Quest University Canada was originally created as the Sea to Sky University in May 2002, when the
Legislative Assembly of British Columbia passed the Sea to Sky University Act. One of the purposes cited in the act was to create a university that would "offer a rigorous and well-rounded university education in the arts and sciences with a global focus." Quest was the brainchild of
David Strangway, who, after his retirement as president of the
University of British Columbia, wished to create a new kind of university where undergraduates guided their own studies in close cooperation with faculty. Together with Quest founding directors Blake Bromley and Peter Ufford, Strangway formed the Sea to Sky Foundation and began soliciting contributions and searching for land. The foundation received grants from the J.W. McConnell Foundation, R. Howard Webster Foundation, and the
Stewart and Marilyn Blusson Foundation, which allowed it to begin hiring staff and faculty and launch the university's operations. In October 2005, the Sea to Sky University changed its name to Quest University Canada. The school officially opened its doors to students in 2007, becoming the first private, secular university in Canada. On October 29, 2020, Quest University announced that an agreement had been signed with Primacorp Ventures, an
investment company which owns and manages commercial and educational
real estate. Under the agreement, Quest would sell their campus lands to Primacorp and then lease them back in order to continue operations. The university closed at the end of the 2022–2023 academic year, when all academic operations ceased. On August 16, 2023, the government of British Columbia issued a press release announcing that
Capilano University had purchased Quest University's campus for $63.2M with supplemental funding provided by the government of British Columbia. CapU Squamish began offering courses at the campus in Fall 2024. == Leadership ==