City guide

Coquitlam

A Tri-Cities anchor where SkyTrain density meets mountain trails, forested parks, and deep family roots.

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Coquitlam stretches across roughly 122 square kilometres on the north side of the Fraser River, climbing from sea-level flats near Maillardville to the forested ridges of Burke Mountain more than 1,200 metres above. With a population of about 148,600, it's the largest of the three Tri-Cities municipalities and one of Metro Vancouver's defining suburban-urban hybrids — part transit-oriented high-rise district, part trail-laced mountain community, part heritage town. The [City of Coquitlam](https://www.coquitlam.ca/) was incorporated in 1891, making it one of the oldest municipalities in the region, and that long history still shows in the French-Canadian roots of Maillardville and the established single-family streets that fan out from the older core. What most newcomers notice first is how green and how connected the city feels at the same time. Mundy Park covers 180 hectares of second-growth forest in the middle of town, the Coquitlam Crunch climbs a Hydro corridor that locals treat as an outdoor gym, and Town Centre Park wraps around Lafarge Lake right beside a SkyTrain station. The Millennium Line's Evergreen Extension threads six stations through the city, with the West Coast Express adding a commuter-rail link to downtown Vancouver from Coquitlam Central. The neighbourhoods that follow reflect that range. You'll find dense, walkable high-rise districts around the City Centre and Burquitlam, quieter family streets in the central plateau, newer subdivisions climbing Burke Mountain, and the heritage character of Maillardville near the Fraser. Each one has a distinct feel, and the guides below are built to help buyers and sellers understand what daily life actually looks like in each pocket of [Coquitlam](https://www.coquitlam.ca/).

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