. The Granville Street Bridge underwent a seismic retrofit that began in late 2018 and was completed in September 2021. In January 2019, Vancouver City Council announced a plan to improve pedestrian and cyclist access to the bridge from the surrounding neighborhoods by converting two of the eight vehicle lanes into separated bike lanes. The plan was opened up for public comment in April 2019 with the project approved. Construction on the pedestrian and bicycle lanes began in February 2023 and was completed in July 2025. ==Gallery==