News   Jul 25, 2024
 684     0 
News   Jul 25, 2024
 643     0 
News   Jul 25, 2024
 493     0 

Forbes: Canada's Top 25 Attractions

wyliepoon

Senior Member
Member Bio
Joined
Apr 22, 2007
Messages
2,011
Reaction score
3
Link to article

Canada's Top Attractions
Rob Baedeker August 14, 2008



The 25 most-visited spots in the North

“We’ve been told that Canada has had a kind of vanilla pudding image,†says Canadian Tourism Commission spokesperson Carol Horne. “Safe and nice, like the girl next door—not the hot chick you’d want to go on vacation with.â€

Any lingering doubt about the sex appeal of the world’s second-largest country should be dispelled by a quick glance at Forbes Traveler’s list of the 25 most-visited Canadian tourist attractions. While the visitor hot spots in the nation’s 3.5 million square miles include the quaint (the narrow, restaurant-lined streets of Quebec City’s fortified old town, for example) they also encompass the exotic and awe-inspiring (the thundering falls of Niagara or the stratospheric heights of Toronto’s CN Tower).

Not surprisingly, for a country renowned for its natural beauty, outdoor destinations figure heavily on the list. Canada’s national parks draw approximately 13 million visitors annually. The system’s crown jewel, Banff National Park, in the Canadian Rockies (in the province of Alberta) attracted about 3.3 million adventure-seekers and nature lovers last year.

Ellen Sellers, a representative of Carlson Wagonlit/Encore Travel in Bolingbrook, Ill., describes Banff as “the Switzerland of this hemisphere.†She says U.S. travelers are often surprised to find the area “much different than a park like Yellowstone. Banff is glacial, very green in the summertime. It’s fresh and cool.â€

The Bay of Fundy, another Canadian natural wonder, straddling the eastern provinces of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, is also a major tourist draw. Approximately 1.2 million visitors a year come to marvel at the world’s highest tide (the sea rises 50 feet in about six hours) and to take in the myriad natural phenomena, including several species of rare and endangered whales.

“Thirty percent of visitors to Fundy come from the U.S.,†says Bay of Fundy Tourism Partnership manager Terri McCulloch. “Likely this is due, in part, to the excellent high speed catamaran car ferry, ‘The Cat,’ that traverses the coast from Portland and Bar Harbor, Maine, to the town of Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, at the mouth of the Bay of Fundy.â€

Americans account for the lion’s share of visitors at many of the country’s top attractions. The Niagara Falls Bridge Commission estimates 12 million annual cross-border passages on its bridges (though they only track vehicles), and U.S. travelers accounted for more than 76 percent of the 18.1 million foreign overnight visitors to Canada in 2006, according to the CTC’s latest annual report.

But perhaps as a result of a declining American dollar, or due to confusion about new passport requirements, visitation by Americans has actually declined recently. A comparison by Statistics Canada of January-to-March visitation in 2008 versus 2007, for example, showed a 13 percent decrease in trips to Canada by U.S. residents. The same report shows that more visitors are coming from countries such as China and Mexico. At Mont Tremblant, a ski resort and village in the Laurentian Mountains north of Montreal, the biggest recent increases in clientele have been coming from the U.K. and Mexico, according to spokesperson Virginie Barbeau.

Still, Barbeau adds, Tremblant is a strong draw for U.S. travelers, perhaps due to its somewhat exotic allure. To many Americans, the town feels more European than North American; the Quebec locals speak French, and the village is pedestrian-only (cars are parked in underground garages). This trans-continental charm, in addition to the world-class ski resort, golf courses and blues festival, draws more than two million visitors to Mont Tremblant annually, putting it in 16th place on our list.

Sellers agrees that the foreignness of Canada’s Eastern regions is often a draw for Americans. For travelers who’ve never left the States and who may be worried about the costs or cultural navigation required of a trip to Europe, Sellers sometimes suggests Toronto as an alternative. “We often recommend Toronto as a first European trip,†she says.

As Canada’s largest city, Toronto is home to many of its most-visited tourist attractions. Harbourfront Centre, a 10-acre site on the waterfront, includes shops, restaurants, green space, art performance venues, an ice skating rink and an extensive boardwalk. It draws approximately 12 million visitors annually, earning it the third spot on our list.

“Toronto is known as one of the world’s most ethnically varied cities,†the CTC’s Carol Horne explains. Some 110 languages and dialects are spoken among the population of 2.5 million.

Looking out from her window in the CTC’s Vancouver office, Horne offers another example of Canada’s thrilling diversity: “I’m looking up at the mountains, and Stanley Park (the forested oasis in the middle of the city) is just down the street. And all this is side by side with some incredible local culinary experiences. You can ski and dine (in the city) all in one day.â€

Vancouver is a prime example of what Horne calls Canada’s “vibrant cities on the edge of nature.†In addition to Stanley Park, Vancouver’s Granville Island—an enclave of theaters, restaurants, shops and artists’ studios alongside a renowned public market—makes our list, with an estimated 10 to 12 million visitors annually.

