Rent a bike at the park gate and ride the ~10km Seawall loop — the totem poles at Brockton Point, the harbour, beaches, Lions Gate Bridge and old-growth forest at your own pace. Cycling one of the world's great urban parks is the definitive Vancouver experience and the lowest-cost marquee on this list. Spokes (operating since 1938) sits at Georgia & Denman, an easy short ride or walk from Canada Place, so it doubles as a low-risk near-port option if a longer tour falls through.
What to expect
You'll pick up a rental bike at Spokes (just a short walk or ride from Canada Place) and spend 1.5–2.5 hours cycling the iconic ~10km Seawall loop at your own pace, passing Brockton Point's dramatic totem poles, crossing sight lines to the Lions Gate Bridge, and threading through old-growth forest before emerging onto pristine beaches with unobstructed harbour views. The rhythm is entirely yours—there's no guide or group, just you on two wheels moving through one of the world's great urban parks, with the freedom to linger at viewpoints or speed through familiar stretches. You'll return the bike to Spokes, helmet and lock intact, having experienced the definitive Vancouver experience without a single narration.
Honest verdict: the ship's 'Stanley Park & City Highlights Drive' ($107-$188) is essentially free to replicate — park entry is free and the seawall is a 20-min walk or short ride from Canada Place. A self-guided bike loop for ~$25-45 is the strongest value in the port; only pay for the ship's narrated drive if you can't or won't move under your own power.
Good to know
Spokes sits at Georgia & Denman, a 20-minute walk or quick ride from your pier at Canada Place, making this a low-risk near-port option even if you have only 4–5 hours ashore; budget 45 minutes total for transit and rental check-in/out, leaving you 2–3 comfortable hours for the loop and a safety margin. Bike rentals run ~CA$14.50/hr (~$11–22 USD), with helmet and lock included, so total cost is roughly $25–45 USD per person for the full loop—no advance booking required, though arriving early (within the first hour after port arrival) avoids peak rental queues. Wear layers and bring sunscreen; the Seawall is fully exposed in places. No skills or fitness hurdle exists; the route is flat, well-maintained, and designed for mixed ability.