Introduction
For other uses, see Chilliwack (disambiguation).
City in British Columbia, CanadaChilliwackCityCity of Chilliwack
FlagSealLogoNickname: The WackMotto:  "Cor Viride Provinciae"  (Latin)"The Green Heart of the Province"Location of Chilliwack within the Fraser ValleyChilliwackLocation of Chilliwack in British ColumbiaShow map of British ColumbiaChilliwackChilliwack (Fraser Valley Regional District)Show map of Fraser Valley Regional DistrictCoordinates: 49°10′16″N 121°57′09″W / 49.1711°N 121.9525°W / 49.1711; -121.9525CountryCanadaProvinceBritish ColumbiaRegional districtFraser ValleySettledc. 3,000 BCEIncorporated1873; 153 years ago (1873)Amalgamated1980; 46 years ago (1980)Government • MayorKen Popove • Governing bodyChilliwack City CouncilArea • City261.34 km2 (100.90 sq mi)Elevation10 m (33 ft)Population (2021) • City93,203 • Estimate (2025)112,500 • Rank11th • Density356.6/km2 (924/sq mi) • Metro130,283 • Metro density78.8/km2 (204/sq mi)Time zoneUTC−07:00 (PT)Forward sortation areaV2P – V2R, V4ZArea codes604, 778, 236, 672Highways Highway 1 (TCH) Highway 9WaterwaysChilliwack River, Vedder River, Fraser River, Hope RiverWebsitewww.chilliwack.com
Chilliwack (/ˈtʃɪləwæk/ CHIL-ə-wak) is a city in the Canadian province of British Columbia. In 2025, the city had an estimated population of 112,500 residents. Between 2020–2025, the city saw steady growth, adding approximately 11,700 residents over this period at a rate of 11.6%. It is located about 100 kilometres (62 mi) east of the City of Vancouver in the Fraser Valley. Chilliwack is 34 kilometres (21 mi) northwest of the Sumas–Huntingdon Border Crossing on the Canada–United States border.
About two-thirds of city land is protected as part of the Agricultural Land Reserve, and agriculture accounts for about 30 percent of the local economy. The city is bounded on the north by the Fraser River, and on the south by the Vedder River and Canada–United States border, and is surrounded by tall mountain peaks, such as Mount Cheam and Slesse Mountain.
Etymology
[edit]
In Halq'eméylem, the language of the Stó:lō communities around Chilliwack and Sardis, Tcil'Qe'uk means "valley of many streams". It also lends its name to the Chilliwack River, and group of aboriginal people, the Ts'elxwéyeqw (also spelt Ts'elxwíqw or Sts'elxwíqw). The spelling of Chilliwack is sometimes a matter of confusion. Prior to the amalgamation of the City of Chilliwack and the Municipality of Chilliwhack, there were two different spellings. At the time of the amalgamation, the current spelling of the city's name was adopted. Anglicized spellings include "Chilliwhyeuk" and other versions closer to the original Halq'eméylem.
History
[edit]
The archeological record shows evidence of Stó:lō people in the Fraser Valley, or S'ólh Téméxw, 10,000 years ago. Permanent structures in the Chilliwack area date from around 5,000 years ago. It is estimated that at the time of the first contact with Europeans, there were as many as 40,000 people living within Stó:lō territory.
19th century[edit]
In the mid-nineteenth century, thousands of gold miners transited the area en route to the goldfields of the upper Fraser River. By the mid-1860s, settlers had established farms around Codville's Landing, Miller's Landing, Minto Landing, Sumas Landing, and Chilliwack Landing along the Fraser River.
On April 26, 1873, the "Corporation of the Township of Chilliwhack" (note the variant spelling) became the third municipality incorporated by the Province of British Columbia. The town centre at the time was concentrated at Chilliwack Landing along the Fraser River. Steamboats were the main mode of transportation, carrying goods and passengers between Chilliwhack and New Westminster. After the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) in 1885, many residents began to cross the Fraser River at Minto Landing to ride the train from Harrison Mills.
In 1881, with little room for expansion and the threat of floods constantly looming, the town centre was moved south to "Five Corners" at the junction of the New Westminster-Yale Wagon Road, Wellington Avenue and Young Road. This subdivision was initially named "Centreville", but later was renamed "Chilliwack", as it was more commonly referred to by locals in 1887. The area would experience catastrophic flooding in 1894, 1935, 1948 and 2021.
On April 20, 1891, Richard Plunkett Cooke, George de Wolf, and Walter E. Graveley established the Chilliwhack Railway Company.
Early 20th century[edit]
On February 20, 1908, the area that was then known as Chilliwack, i.e., the subdivision within the greater Chilliwhack Township, was proclaimed as the City of Chilliwack by letters patent issued by the provincial government under the Chilliwack City Incorporation Act. The City of Chilliwack and the Township of Chilliwhack co-existed as separately administered municipalities until 1980.
On October 4, 1910, the British Columbia Electric Railway began operating regularly scheduled passenger service on the New Westminster–Chilliwack Interurban Line.
In 1941, Camp Chilliwack was established following Canada's entry into the Second World War in 1939. After the outbreak of the Pacific War, the camp was expanded to garrison Canadian Army units for the defence of Canada's West Coast. It continued to be used as a permanent training facility and army garrison during the Cold War. Following the unification of the Canadian Armed Forces in 1968, the base was renamed Canadian Forces Base Chilliwack (CFB Chilliwack). The base housed the following units:
Canadian Forces Officer Candidate School
First Combat Engineer Regiment (1CER)
Canadian Forces School of Military Engineering
Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry 3rd Battalion (3PPCLI)
Late 20th century[edit]
On January 1, 1980, the Township of Chilliwhack and the City of Chilliwack were amalgamated to form a single municipality styled the District of Chilliwack, following the passage of referendae in both municipalities. On July 16, 1999, the District of Chilliwack, once again, was renamed the City of Chilliwack. To the present day, locals idiosyncratically use the same name to refer to the city as a whole, and to the old city centre. It is also the name of the greater metropolitan area encompassing adjacent sovereign indigenous nations, municipalities, and unincorporated areas.
In 1997, following the end of the Cold War a few years earlier, CFB Chilliwack closed. Its training facilities were converted into the Canada Education Park, a campus for multiple institutions, including the Justice Institute of British Columbia, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the University of the Fraser Valley, and the Western Area Training Centre (WATC). Today it also houses supply depots for the 39 Canadian Brigade Group of the Canadian Army and the Royal Canadian Army Cadets. The old quartermaster warehouse became the Canadian Military Education Centre Museum.
Geography
[edit]
Vedder River Campground near Cultus Lake, located just south of Chilliwack
Chilliwack is located in the Upper Fraser Valley, 100 kilometres (62 mi) east of Vancouver on the Trans-Canada Highway. The city is bounded on the north by the Fraser River, and on the south by the Canada-United States border.
Chilliwack is surrounded by tall mountain peaks, such as Mount Cheam and Slesse Mountain, and large rivers (the Fraser and Vedder).
Geology[edit]
The Chilliwack Batholith forms much of the North Cascades in southwestern British Columbia, Canada and the U.S. state of Washington. The geological structure is primarily named after the City of Chilliwack, where it is the most notable geological feature.
The Chilliwack Batholith is part of the Pemberton Volcanic Belt and is the largest mass of exposed intrusive rock in the Cascade Volcanic Arc. The age of the Chilliwack batholith ranges from 26 to 29 million years old.
In 2013, Maclean's reported that, with an average annual temperature of 10.5 °C (50.9 °F), Chilliwack is the warmest city in Canada.
Climate[edit]
Vedder RiverThe climate is typical oceanic (Köppen: Cfb) but with some influence of the land mass being some distance from the sea, similar to Orléans, France (although the former has a precipitation more than twice as long and with a tendency towards the Mediterranean pattern). Chilliwack's mild climate with limited extremes provides excellent growing conditions for a wide variety of crops and agricultural products. In fact, when averaged from 1981 to 2010, Chilliwack had one of the warmest mean temperatures for any city in Canada.
The highest temperature recorded within the city of Chilliwack is 43.7 °C (110.7 °F) on June 28, 2021, which was set during the 2021 Western North America Heat wave, beating the old mark of 38.0 °C (100.4 °F) recorded on July 21, 2006. The lowest recorded temperature was −21.7 °C (−7.1 °F) on December 27, 1968. Precipitation falls mostly as rain, with snow limited to the surrounding mountains, except for two or three weeks per year generally in December or January when arctic outflow occurs. In 2013, Maclean's wrongly reported that with an average annual temperature of 10.5 °C (50.9 °F), Chilliwack is the warmest city in Canada. The actual warmest city in Canada is Victoria, with an average annual temperature of 11.2 °C (52.2 °F). Chilliwack enjoys some of the warmest average high temperatures in Canada, with 15.5 °C (59.9 °F) being the yearly average high.
Chilliwack receives nearly the same number of days of precipitation (184.6 days at greater than 0.2 mm) as comparable local communities near Vancouver such as Maple Ridge (185.8 days) and the City of Mission (186.0 days) (Environment Canada Statistics). Summers in Chilliwack are usually sunny and warm, with long days (light out until well after 10 pm in June with dusk that lasts for hours) and with occasional stretches of heat where temperatures rise above 30 °C (86 °F).
Due to its location at the eastern end of the Fraser Valley, there has been some debate about preserving Chilliwack's air quality. However, the 2011 World Health Organization's study of air quality shows that Chilliwack enjoys air quality among the best in the world. For PM10 (10 μm) size particulates, Canada averaged third best in the world (along with Australia) at an average of 13 micrograms per cubic metre. The City of Chilliwack and the Greater Vancouver Regional District were tied at a low 8.0 MPCM. For smaller particulate of 2.5 μm size (PM2.5), "the City of Chilliwack averaged 4.9 micrograms per cubic metre. Vancouver also had 4.9, Calgary had 5.6, Winnipeg had 5.6, Toronto had 7.9, Montreal had 11.2 and Sarnia had 12.7."
Climate data for Chilliwack Airport – Cultus Lake, British Columbia
Month
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Year
Record high °C (°F)
18.3(64.9)
20.6(69.1)
25.8(78.4)
32.2(90.0)
34.5(94.1)
43.7(110.7)
38.0(100.4)
38.2(100.8)
36.5(97.7)
27.8(82.0)
21.1(70.0)
19.0(66.2)
43.7(110.7)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F)
6.1(43.0)
8.8(47.8)
11.8(53.2)
15.8(60.4)
19.1(66.4)
21.7(71.1)
25.0(77.0)
25.3(77.5)
22.3(72.1)
15.3(59.5)
9.3(48.7)
6.0(42.8)
15.5(59.9)
Daily mean °C (°F)
3.3(37.9)
4.9(40.8)
7.3(45.1)
10.5(50.9)
13.7(56.7)
16.4(61.5)
18.8(65.8)
18.7(65.7)
15.7(60.3)
10.8(51.4)
6.2(43.2)
3.3(37.9)
10.8(51.4)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F)
0.4(32.7)
1.0(33.8)
2.8(37.0)
5.2(41.4)
8.2(46.8)
11.0(51.8)
12.5(54.5)
12.1(53.8)
9.1(48.4)
6.4(43.5)
3.1(37.6)
0.5(32.9)
6.0(42.8)
Record low °C (°F)
−20.6(−5.1)
−16.7(1.9)
−14.4(6.1)
−6.1(21.0)
−1.7(28.9)
1.1(34.0)
3.3(37.9)
2.8(37.0)
−2.8(27.0)
−7.2(19.0)
−14.4(6.1)
−21.7(−7.1)
−21.7(−7.1)
Average precipitation mm (inches)
233.5(9.19)
125.8(4.95)
154.7(6.09)
116.3(4.58)
93.1(3.67)
91.7(3.61)
48.1(1.89)
56.7(2.23)
75.2(2.96)
178.5(7.03)
283.8(11.17)
210.1(8.27)
1,667.5(65.65)
Average rainfall mm (inches)
206.9(8.15)
114.7(4.52)
143.7(5.66)
115.2(4.54)
93.1(3.67)
91.7(3.61)
48.1(1.89)
56.7(2.23)
75.2(2.96)
178.4(7.02)
272.7(10.74)
185.8(7.31)
1,582.2(62.29)
Average snowfall cm (inches)
26.6(10.5)
11.2(4.4)
11.0(4.3)
1.1(0.4)
0.0(0.0)
0.0(0.0)
0.0(0.0)
0.0(0.0)
0.0(0.0)
0.1(0.0)
11.2(4.4)
24.3(9.6)
85.3(33.6)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.2 mm)
20.6
15.9
19.7
17.5
15.8
14.6
8.7
8.5
9.9
17.1
21.5
20.1
189.9
Average rainy days (≥ 0.2 mm)
18.6
14.6
19.2
17.5
15.8
14.6
8.7
8.5
9.9
17.1
20.9
18.4
183.8
Average snowy days (≥ 0.2 cm)
5.0
2.9
1.9
0.2
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.1
2.0
4.8
16.8
Source: Environment Canada
Cityscape
[edit]
Bridal Veil Falls near the Village of Popkum
The city is made up of several amalgamated villages and communities. The urban core follows a north–south axis bisected by the Trans-Canada Highway. The city is bounded in the north by the Fraser River, in the east by the Eastern Hillsides, in the south by the Canada–US border, and in the west by the Vedder Canal. With 939 farms on approximately 17,322 hectares (42,800 acres) of dedicated farmland, farming remains an important part of the Chilliwack landscape.
Neighbourhoods[edit]
Main article: Neighbourhoods in Chilliwack
Neighbourhoods on the north side[edit]
Also referred to as "Chilliwack Proper Village West", the north side covers the area from the Trans-Canada Highway in the south, to the Fraser River in the north, and includes the communities of Camp River, Chilliwack Mountain, Downtown Chilliwack, East Chilliwack, Fairfield Island, Rosedale and Popkum. Downtown Chilliwack is the historical urban centre of the city. Several cultural attractions, such as the Chilliwack Coliseum, Chilliwack Cultural Centre, The Book Man and the Eagle Landing Shopping Centre are located there, as well as key government buildings, such as city hall, FVRD offices, and the Provincial Court of British Columbia.
Neighbourhoods on the south side[edit]
The south side includes the communities of Atchelitz, Cultus Lake Park, Greendale, Promontory Heights, Ryder Lake, Sardis, Vedder Crossing, Garrison Crossing, and Yarrow. Sardis is the urban core of the south side and is a popular shopping destination.
Parks[edit]
Bridal Veil Falls Provincial Park
Cheam Wetlands Regional Park
Chilliwack Heritage Park
Chilliwack Lake Provincial Park
Cultus Lake Provincial Park
Fairfield Park
Great Blue Heron Nature Reserve
Gwynne Vaughn Park
Island 22
Salish Park
Sardis Park
Townsend Park
Arts and culture
[edit]
Front view of the newly constructed Chilliwack City Hall in 1912. The building later became the Chilliwack Museum and Historical Society.
Music[edit]
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Chilliwack has an active rock music scene, initially centering mostly around young ska and punk rock bands. The modern scene has expanded to genres including metal, grunge, pop punk, emo, and shoegaze. Bands originating in Chilliwack include: These Kids Wear Crowns, Mystery Machine, and The Darkest of the Hillside Thickets.
Chilliwack also has a thriving classical music community, featuring the Chilliwack Symphony Orchestra and the Chilliwack Metropolitan Orchestra.
The drumline from Sardis Secondary School played at several venues during the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.
Chilliwack also offers many other community events and classes throughout the year. The Downtown Chilliwack Business Improvement Association is hosting music in Central Park on Saturdays for the month of August 2022.
Despite their name, the band Chilliwack was actually formed, and is based, in nearby Vancouver.
Performing arts[edit]
The Chilliwack Cultural Centre is a performing arts venue located in downtown Chilliwack. The building is home to the Chilliwack Players' Guild (the resident theatre company), as well as the Chilliwack Academy of Music.
The UFV Theatre is a 206-seat thrust stage venue formerly belonging to the University of the Fraser Valley (UFV) Theatre Department. Until 2017, UFV produced three or four mainstage shows each year, as well as the annual Directors' Festival, which featured student directors and performers from UFV, Capilano University, Thompson Rivers University, University of Victoria, UBC and Douglas College. As of 2021, the theatre is part of the Imagine High public high school.
The Chilliwack School of Performing Arts provides pre-professional training in acting, singing and dancing to children ages 3–18 at their downtown location. The mainstage show performs a two-week run every January at the Chilliwack Cultural Centre, and a Spring Festival featuring performances from many age groups in late May. Programs at the Chilliwack Performing Arts can be registered for at. Many different programs are available, including a Junior Musical Theatre and Summer Break Camps.
Public Art[edit]
Use Your Voice, Kevin Ledo 2020 for Chilliwack Mural Festival
The Chilliwack Mural Festival occurs annually. Co-founded and directed by Amber Price and Lise Oakley, their volunteer team has curated and directed the installation of over three dozen works of large scale original art in Historic Downtown Chilliwack.
Murals by Canadian Artists Emmanuel Jarus, Jason Botkin and Chris Perez can be found along with other public art via the Chilliwack Public Art Trail.
Festivals[edit]
Tulip Festival 2018
Annual events and festivals include:
Art of Wine Festival
Canada Day
Chilliwack Fair
Chilliwack Flight Fest
Chilliwack Independent Film Festival
Christmas Craft Market
Fraser Valley Culture and Craft Beer Festival
Garlic Festival
Lunar New Year
Mural Festival
Music and Dance Festival
Party in the Park
Pride Festival
Sunflower Festival
Tulip Festival
Yarrow Days
Museums[edit]
Chilliwack Sports Hall of Fame
Canadian Military Education Centre
Chilliwack Museum and Archives, located in the 1912 former Chilliwack City Hall on Spadina Avenue, is a National Historic Site of Canada. The Chilliwack Museum and Archives are a non-profit organization operated by the Chilliwack Museum and Historical Society which began in 1958 by brothers Oliver and Casey Wells.
Notable people
[edit]
See also: Category:People from Chilliwack
Piper James C. Richardson was awarded the Victoria Cross for gallantry at the Battle of the Somme
Former lieutenant governor Steven Point hails from Chilliwack
Academics[edit]
Allan Brooks DSO, Ornithologist and distinguished wildlife artist
Carin Bondar Ph.D., biologist, writer, filmmaker, speaker and television personality
Charlotte Froese Fischer, Ph.D., mathematician and computer scientist
Homer Thompson Ph.D., classical archeologist and excavator of the Ancient Agora of Athens
Rita Steblin Ph.D., musicologist in Vancouver and Vienna, Austria
Wayne Smith M.Econ, Chief Statistician of Canada
Activists[edit]
Betty Fox, cancer research activist, mother of Terry Fox.
Michael J. Fox OC, Actor
Athletes[edit]
Amber Allen, former professional soccer player with the Vancouver Whitecaps.
Dave Archibald, former professional hockey player with the Minnesota North Stars and Ottawa Senators.
Jordyn Huitema, soccer player for Seattle Reign FC and the Canada national team
Marc-Andre Leclerc, solo free climber
Rick Klassen, former professional football player with the BC Lions and Saskatchewan Roughriders.
Zach Benson, professional hockey player with the Buffalo Sabres.
Arts and entertainment[edit]
Bernie Herms, Grammy Award-winning artist
Bob Random, actor
Bria Skonberg, jazz musician, Juno Award winner
Inez Jasper, musician
Jim Vallance CM, musician, songwriter, composer, arranger and producer
Patrick Gallagher, actor from Glee, True Blood and Night At The Museum
Tasha Tilberg, model
Journalists[edit]
Diana Swain, television journalist
Jack McGaw, journalist and radio operator
Jurists[edit]
Steven Point KC OC OBC, former Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia
Thomas J. Crabtree KC, Supreme Court Justice
William H. Davies KC, Supreme Court Justice (1982–1999) and Chair of the Davies Commission Inquiry
Military[edit]
Piper James C. Richardson †, recipient of the Victoria Cross
Mark Isfeld †, combat engineer and UN peacekeeper killed by a landmine
Politicians[edit]
Barry Neufeld, former school trustee
Barry Penner KC MLA, former Attorney General
Chuck Strahl PC, former cabinet minister
Dorothy Kostrzewa, former city councillor and first Chinese-Canadian woman elected to political office in Canada
Writers[edit]
Allan Fotheringham, columnist
Gayle Friesen, novelist
W.P. Kinsella  OC OBC, author of Shoeless Joe
Others[edit]
Brian Minter CM OBC – horticulturist, author and syndicated columnist
Keith Hunter Jesperson, serial killer
Prest Family - One of the pioneer Chilliwack families
Media
[edit]
Main article: Media in the Fraser Valley
Newspapers[edit]
Chilliwack Progress – British Columbia's oldest community newspaper, published continuously with the same name in the same community since April 1891
Chilliwack Times published its final edition on December 28, 2016.
