Surrey
City of Surrey
From top left: Surrey City Hall, Crescent Beach, Peace Arch, Surrey Museum, Newton Town Centre
Nickname: 
City of Parks
Motto: 
"The future lives here"
Location of Surrey
Location of Surrey
Coordinates: 49°11′24″N 122°50′56″W / 49.19000°N 122.84889°W / 49.19000; -122.84889
CountryCanada
ProvinceBritish Columbia
Regional districtMetro Vancouver
Incorporation1879 (municipality status)
 1993 (city status)
Government
 • MayorDoug McCallum
 • City Council
List of councillors
  • Linda Annis (Surrey First)
  • Doug Elford (Safe Surrey Coalition)
  • Laurie Guerra (Safe Surrey Coalition)
  • Brenda Locke (independent)[1]
  • Jack Hundial (independent)[2]
  • Mandeep Nagra (Safe Surrey Coalition)
  • Allison Patton (Safe Surrey Coalition)
  • Steven Pettigrew (independent)[3]
 • MLAs
List of MLAs
  • Harry Bains (NDP)
  • Garry Begg (NDP)
  • Jagrup Brar (NDP))
  • Stephanie Cadieux (LIB)
  • Marvin Hunt (LIB)
  • Bruce Ralston (NDP)
  • Tracy Redies (LIB)
  • Jinny Sims (NDP)
  • Rachna Singh (NDP)
 • MPs
List of MPs
  • Sukh Dhaliwal (LPC)
  • Kerry-Lynne Findlay (Conservative)
  • Ken Hardie (LPC)
  • Tamara Jansen (Conservative)
  • Randeep Sarai (LPC)
 • School trustees
List of trustees
  • Terry Allen (Surrey First Education)
  • Bob Holmes (Surrey First Education)
  • Laurie Larsen (Surrey First Education)
  • Laurae McNally (independent - represents City of White Rock)
  • Garry Thind (Surrey First Education)
  • Gary Tymoschuk (Surrey First Education)
  • Shawn Wilson (Surrey First Education)
Area
 • Total316.41 km2 (122.17 sq mi)
Highest elevation
134 m (440 ft)
Lowest elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2016)[4]
 • Total517,887
 • Rank12th
 • Density1,636.8/km2 (4,239/sq mi)
DemonymSurreyite[5]
Time zoneUTC-08 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-07 (PDT)
Forward sortation area
V3R–V3X, V3Z–V4A, V4N–V4P
Area code(s)604, 778, 236
Highways
Hwy 1 (TCH)
Hwy 1A
Hwy 15
Hwy 17
Hwy 99
Websitesurrey.ca

Surrey is a city in British Columbia, Canada. It is a part of Metro Vancouver, which is next to the cities of; Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam to the north, Pitt Meadows to the north east, Langley to the east, New Westminster to the north west, White Rock to the south, and Delta to the west. Surrey is also next to Blaine, Washington, USA to the south.

Surrey has six town centres: Whalley, Newton, Guildford, Fleetwood, Cloverdale, and South Surrey.

The mayor of Surrey is Linda Hepner.

About Surrey

Surrey was made as a municipality in 1879, in the early 90s, more people started moving to Surrey and made it their home. In 1993, Surrey turned into a city.

In 1937, the Pattullo Bridge was made, and connected Surrey to New Westminster. The bridge also caused more people to move to Surrey. In 1964, the Port Mann bridge was built to connect from Surrey to Coquitlam. The Port Mann bridge is a part of the famous Trans Canada Highway. Six highways run through Surrey, Highway 10, Highway 99, