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


