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This stunning photo of Granville Island shows what Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­looked like over 130 years ago

The Granville Street Bridge and the old C.P.R. Bridge can be seen in the background cutting over False Creek
Kitsilano 1890
Housed in the City of Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­Archives, this photo of Granville Island looks out onto the Granville Street Bridge and the Kitsilano trestle bridge. Reference code AM753-S1-F1-: CVA 256-01.23

Tucked away in the City of Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­archives lies a stark photo of a lone house looking out onto the newly completed Granville Street bridge and a forested Granville Island.

Taken in 1890, the photo shows the first rendition of the Granville Street Bridge which was completed in 1889 and behind it, the Kitsilano trestle bridge completed in 1886. If the camera stayed in the same place and took another photo 40 years later it would have seen the completion of the Burrard Street Bridge in 1930.

The Granville Street bridge in the picture would undergo some serious upgrades 20 years later but it would take another 45 years from then for it to become the bridge we all recognize today. 

Vintage Aerial view False Creek
Aerial view of Downtown Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­and False Creek, between Burrard Street and Granville Street Bridge. Reference code COV-S167---: CVA 515-8. By City of Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­Archives

The Kitsilano trestle bridge, on the other hand, outlived its usefulness as the downtown connector for streetcars in the early 1980s and was removed. Other archival photos show all three bridges, the Burrard, Granville and the Kitsilano trestle all running alongside each other. 

As pointed out by documenting Vancouver’s changes over the years, the original right-of-way for the rail line can still be seen today. The curved line of buildings around the Harbour Cove and Mariner Point follow the rail line laid out by the Canadian Pacific Railway almost 100 years before.