Railway connections to North Vancouver were completed in the 1950s, with a highway built in the later 1960s that was the precursor to today's Sea-to-Sky Highway.
Horseshoe Bay is a residential and commercial district of Vancouver on the southern edge of the Sea-to-Sky Highway.
Lions Bay is a village municipality located north of Vancouver, British Columbia, on the Sea-to-Sky Highway.
In the long term, this may be further expanded to include the area along the Sea-to-Sky Highway as far north as Pemberton and east to Hope.
Less waiting traffic at Horseshoe Bay terminal as backlogs often blocked access to the Sea-to-Sky Highway.
The highway by the shoreline on the way to Whistler Mountain is the Sea-to-Sky Highway.
The apprehension occurred on the Sea-to-Sky Highway, just south of Squamish, giving rise to the name the media attached to the group.
Known as the Pemberton Trail, the route followed a path similar to the Sea-to-Sky Highway, leading past the Whistler area to the present day town of Pemberton.
The British Columbia government paid $600 million for major upgrades to the Sea-to-Sky Highway, which carried the majority of visitors to the alpine sites.
It is particularly noticeable from the Sea-to-Sky Highway just south of Whistler, British Columbia.