Radio[edit]
FM 89.5 – CHWK-FM
FM 91.7 – CBYF-FM
FM 98.3 – CKSR-FM
FM 99.9 – CBU-FM-7
FM 102.1 – CBUF-FM-1
FM 107.5 – CKKS-FM
Television[edit]
Channel 11 CHAN-TV-1 Global
Sports
[edit]
See also: Category:Sports in Chilliwack
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Team
League
Sport
Venue
Established
Chilliwack Chiefs
BCHL
Ice hockey
Chilliwack Coliseum
2011
Chilliwack Jets
PJHL
Ice hockey
Sardis Sports Complex
2020
Valley Huskers
CJFL
Football
Exhibition Stadium
1999
Chilliwack Crusaders RFC
Third Division
Rugby union
Yarrow Sports Field
2012
Sports clubs in Chilliwack
Football[edit]
The Canadian Junior Football League club, the Valley Huskers, plays its home games at Exhibition Stadium in Chilliwack.
Ice hockey[edit]
Chilliwack is home to two Junior ice hockey clubs. The Chilliwack Chiefs of the independent British Columbia Hockey League plays its home games at the Chilliwack Coliseum. The Chilliwack Jets of the Pacific Junior Hockey League plays its home games at the Sardis Ice Complex. The Chilliwack Minor Hockey Association was founded in 1958 with the opening of the original Chilliwack Coliseum. The Western Hockey League announced that it planned to establish an expansion franchise in Chilliwack in 2026.
Karting[edit]
Greg Moore Raceway, located on Skwá First Nation, is home to the West Coast Kart Club, the only kart racing club in the Lower Mainland. The facility hosts club and national level karting events, as well as the Pacific Coast Mini Roadracing Club (PCMRC).
Trivia[edit]
Chilliwack Turbo Fastball club won the 1997 Canadian Jr. Men's National Championships. In 2013 the team was an inaugural induction into the Chilliwack Sports Hall of Fame.
Chilliwack's minor baseball Cougars were the 2003 Midget AAA Provincial champions as well as the 2006 Western Canadian tier 2 champions. Chilliwack Cougars College Prep Baseball Team won the Provincial Championship in 2016, 2017 and 2019. Most recent title against the Ridge Meadows Royals.
Sardis Flyers Are a speed skating club based out of Sardis Sports Complex.
Chilliwack Hawks Field Lacrosse Are a field lacrosse team that play at Stitos Elementary and Middle School.
Chilliwack Minor Lacrosse Mustangs are a minor league lacrosse team that play at the Sardis Sports Complex.
Chilliwack hosted the 2007–2008 Synchronized Skating Canadian Championships at the Prospera Centre.
Demographics
[edit]
Metropolitan Area[edit]
According to the 2021 census, the Chilliwack Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) has a population of 113,767 living in 44,365 of its 46,708 total private dwellings, a change of 12.1% from its 2016 population of 101,512. With a land area of 1,444.02 km2 (557.54 sq mi), it has a population density of 78.8/km2 (204.1/sq mi).
City of Chilliwack[edit]
According to the 2021 census, the City of Chilliwack has a population of 93,203 living in 35,758 of its 37,124 total private dwellings, a change of 11.2% from its 2016 population of 83,788. With a land area of 261.34 km2 (100.90 sq mi), it has a population density of 356.6/km2 (923.7/sq mi).
Ethnicity[edit]
Panethnic groups in the City of Chilliwack (2001–2021)
Panethnicgroup
2021
2016
2011
2006
2001
Pop.
%
Pop.
%
Pop.
%
Pop.
%
Pop.
%
European
73,865
80.3%
69,810
84.92%
67,210
87.37%
62,205
90.59%
57,020
91.52%
Indigenous
7,255
7.89%
6,585
8.01%
6,030
7.84%
3,400
4.95%
2,550
4.09%
South Asian
3,025
3.29%
1,260
1.53%
715
0.93%
555
0.81%
465
0.75%
Southeast Asian
2,425
2.64%
1,250
1.52%
855
1.11%
340
0.5%
580
0.93%
East Asian
2,215
2.41%
1,580
1.92%
1,100
1.43%
1,070
1.56%
910
1.46%
Latin American
1,015
1.1%
500
0.61%
370
0.48%
475
0.69%
295
0.47%
African
1,005
1.09%
685
0.83%
325
0.42%
250
0.36%
270
0.43%
Middle Eastern
510
0.55%
200
0.24%
75
0.1%
110
0.16%
65
0.1%
Other
675
0.73%
345
0.42%
245
0.32%
260
0.38%
150
0.24%
Total responses
91,985
98.69%
82,210
98.12%
76,930
98.71%
68,670
99.21%
62,300
99%
Total population
93,203
100%
83,788
100%
77,936
100%
69,217
100%
62,927
100%
^ Statistic includes all persons that did not make up part of a visible minority or an indigenous identity.
^ Statistic includes total responses of "Filipino" and "Southeast Asian" under visible minority section on census.
^ Statistic includes total responses of "Chinese", "Korean", and "Japanese" under visible minority section on census.
^ Statistic includes total responses of "West Asian" and "Arab" under visible minority section on census.
^ Statistic includes total responses of "Visible minority, n.i.e." and "Multiple visible minorities" under visible minority section on census.
Religion[edit]
According to the 2021 census, religious groups in Chilliwack included:
Irreligion (45,475 persons or 49.4%)
Christianity (41,875 persons or 45.5%)
Sikhism (1,570 persons or 1.7%)
Islam (750 persons or 0.8%)
Buddhism (575 persons or 0.6%)
Hinduism (575 persons or 0.6%)
Judaism (120 persons or 0.1%)
Indigenous Spirituality (105 persons or 0.1%)
Economy
[edit]
Chilliwack is part of the Lower Mainland-Southwest economic region. Chilliwack's service and retail sectors account for approximately 50% of GDP. Other growing industries include manufacturing accounting for 13%, construction at 8% and agriculture and forestry at 5% of Chilliwack's GDP.
Industry
Est. % of GDP
Agriculture & Forestry
5%
Construction
8%
Education
6%
Finance, Insurance & Real Estate
11%
Health
6%
Manufacturing
13%
Public Administration
9%
Retail/Wholesale Trade
12%
Technology
6%
Tourism
9%
Other
15%
Transportation
[edit]
Chilliwack Airport
Airports[edit]
Chilliwack Airport is a small regional airport located in Downtown Chilliwack. It has 1,219 m (3,999 ft) of paved and lit runway that includes a parallel taxiway. Approximately 70% of the estimated 60,000 annual air traffic movements are itinerant traffic that consists of both pilot training and recreational flights from all around BC and south of the border.
Vancouver International Airport is located about 113 km (70 mi) from downtown Chilliwack and has non-stop flights daily to Asia, Europe, Oceania, the United States, and Mexico, and other airports within Canada. Abbotsford International Airport is located about 42 km (26 mi) west of Downtown Chilliwack and offers scheduled service to Calgary, Edmonton, Toronto and Victoria, where passengers can connect to anywhere.
Active transportation[edit]
There are 673 km (418 mi) of active transportation throughout the city, the most per capita of any municipality in the Lower Mainland.
Highways[edit]
Trans-Canada Highway at dawn in Chilliwack
A four-lane to six-lane expressway from Horseshoe Bay to Hope runs through Chilliwack on the Lower Mainland section of the Trans-Canada Highway.
The Agassiz-Rosedale Highway is a north–south route in the eastern part of Chilliwack that acts as the last connection between Highways 1 and 7 eastbound before Hope, and is the main access to the resort village of Harrison Hot Springs. The highway first opened in 1953, originally going between Yale Road in Rosedale and Highway 7, with a ferry across the Fraser River. A bridge replaced the ferry in 1956. When the section of Highway 1 east of Chilliwack opened in 1961, Highway 9 was extended south to a junction with the new Highway 1 alignment, which replaced Yale Road as the main route between Chilliwack and Hope.
Mass transit[edit]
Main article: Chilliwack/Agassiz-Harrison Transit System
Until the railway and road access were built most travel to Chilliwack was done via paddlewheelers
Chilliwack Transit System consists of a fleet of 9 buses that operate along regularly scheduled routes throughout the metropolitan area. The 51 bus runs along the central Yale / Vedder artery providing transit to and between Downtown Chilliwack and UFV. Cottonwood mall acts as a central location for the bus lines that stray off from the main artery of Chilliwack. These busses include 57/58 from Broadway to Tyson, and 52/54 from Downtown Chilliwack to Promontory.
