Skip to content

Ontario teen, due to start at UBC, dies in fall off 50-metre cliff in Metro Vancouver

03c5fcf7213411a3ac2f2a6558ea28802b55f03e22c636083f32a168d42d36a8
A 17-year-old from Ontario is dead after climbing over a fence and falling off the edge of a cliff in a popular park in North Vancouver, B.C. Fences block the access to the Lynn Suspension Bridge in North Vancouver, B.C., Monday, Sept. 21, 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. — A 17-year-old from Ontario who was about to start his studies at the University of British Columbia is dead after climbing over a fence and falling off a cliff in a popular Metro Vancouver park.

North Vancouver assistant fire chief Dwayne Derban said the boy was with three friends in an off-trail area of Lynn Canyon Park when it happened Sunday afternoon.

Derban said the area had a chain-link fence about 1.5 metres tall marking the edge of the cliff as well as signage warning people to stay away from dangerous areas.

But Derban said the teen's friends told firefighters that he had climbed over the fence to get a better view of the river canyon and he "just got too close" to the edge.

"The cliff that he fell over was about 50 metres. He fell onto rocks below, it wasn't into the water," Derban said, adding a first responder found the boy had no pulse.

The teen had been enrolled at the University of British Columbia, where the new semester starts next week.

"They were four friends, all just finishing high school," Derban said, adding the other three students have plans to start university in Ontario and the United States.

"They were all academic and looking forward to an exciting future," he said.

The area where the boy fell is "completely safe as long as you stay within the areas that are meant to be walked in," Derban said, adding no one should hop any fencing.

"People go over and you can see paths on the other side and it looks inviting, like an awesome view, but the dangers that are inherent are just not worth the risk."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 27, 2024.

The Canadian Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks