With your personal AI guide you aren't restricted to major landmarks and limited stories any more! Explore iconic sites like the Lion’s Gate Bridge, the Canada Place, the Shannon Falls or any other popular or less known landmark, historical building or even piece of art. You can ask about literally anything which catches your eye: whole city district, hidden street corner, intriguing frescoes...
Key Features for Your Canadian Holiday:
Snap a photo of any ancient ruin, fountain, or masterpiece and instantly receive a fascinating story. It’s like having a historian in your pocket!
Navigate seamlessly with map-based audio tours, giving you full flexibility.
Choose a narrator persona—from an in-depth local guide to a fun, kid-friendly companion—to tailor the stories to your interests.
Offline Ready: Download guides in advance so you never miss a story, even without Wi-Fi.
7 days premium subscription included. Available both for iPhones and Android smartphones
You can start your journey at any place in Vancouver and travel at your pace. Just download the app to your phone
Trace the shoreline of this urban sanctuary. Your guide reveals the 1917 origins of this 28km stone wall, an engineering feat designed to prevent erosion while creating the world’s longest uninterrupted waterfront path.
Peer up at the suspension towers. Learn how the Guinness family financed this 1938 bridge to provide access to their British Properties, utilizing a design that pioneered thin-strand cable technology.
Watch the rhythmic release of white vapor. Discover the 1977 mechanics behind this "antique-style" clock, which actually runs on the city’s underground steam heating network.
Examine the five iconic white sails. Your architectural briefing explains how this Teflon-coated fabric structure was inspired by Vancouver’s maritime identity for Expo 86.
Step into a former industrial wasteland. Uncover the 1970s urban renewal project that transformed corrugated tin factories into a world-class culinary and artisan hub.
Marvel at the geodesic dome. Learn about the "Buckminster Fuller" inspired geometry used for this Expo 86 pavilion, designed to maximize interior space with minimal structural material.
Ascend 168 meters in a glass elevator. Get a 360-degree technical breakdown of the city’s "Vancouverism" urban planning—a model of high-density residential towers balanced with green spaces.
Behold the Art Deco masterpiece. Your guide points out the intricate terracotta "sea flora and fauna" reliefs and explains why this was the tallest building in the British Empire upon its 1930 completion.
Enter the soaring concrete halls. Study the architecture of Arthur Erickson, who mirrored the traditional post-and-beam structures of the First Nations people using modern pre-cast concrete.
Stand before the stone sentinel. Learn about the ancient Inuit tradition of stone markers (Inuksuit) and how this specific monument became the symbol of the 2010 Winter Olympics.
Feel the mist from BC’s third-highest waterfall. Your guide details the geological fracture in the granite cliffs that allows water to plummet 335 meters down to the Howe Sound.
Rise 885 meters above sea level. Understand the Swiss-engineered cable system that transports visitors into the alpine zone in under 10 minutes.
Walk the 100-meter span. Learn about the tension-anchor system used to secure this bridge into the rugged gneiss rock of the coastal mountains.
Descend into the depths. Your industrial guide explains how this was once the largest copper mine in the British Empire, featuring a massive gravity-fed ore processing mill.
Gaze at the serrated peaks. Learn about the tectonic uplift and glacial carving that created this dramatic mountain range over millions of years.
Navigate the pedestrian-only layout. Discover the 1970s design principles that aimed to create a European-style ski village optimized for wind protection and sunlight.
Cross the world’s longest unsupported span. Your technical briefing details the 3-cable (3S) technology that allows cabins to travel 4.4km between mountains without a single support tower in the middle.
Traverse the high-altitude span. Learn about the extreme weather engineering required to keep this metal bridge stable against 200km/h alpine winds.
Explore the cedar-plank architecture. Understand the shared heritage of the two local First Nations and the traditional techniques used to build their longhouses and pit houses.
Witness the perfect "horseshoe" drop. Your geological guide explains how a basalt lava flow 34,000 years ago created the hard lip that allows the water to fall cleanly into the canyon below.
Ascend past three turquoise tiers. Your geological guide explains "rock flour"—fine glacial silt that remains suspended in water, refracting light to create this surreal neon-blue hue.
Survey the mirrored reflection of Mount Matier. Learn about the 19th-century "Gold Rush Trail" that pioneers carved through these treacherous granite passes.
View the freshwater fjord. Understand the 1940s Bridge River Power Project, which diverted water through massive tunnels in the mountain to generate hydroelectricity for the coast.
Step back to 1912. Your industrial briefing details the "2141" steam locomotive, a coal-fired workhorse that powered the expansion of the Canadian West.
Stand at the precise spot where the transcontinental railroad met in 1885. Learn how this single iron spike unified Canada as a nation, overcoming impossible mountainous terrain.
Explore the unique 1950s folk-art architecture. Discover how hand-built cement and cedar structures were integrated into the old-growth cedar rainforest without disturbing the root systems.
Navigate the high-canopy bridges. Your guide explains the tension-cable engineering used to suspend platforms between massive 500-year-old Western Red Cedars.
Wander through relocated 19th-century buildings. Uncover the architectural salvage techniques used to move an entire pioneer town to this lakeside cliff.
Examine the "Selkirk" locomotive. Learn why these massive engines were specially designed with extra drive wheels to haul heavy freight over the steep Rogers Pass.
Stand atop the 175-meter concrete wall. Your technical guide details the "run-of-river" technology that makes this one of the most powerful renewable energy sites in North America.
Walk among 800-year-old giants. Your botanical guide explains the unique "Interior Wetbelt" ecosystem—the only place in the world where a rainforest exists so far from the ocean.
Explore the birthplace of North American mountaineering. Learn about the 1881 discovery of this pass and the constant battle against the world's highest avalanche frequency.
