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{{coor title d|49.277507|N|123.147265|W}}
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[[Category:Maritime museums]]
[[Category:Maritime museums in Canada]]
[[Category:Museums in Vancouver]]
[[Category:Museums in Vancouver]]

[[de:Vancouver Maritime Museum]]
[[de:Vancouver Maritime Museum]]

Revision as of 15:19, 28 September 2007

File:Vmmlogo.gif

The Vancouver Maritime Museum is a nautical museum in Vancouver, Canada. It is located just west of False Creek on the Vancouver waterfront. The main exhibit is the St. Roch, an historic arctic exploration vessel. The museum also has extensive galleries of model ships, including one with historic model ships built entirely from cardboard or paper, There is a workshop where visitors can watch craftsmen build models.

Vancouver Maritime Museum

The museum was built around the St. Roch. She is enclosed in an A-frame, which, unfortunately, has not proven to be the ideal structure for her preservation or display. The St. Roch needs some conservation work. Also, her protective structure needs to be replaced with a larger structure with better climate control.

Captain George Vancouver Special Exhibit

In 2007, the museum featured a special exhibit of a series of paintings documenting Captain George Vancouver's famous voyages to the Pacific Northwest. The exhibit was in honor of the 250th anniversary of Vancouver's birth.

Plans to Move the Museum

The Museum is, as of 2006, planning to move to a more ideal location, possibly in North Vancouver, which is considering the creation of a National Maritime Centre for Pacific and the Arctic on the city's waterfront.[1]

References

  1. ^ "National Maritime Centre," Vancouver Maritime Museum. Retrieved 8 April 2007.

49°16′39″N 123°08′50″W / 49.277507°N 123.147265°W / 49.277507; -123.147265