Skip to Content
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Log In
Streetsblog.net

Livability Star Vancouver the Latest City to Look at Highway Removal

When it comes to the choice between a highway and a more connected, cohesive urban community, more and more cities are getting serious about ditching the highway.

false

Planners in Vancouver are the latest to contemplate urban highway removal, joining New Orleans, New York, Seattle and other cities that may replace high-speed, limited-access roads with more valuable uses. The Canadian metropolis is considering tearing down two viaducts that run between the city's east side and its downtown.

Erica C. Barnett at PubliCola has this report:

The city closed down the Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts to traffic throughout the Olympics, and “nothing fell apart,” Vancouver city engineer Peter Judd told the paper, which reports that “A preliminary Transportation Review unveiled April 7 shows that almost half of the traffic on the viaducts originates within the city of Vancouver, and there is unused capacity on parallel arterial streets like Expo, Pacific, and Hastings — which suggest traffic could be accommodated if the viaducts were partially or completely removed.”

Tearing down the two viaducts would, much like the removal of Seattle’s Alaskan Way Viaduct, create five city blocks’ worth of developable land in Vancouver’s downtown.

The statements by Vancouver’s anti-viaduct visionaries will be familiar to anyone who’s followed Seattle’s debate over how to replace the Alaskan Way Viaduct. What’s different in Vancouver, politically, is that there appears to be no real organized, pro-highway opposition to the proposal—instead, the debate centers on how much of the viaducts should be torn down, and how quickly. In fact, the only skeptical voice in the [local news] story comes from an anti-freeway activist who notes that the two viaducts are just “postage stamp[s]” compared to the freeways that are still being built elsewhere in the city.

It's that progressive attitude, no doubt, that has helped Vancouver earn the title of world's most livable city five years running.

Elsewhere on the Network today: The Active Transportation Alliance is encouraging readers to contact their elected representatives to express support for a proposal that would allow Illinois gas tax revenues to fund sustainable transportation. Sharable Cities lists the top 13 cities for public transportation. And at the National Transportation Examiner, Streetsblog contributor Adam Voiland asks whether improved cycling infrastructure in D.C. will encourage more women to try biking for transportation.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

Metro Committee Approves Additional Early Construction Funding for Union Station Run-Through Tracks

Link US is a huge undertaking which includes building a new bridge over and along the 101 Freeway

February 20, 2026

Friday’s Headlines

ICE, Playa del Rey cyclist memorial, potholes, don't poop on buses PSA, Santa Monica, Pasadena, Venice Dell housing, car-nage, and more

February 20, 2026

Thursday’s Headlines

Metro D Line, speed cameras, housing, beach path, Little Tokyo, Big Blue Bus, SB79, South Pasadena, 6th St. Bridge, Pico Rivera, car-nage, and more

February 19, 2026

This Week In Livable Streets

Metro meetings, Marmion Way, Jessica Meaney, Long Beach bridge alert, and more

February 17, 2026

Baldwin Park Greenway is Now Officially Open

The 2.3 mile walk/bike path circumvents the city’s busiest streets, and is slated to expand to a total of five miles in the years to come.

February 17, 2026
See all posts