Before we take a closer look at those sites of urban vibrancy and natural splendor that constitute Canada’s most-visited tourist sites, a word about methodology. We defined tourist attractions in Canada as discrete sites of historical or cultural interest; natural phenomena and landmarks; and delimited (or officially designated) spaces of entertainment and recreation. While we’ve included some sites that have strong commercial components, we’ve excluded standalone shopping malls and casinos. If we hadn't, Toronto’s Eaton Center, which claims one million visitors a week, would top our list.

We’ve used the most up-to-date available numbers from the tourist attractions themselves along with data from reputable media sources, government agencies, and tourism industry newsletters.

So which vertigo-inducing Canadian attraction—the ski slopes of Whistler Blackcomb ski resort, or the glass-floored viewing room of Toronto’s CN Tower—welcomes the most visitors each year? Read the slideshow to find out.

*****

To save you the time going through the slideshow...

Canada's Top Attractions (by number of visits). Toronto attractions in bold.

1. Niagara Falls, Ontario: 12 to 14 million
2. Harbourfront Centre Toronto: 12 million
3. Granville Island, Vancouver, B.C.: 10 to 12 million
4. Stanley Park, Vancouver, BC: 8 million
5. Vieux Port (Old Port), Montreal: 7 million
6. Exhibition Place, Toronto: 4.5 to 5.2 million
7. The Forks, Winnipeg: 4 to 5 million
8. Banff National Park, Alberta: 3.3 million
9. Canada's Wonderland, Maple, Ontario: 3.25 million
10. Le Vieux-Quebec (Old City), Quebec City: 3.02 million
11. Mont Royal Park, Montreal: 3 million
12. Whistler Blackcomb, Vancouver, B.C.: 2.1 million
13. CN Tower, Toronto: 2 million (tie)
13. Mont Tremblant, Quebec: 2 million (tie)
15. Jasper National Park, Alberta: 1.99 million
16. Nathan Phillips Square, Toronto: 1.5 million
17. Centreville Amusement Park, Toronto: 1.35 million

18. La Ronde, Montreal: 1.3 million
19. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Gatineau, Quebec: 1.26 million
20. Ontario Place, Toronto: 1.2 million (tie)
20. Ontario Science Center, Toronto: 1.2 million (tie)
20. Toronto Zoo, Toronto: 1.2 million (tie)

20. Bay of Fundy, Nova Scotia: 1.2 million (tie)
24. Saguenay St. Lawrence Marine Park, Quebec: 1.07 million
25. Yonge-Dundas Square, Toronto: 1 million (est.)
 
It's odd that certain places made the list like Canada's Wonderland where I suspect most of the visitors are people who live in the area. This is supposed to be about tourism, after all.
 
Yea wow ... forget that more people go there compared to the zoo / ROM / science center ?? wow ... pretty impressive.

I betcha they never including the Toronto islands ... they'd be very high on that list.
I really wonder why they didn't ... seems odd and unfair considering all the other Parks they included on the list!

And is "Whistler Blackcomb, Vancouver, B.C.: 2.1 million" in "Vancouver" ??? .... they seemed to take the time to distinguish Maple from Toronto ... more silliness.
 
good they did not include malls.


The West Edmonton Mall, And Yorkdale and Eaton Centre will likely be number 1,2,3
 
Harbourfront Centre? Come on, 12 million people? Surely that includes everyone taking the ferry to the islands, and thus the HC is no more an attraction than a bus station or airport.

Yonge-Dundas Square? Come on.
 
The ROM, which clocked in at just under a million visitors last year, is now projected to attract 1.4 million once all the new galleries are installed. The AGO has generally attracted fewer visitors than the ROM and it'll be interesting to see what effect Gehry's reno has on those numbers in a few years time.
 
Harbourfront Centre? Come on, 12 million people? Surely that includes everyone taking the ferry to the islands, and thus the HC is no more an attraction than a bus station or airport.

First stop for international visitors to the Hipster Duck household is the Toronto Coach Terminal, where I indulge them in the egg salad sandwiches from "Kramden's Cafe".
 
Of all those Toronto sites, only two (NPS and Y&D Square) have direct or easy subway access and only Harbourfront and the Ex have direct Streetcar access. If these are desintations, wouldn't it make sense to have them accessible by public transit? (Disclaimer: this is not an endorsement of a subway to Maple)
 
Of all those Toronto sites, only two (NPS and Y&D Square) have direct or easy subway access and only Harbourfront and the Ex have direct Streetcar access. If these are desintations, wouldn't it make sense to have them accessible by public transit? (Disclaimer: this is not an endorsement of a subway to Maple)

Subway to Niagara it is! Maid of the Mist, watch out.
 
The Ex, CN Tower, Rogers Centre, Distillery District, Fort York and Ontario Place could all be served by the Downtown Relief Line. These are all pretty major TO attractions.

Not only does it make sense in unclogging the Yonge Line and serving new waterside communities, it would also make sense for tourism.

Maybe we can ask Giambrone again for Christmas.
 
Harbourfront Centre? Come on, 12 million people? Surely that includes everyone taking the ferry to the islands, and thus the HC is no more an attraction than a bus station or airport.

Last time I checked the ferry docks were located at the foot of Bay street, not part of Habourfront Centre. Ferry traffic would not be included. 12 million might seem a little high, but go down there at this time of year. There's always lots of people, and when they have their various festivals on weekends the crowds are downright ridiculous.
 

Back
Top