You’ve walked through Stanley Park and around Granville Island, and you’ve swayed across the North Shore’s Capilano Suspension Bridge. What’s next? It’s easy to find Vancouver’s biggest visitor attractions, so here’s somewhere else you can go with a little spare time and a hankering to head off the beaten path.

The campus is an idyllic place to hangout for the day © John Lee / Lonely Planet

Occupying a dramatic waterfront promontory on the city’s West Side, the University of British Columbia campus is studded with museums, gardens and attractions. Add public art, a full menu of eateries and a couple of great performance spaces, and you’ll have more than enough for a great day out – so long as you know where to go.

Getting there & around

UBC campus is easily reached by transit bus. Numbers 4 and 44 roll in from downtown, while connecting to the 99 B-Line is usually even faster. Drivers can check the UBC Parking website (parking.ubc.ca) for information on parking spots and rates, and cyclists can utilize the many bike paths around campus – consider using Mobi (mobibikes.ca), Vancouver’s new public bike share scheme.

Museums

Many visitors start at the popular Museum of Anthropology, the university’s best-known attraction. Its glass-walled Great Hall, bristling with towering totem poles and hulking ceremonial carvings, illuminates the region’s rich First Nations heritage (take a free guided tour for added enlightenment).

Studying the ancient totem poles at the Museum of Anthropology © John Lee / Lonely Planet

But the MOA isn’t just about snaggle-toothed totems. It’s also crammed with over 10,000 cultural objects from around the world, from intricate samurai armor to leering Portuguese Lucifer masks. And its library-quiet European Ceramics Gallery displays 600 pre-20th-century objets d’arts, including elaborate beer steins and fragile figurines.

Some visitors begin and end their UBC excursion with the MOA. But there are other museums worth hunting down here – including some hidden gems.

The entrance to the family-friendly Beaty Biodiversity Museum is dominated by Canada’s largest blue whale skeleton, a 26-metre-long colossus suspended from the ceiling. Step into the movie theatre for a fascinating documentary on how this marine giant was transported across the country.

The blue whale skeleton dominates the entrance to the Beaty Biodiversity Museum © John Lee / Lonely Planet

Essentially a public display of natural history research materials, Beaty is lined with rows of cabinets teeming with tooth-and-claw taxidermy and preserved flora and fauna. Beady-eyed birds are the stars – especially some imperious owls and a yellow-feathered Baltimore oriole that seems to scrutinize everyone who passes.

Just across from Beaty, the small Pacific Museum of Earth (pme.ubc.ca) is one UBC’s lesser-known attractions, and entry is by donation. Often crammed with kids, its displays showcase intriguing fossils and shiny, gem-like minerals – while a large, duck-billed Lambeosaurus skeleton acts as a full-time camera magnet.

The bike-friendly Main Mall is the predominant thoroughfare on campus © John Lee / Lonely Planet

Galleries & gardens

After perusing the free-entry Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, which specializes in contemporary works and changes shows several times a year, discover another gratis attraction. Hidden in the basement of the Irving K Barber Learning Centre – UBC’s original library building – the Chung Collection’s (chung.library.ubc.ca) evocative photos illuminate Vancouver’s early Chinese residents. There are also nostalgic posters, menus and models from the golden age of Canadian Pacific Railway travel – think powerhouse steam engines and streamlined cruise ships.

Back outside, it’s worth saving time for a tree-lined campus stroll. Centered on Main Mall – UBC’s principal thoroughfare and de facto promenade – ivy-clad older buildings jostle with grand, glass-fronted structures resembling corporate head offices. But despite the pace of development, plenty of tranquil green spaces remain here.

The view from the Rose Garden overlooks the North Shore mountains © John Lee / Lonely Planet

Punctuating Main Mall’s north end, the handsome Rose Garden offers postcard views of Burrard Inlet framed by the looming North Shore Mountains. Not far away, the Nitobe Memorial Garden is a Japanese-themed oasis of peaceful pathways and a moss-banked pond filled with plump koi carp. And if communing with nature is your main aim, Pacific Spirit Regional Park fringes the waterfront with dozens of woodland trails.

But most green-loving visitors make a beeline for the UBC Botanical Garden (it’s on the university’s C20 shuttle bus route if you don’t want to hoof it from Main Mall). The 78-acre park is divided between tree-lined trails on one side and – via an under-road tunnel – cultivated gardens on the other.

The Nitobi Memorial Garden is a tranquil respite from the busy campus © John Lee / Lonely Planet

Check out the medicinal Physic Garden and the jam-packed Food Garden here but don’t miss the attraction’s Greenheart TreeWalk, an elaborate network of rope-supported footbridges strung between towering firs and cedars. It guarantees a squirrel’s-eye view of the regional rainforest – plus a jelly-legged feeling as you wobble along the route.

A quick, budget-stretching note: the handy UBC Museums and Gardens Pass (botanicalgarden.ubc.ca/visit/admission) provides discounted combined entry to four fee-paying attractions – ideal if you’re planning a full day out.

The Greenheart Canopy Walkway is a highlight of the UBC Botanical Garden © John Lee / Lonely Planet

Eating & Drinking

And if all that exertion inspires an appetite, the campus also has a diverse menu of fuel-up options available.

Coffee shops like Ike’s (food.ubc.ca/project/ikes) and Neville’s (food.ubc.ca/project/nevilles) are perfect pit-stops, while Italianesque Mercante (food.ubc.ca/project/mercante) is ideal for lunch. But if you’re craving something more substantial, you don’t need to line-up with the undergrads at the slick new AMS Student Nest (ams.ubc.ca/nest), which recently replaced the old Student Union Building. Instead, pick-up a copy of The Ubyssey campus newspaper and find a perch inside the best bar on campus.

Ivy-clad older buildings recall UBC’s early days © John Lee / Lonely Planet

Koerner’s Pub (koerners.ca), well-hidden near the north end of West Mall and handily close to the MOA, welcomes all with its communal tables, tree-fringed beer garden and clientele of nerdy professors and hipster regulars. Alongside the laid-back ambience, the menu keeps the locals coming back.

The Koerner Organic Burger is a staple here; add peppered maple bacon for the full effect. Alternatively, for something hyper-local, try a crunchy Farm Salad, sourced as much as possible from the university’s own farm, less than a mile away.

The farm is planning to open its own microbrewery in the next couple of years, but until then, you can sup from Koerner’s excellent booze list. Go for a tasting flight of four beers or veer straight to Driftwood Brewing, one of British Columbia’s best ale-makers – their Fat Tug IPA is highly recommended.

And while you should also save time to dart into the UBC Bookstore (bookstore.ubc.ca/home) for a souvenir of your visit – UBC Thunderbirds T-shirt are always a good idea – there’s no need to end your eclectic day out just yet.

Check ahead to see what’s on at the university’s Chan Centre for the Performing Arts (chancentre.com) – one of Vancouver’s best concert venues – or book tickets for a play by the school’s acclaimed thespian students on one of several campus stages (theatrefilm.ubc.ca/events/main-stage-season). The season typically runs from September to March, and you might just spot a rising star or two.

This article was originally published in July 2014. It was updated in September 2016.

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