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Princess Park continues to be a high-demand sub-area. Inventory typically moves faster than the regional average.
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Single-family detached homes from the 1970s–1980s on generous lots at the forest edge, with prices typically from $1.85M to $2.3M for this upper North Vancouver enclave.
The neighbourhood feeds into the Lynn Valley school catchment with elementary students attending local schools and secondary students at Argyle Secondary (8–12), School District 44.
Lynn Headwaters Regional Park is at the neighbourhood's doorstep — the Headwaters Trail, Cedar Mill Trail, and Lynn Loop provide direct wilderness hiking access year-round.
Lynn Valley Centre's Save-On-Foods, restaurants, and commercial services are the nearest shopping hub, with the neighbourhood's deep forest character making daily errands a car-dependent but very manageable routine.
Princess Park's park-edge location and wilderness trail access create a consistent premium among nature-oriented buyers; the neighbourhood's forested character and limited infill potential support long-term value.
Detached homes in Princess Park typically range from $1.85M to $2.3M as of April 2026. Properties backing directly onto Lynn Headwaters Regional Park or with premium forest views command the upper end of this range.
The neighbourhood feeds into the Lynn Valley school system, with secondary students attending Argyle Secondary (8–12) within North Vancouver School District 44. Elementary students attend nearby North Vancouver public elementary schools.
Princess Park is an ideal choice for nature-first buyers — direct access to Lynn Headwaters Regional Park's wilderness trail system at prices below Deep Cove or Roche Point represents exceptional value for outdoor enthusiasts. The forest-edge setting and limited development potential preserve the neighbourhood's character long-term.
Downtown Vancouver is approximately 35–45 minutes by car via the Upper Levels Highway and Lynn Valley Road interchange. Bus connections from Lynn Valley Centre connect to the broader North Shore transit network. The upper location means most residents drive for both commuting and daily errands.
Princess Park is literally where the city ends and the wilderness begins — the neighbourhood streets back directly onto Lynn Headwaters Regional Park, one of the most spectacular wilderness parks accessible from any major Canadian city. Residents can walk from their front door to old-growth forest, river canyons, and mountain trails within minutes, a combination simply not available at any other comparable price point in Metro Vancouver.
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Princess Park is a forested residential neighbourhood in upper North Vancouver, situated near the southern boundary of Lynn Headwaters Regional Park. The area takes its identity from its deep forest setting — the neighbourhood streets are quiet, heavily treed, and backed by the park boundary, creating a genuinely natural residential environment within a major metropolitan area.
The proximity to Lynn Headwaters Regional Park gives Princess Park residents direct access to one of Metro Vancouver's most spectacular green spaces — a vast wilderness park with trails penetrating deep into the Coast Mountains, including the Headwaters Trail, the Cedar Mill Trail, and the Lynn Loop, all accessible within a short walk of the neighbourhood's residential streets.
Housing is predominantly single-family detached, with the typical upper North Vancouver mix of 1970s–1980s family homes on generous lots. The neighbourhood's school catchments connect to the Lynn Valley school system, and the area's family orientation and outdoor access make it a natural destination for buyers who want the wilderness edge.