Passenger rail[edit]
vteBritish ColumbiaElectric Railway
Legend
city lines
interurban lines
North Vancouver
Burrard Inlet
Vancouver
Burnaby
New Westminster
Fraser River
Surrey
Langley
Abbotsford
Chilliwack
Richmond
Georgia Strait
Deep Cove
North Saanich
Saanich
Esquimalt
Victoria
Chilliwack historically was served by the British Columbia Electric Railway New Westminster–Chilliwack interurban line. The company announced its "Rails-to-Rubber" conversion programme in 1944, and the Chilliwack line ceased service in 1950.
Chilliwack is served by Via Rail's The Canadian as a flag stop. The town is only served by westbound trains towards Vancouver. Eastbound trains call at Agassiz, British Columbia along the CPR tracks, on the other side of the Fraser River. This split in service between Vancouver and Ashcroft is due to CN and CPR utilizing directional running through the Thompson- and Fraser Canyon.
In 2019, the South Fraser Community Rail Society was launched by former BC premier Bill Vander Zalm and former mayor of Langley Township Rick Green, to resurrect passenger service using the former BCER right-of-way. The proposed light-rail line would be 103 km (64 miles) long.
Services
Preceding station
Via Rail
Following station
Abbotsfordtoward Vancouver
The Canadian
HopeOne-way operation
Education
[edit]
UFV Campus at Canada Education Park
Post-secondary[edit]
Canada Education Park is an 86-acre (35 ha) campus in the Vedder Crossing neighbourhood on the south side of Chilliwack that houses several post-secondary institutions, including the University of the Fraser Valley, the RCMP Pacific Region Training Centre, and the Justice Institute of British Columbia.
The University of the Fraser Valley (UFV) is the largest post-secondary school in Chilliwack, and the seventh largest in British Columbia in terms of full-time enrolment. It offers master's degrees, bachelor's degrees, associate degrees, diplomas, certificates and citations across a range of programs in fine arts, humanities, science, social sciences, applied communication, business, nursing, as well as technical and trade programs. Its campuses are located in Abbotsford, Chilliwack, Hope and Mission.
Private[edit]
Independent schools in Chilliwack
School
Level
Grades
Saint Mary's
Elementary
K-7
Unity Christian School
Elementary-Secondary
K-12
John Calvin Christian School
Elementary
K-8
Timothy Christian School
Elementary-Secondary
K-12
Highroad Academy
Elementary-Secondary
K-12
Mount Cheam Christian School
Elementary-Secondary
K-12
Chilliwack Adventist Christian School
Elementary-Junior secondary
K-7
Cascade Christian School
Elementary-Junior secondary
K-12
Public[edit]
Main article: School District 33 Chilliwack
Public schools in Chilliwack
School
Level
Grades
Bernard Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Central Elementary Community School
Elementary
K-5
Cheam Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Cultus Lake Elementary
Elementary
K-5
East Chilliwack Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Evans Elementary
Elementary
K-5
F.G. Leary Fine Arts Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Greendale Community Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Little Mountain Elementary
Elementary
K-5
McCammon Traditional Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Promontory Heights Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Robertson Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Rosedale Traditional Community
Elementary, Middle
K-8
Sardis Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Stitó:s Lá:lém Totí:lt
Elementary, Middle
K-8
Strathcona Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Tyson Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Unsworth Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Vedder Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Watson Elementary
Elementary
K-5
Yarrow Community Elementary
Elementary
K-5
A.D. Rundle Middle
Middle
6–8
Chilliwack Middle
Middle
6–8
Mt. Slesse Middle
Middle
6–8
Rosedale Traditional Community
Middle
6–8
Vedder Middle
Middle
6–8
Chilliwack Secondary
Secondary
9–12
G.W. Graham Secondary School
Secondary
9–12
Imagine High Integrated Arts and Technology Secondary
Secondary
9–12
Sardis Secondary
Secondary
9–12
Education Centre
Alternative
8–12
Fraser Valley Distance Education
Alternative
K-12
The Conseil scolaire francophone de la Colombie-Britannique operates one Francophone school: école La Vérendrye primary school.