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High school students from Japan use umbrellas to shield themselves from the rain while stopping to view the totem poles at Stanley Park, in Vancouver, on Saturday, October 19, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

Stanley Park’s stagnant Lost Lagoon closer to being reconnected to ocean

Mar 11, 2026 | 12:50 PM

VANCOUVER — Lost Lagoon at the entrance to Vancouver’s famed Stanley Park has become a swamp of green algae and stagnant water but the city’s board of parks is moving forward with a plan to reconnect the lagoon to the ocean after more than a century of being marooned.

Board members endorsed exploratory work in a motion on Tuesday to reconnect the lagoon to Coal Harbour and Second Beach to improve its ecological health and restore it as a tidal ecosystem.

Instead of a growing bloom of algae and worsening water quality — a result, the board says, of a century of infilling — a lagoon reconnected to the sea could see bird-rich mud flats at low tide, and marsh-like conditions at high tide.

Chad Townsend, senior planner of environment and sustainability at the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation, says that while many think of Lost Lagoon as a natural system, things were very different a century ago.

He says the site has a Squamish name, Ch’ekxwa’7lech, meaning “gets dry at times,” referring to how tides would roll in and out about 100 years ago.

As a historic salt marsh, the lagoon was used by local First Nations for shellfish harvesting and waterfowl hunting, and the site supported a diverse ecosystem of fish, birds, crustaceans, and invertebrates.

But things changed after the construction of the Stanley Park Causeway in 1916 when the lagoon was cut off from Burrard Inlet to make way for what was to become Highway 99.

Now, the lagoon is less than a metre deep.

Townsend says the causeway is like a dam, cutting off tidal flows and turning the lagoon into a “very deteriorated” ecosystem.

“So, things like algae blooms and smell are all indicators of poor habitat quality,” says Townsend. “A lot of that has to do with depth.”

He said that when depth drops to less than one metre, water bodies heat up faster. The lagoon now lacks the ability to exchange nutrients and fresh water.

“It really has none of the characteristics that it would have when the (First) Nations were stewarding Stanley Park.”

Ernie George, director of treaty, lands and resources with the Tsleil-Waututh Nation, says in a letter that the nation supports the board’s efforts to connect the lagoon to the sea.

George says after the lagoon was cut off the environment changed from a saltwater lagoon to a freshwater lake.

“The loss of salt marsh is not unique within Burrard Inlet as the inlet has seen a dramatic decrease in salt marsh and other key habitats since contact,” read the letter.

“Some estimates have half the Inlet’s shores being altered, removing fish habitat for important species like Pacific salmon and forage fish,” the letter says.

A staff report dated Feb. 26 offered three options to reconnect the lagoon to the ocean, including building a channel to connect the lagoon to tidal waters at Second Beach.

Tom Digby, the board’s chair, said algae blooms and fish die-offs have become a regular occurrence and it’s important to explore long-term solutions to restore the area’s ecological health.

The board said a redesigned lagoon would restore the tidal habitat, but it’s not currently funded and the estimated cost of the project is $30 million.

Townsend says the funding is “relatively small” compared with other recent infrastructure projects by the city.

“I think it’s an important development, and it’s really exciting for the whole region to have such a project that restores natural flows, bird habitat, and turns back the clock on a decision that was made for a very different reason of pleasure boating 100 years ago,” says Townsend.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Mar. 11, 2026.

Nono Shen, The Canadian Press