Traverse the accessible boardwalk. Understand the structural integrity of the Western Hemlock, a tree that thrives in the heavy, wet snowpack characteristic of this high-altitude pass.
Cross Canada’s longest timber-frame bridge. Learn about the traditional "Swiss-style" joinery that uses massive Douglas-fir beams without a single metal bolt in the main trusses.
Watch trains disappear into the mountain. Your technical briefing explains the 1909 solution to the "Big Hill" grade, where engineers blasted circular tunnels inside the peaks to reduce the incline.
Observe the power of the Kicking Horse River. Your geological guide describes how the rushing water exploited a soft fissure in the limestone to carve a bridge out of solid rock.
Visit the 1902 CPR hotel. Learn about the "Rustic Architecture" style—using local stone and timber to ensure human structures complement the surrounding wilderness.
Feel the power of the 373-meter drop. Understand the "v-shaped" glacial hanging valley that allows Daly Glacier’s meltwater to plummet into the Yoho Valley below.
Walk the perfectly aligned main street. Discover the 19th-century urban planning that ensures a direct, unobstructed view of the massive Cascade Mountain from every sidewalk.
Tour the "Castle in the Rockies." Your architectural guide details the 1888 Scottish Baronial design and the iron-frame construction that allowed for such a massive footprint in a remote wilderness.
Descend into the thermal waters. Learn how the discovery of these sulfur springs by three railway workers in 1883 led to the creation of Canada’s entire National Park system.
Soak in the 39°C mineral water. Your guide explains the geothermal process where rainwater seeps 3km deep into the Earth’s crust, heats up, and rises back through the Sulphur Mountain Thrust Fault.
Ascend to 2,281 meters. Learn about the 1950s lift technology and the "Sanson’s Peak" weather station that provided critical meteorological data for early pilots.
Study the tilted sedimentary layers. Your geological briefing explains how the river was diverted by glacial debris, forcing it to cut a new path through 250-million-year-old limestone.
Capture the iconic "Castle" view. Understand the early marketing strategies of the Canadian Pacific Railway, which used professional photographers to make the Rockies a global luxury destination.
Traverse the "Iron Way." Learn about the steel cable and ladder system anchored directly into the vertical rock face, allowing non-climbers to reach the peak safely.
Cruise the "Lake of the Spirits." Your industrial guide reveals the submerged 19th-century resort town of Minnewanka Landing, flooded by the construction of a hydroelectric dam in 1941.
Enter the 1903 "Lantern" building. Study the "Log Cantilever" architecture—the oldest federal building in any Canadian park—designed to showcase the local wildlife in natural light.
Observe the "Inverted Reflection" of Mount Rundle. Your guide explains the tectonic "thrust faulting" that pushed these massive slabs of rock into their signature wedge shape.
Visit the historic red-roofed lodge. Learn about Jimmy Simpson, a pioneer guide who built this structure using local timber to host the first "Golden Age" mountain explorers.
View the "Wolf Head" shaped lake. Your geological guide explains the "Terminal Moraine"—the pile of debris left by the retreating glacier that holds the lake in its high-altitude basin.
Peer into the deep limestone slot. Understand the "pothole" erosion process, where swirling rocks and water drilled perfect cylindrical holes into the canyon walls over millennia.
Walk on the ancient ice. Your glaciology briefing explains how this 6km-long ice tongue is part of a massive "Hydrological Apex," where water flows to the Pacific, Atlantic, and Arctic Oceans.
Step onto the glass floor 280 meters above the Sunwapta Valley. Learn about the cantilevered steel design that uses counter-weights to remain stable over the sheer abyss.
View the multi-tiered cascade. Your guide points out the spray-zone vegetation—unique mosses and lichens that thrive in the constant humidity created by the falling water.
Witness the "Turbulent Water." Learn how the river changes direction 90 degrees as it drops into a narrow canyon, a result of the different erosion rates between soft and hard rock layers.
Hear the roar of the most powerful falls in the Rockies. Your geological guide explains the "Quartzite" rock formation—so hard that the river has spent 10,000 years carving just a few meters into it.
Spot mountain goats on the sheer silt cliffs. Learn about the "Mineral Lick"—a natural deposit of salt and minerals that attracts wildlife to this specific vertical landscape.
Traverse the deepest canyon in the Rockies. Your guide explains the "Karst" system—an underground network of caves and disappearing rivers that feed this 50-meter-deep limestone fissure.
Cruise to the most photographed island in Canada. Learn about the "pinnacle" trees and why this sacred site remains inaccessible by foot to protect its delicate ecosystem.
Take Canada’s highest and longest guided aerial tramway. Your technical briefing details the "pulse" system that whisks visitors to the top of Whistlers Mountain for a view of Mt. Robson.
Explore the 1920s luxury log cabins. Discover how the "Arts and Crafts" movement influenced the design of these structures, prioritizing local materials and hand-hewn craftsmanship.
Solve the "Disappearing Lake" mystery. Your geological guide explains how the lake drains every autumn through a massive underground drainage system, one of the largest in the world.
Hike the historic lookout. Learn about the 1811 fur trade post established here by David Thompson, the "greatest land geographer who ever lived."
Admire the iron-rich red peak. Your guide explains the "Pyramid Reflection" on the lake and the unique Pre-Cambrian rock that gives the mountain its distinctive color.
Walk the turquoise loop. Your botanical guide explains the different depths and mineral compositions that give each of the five connected lakes a unique shade of blue and green.
Visit the 1913 cobblestone building. Your architectural briefing explains the "National Park Service Rustic" style, which set the standard for all park buildings across North America.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
Your guide to the flawless travel experience