The
Metro Vancouver operates a regional rapid mass transit network, under the auspices of the South Coast British Columbia Transportation Authority (formerly Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority). Known as
TransLink, it is responsible for all aspects of municipal transport. In addition to
public transit, TransLink is also responsible for maintaining some roads and providing ferry service within the
Lower Mainland. TransLink introduced a smart card based electronic payment system called
Compass Card to replace existing monthly and daily passes, tickets and cash. TransLink has been slowly phasing in use of the Compass Card. Summer 2015 saw most post-secondary school students begin using the fare cards. TransLink rolled out the card to the general population in November 2015. The Compass Card has a [C$]6 refundable deposit. It is a NXP Mifare DESFire EV1 card.
Bus service Bus service operates throughout most of the region under a subsidiary of TransLink, known as
Coast Mountain Bus Company. TransLink was established by the provincial government as a way to divorce itself from the responsibilities of roads, bridges and transit service. Ultimately the provincial government retains responsibility for funding of all projects under the aegis of TransLink. Service in
West Vancouver and
Lions Bay is contracted through
West Vancouver Blue Bus. All buses are wheelchair-accessible and carry cycle racks; they can carry two wheelchairs and bicycles. Vancouver is actively maintaining and upgrading its
trolleybus fleet. With purchases of 188 E40LFRs and 74 E60LFRs from
New Flyer Industries (in 2005–2009), the trolley network serves the downtown core and much of the city of Vancouver proper with fully wheelchair-accessible and bicycle-friendly zero-emission buses. Certain diesel commuter buses which travel to the suburbs as RapidBus have bicycle racks, wheelchair lifts, reading lights and high back reclining seats. Frequency in Greater Vancouver ranges from every couple of minutes within downtown Vancouver to two to three trips a day in far-flung suburbs such as
Maple Ridge, Langley, and Aldergrove.
SkyTrain 's
Bombardier ART Mk III at
Stadium–Chinatown station The SkyTrain is an advanced rapid metro system operating fully automated trains on three lines. Built for the
Expo 86 World's Fair, it has since become the world's second longest automated light rapid transit system utilizing the world's longest transit-only bridge, the
SkyBridge. The
Expo Line and
Millennium Line link downtown to the suburbs of
Burnaby,
New Westminster,
Surrey, and
Coquitlam. A third rapid transit line connecting downtown Vancouver to central
Richmond and the
Vancouver International Airport, known as the
Canada Line, started operation on August 17, 2009. It utilizes
Hyundai Rotem instead of the
linear induction Bombardier technology used on the first two lines.
Future expansion Plans from the 2000s to expand the Expo Line to the southeast, increasing its capacity and extending its route further into the city of Surrey, were superseded in the mid-2010s by a
proposed light rail line. These plans were themselves superseded in 2018 in favour of a return to the planned SkyTrain extension. , construction is underway for a $2-billion extension of the Millennium Line west towards Kitsilano and Point Grey. The phase 1 extension would start at the current VCC–Clark SkyTrain station terminus, then run under the Broadway corridor to terminate at a
station at Arbutus Street; it is expected to be completed in 2025. At a future date, a phase 2 extension would be built to the
University of British Columbia. In 2022, funding for a extension of the Expo Line southeast through Surrey into Langley was formally approved by the provincial and federal governments. Major construction is expected to proceed from 2024 until the line opens in 2028. In early 2022, TransLink and the Mayors' Council approved the 10-year priority projects of the Transport 2050 plan through to the early 2030s. These projects includes several rapid bus transit lines and the extension of the SkyTrain system.
Downtown streetcar The city was planning the first phase of a downtown
streetcar from
Granville Island around
False Creek to
Waterfront Station and then to
Stanley Park using a combination of modern
low-floor trams and
heritage streetcars. The
Vancouver Downtown Historic Railway was running the phase-zero route,
Granville Island-Main Street SkyTrain station, in the summer months, as a demonstration. From January 21 to March 21, 2010, a free demonstration service called the
Olympic Line (named after the
2010 Winter Olympics) ran along 1.8 km of the Downtown Historic Railway, from Granville Island to
Olympic Village Station, using two
Bombardier Flexity Outlook streetcars borrowed from the
Brussels tramway. Plans were being developed that would have extended the streetcar network into Yaletown making a ring around the downtown peninsula as phase two. Longer range plans were being discussed that may have extended the streetcar from Granville Island west onto the Arbutus corridor, east along Hastings Street and/or south along Main Street. However, there are no current plans for a streetcar network in Vancouver, and the Olympic Line demonstration line was decommissioned. , the
West Coast Express.
West Coast Express The West Coast Express, a
heavy commuter rail train, serves
Port Moody,
Coquitlam,
Port Coquitlam,
Pitt Meadows,
Maple Ridge, and
Mission. These services have an
integrated ticketing system.
SeaBus The SeaBus is a passenger-only ferry connecting downtown Vancouver and the
City of North Vancouver across
Burrard Inlet. There are three ferries in the fleet, which is owned and operated by the Coast Mountain Bus Company. The newest vessel was put into service in 2014. ==Cycling==