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Mount Robson Visitor Centre

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Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Mount Robson Visitor Centre
Phone:
+1 250-566-4038

Hours:
Sunday9am - 4pm
Monday9am - 4pm
Tuesday9am - 4pm
Wednesday9am - 4pm
Thursday9am - 4pm
Friday9am - 4pm
Saturday9am - 4pm


Mount Robson Provincial Park is a vast provincial park in the Canadian Rockies with an area of 2,249 km². The park is located entirely within British Columbia, bordering Jasper National Park in Alberta. The B.C. legislature created the park in 1913, the same year as the first ascent of Mount Robson by a party led by Conrad Kain. It is the second oldest park in the provincial system. The park is named for Mount Robson, which has the highest point in the Canadian Rockies and is located entirely within the park. The first recreational trail was built in 1913 by Jasper outfitter Donald Curly Phillips along the Robson River to Berg Lake. From May to September, the Mt. Robson Visitor Information Centre is open to the public, and is a common stop on the Yellowhead Highway. The only commercial services within the park are at a combination coffee-shop gas station complex at the same viewpoint. There are two government campgrounds near the Visitor Centre and one near Yellowhead Pass. The park spans the Yellowhead Highway and is located 390 kilometres west of Edmonton or 290 kilometres east of Prince George. The source of the Fraser River is in Mount Robson Provincial Park. A dripping spring just west of a pond at Fraser Pass is the actual source of British Columbia's longest river. It is located 40 km south of the Yellowhead Highway at Lucerne Campground. There are no trails there and the best access is by helicopter from Valemount.
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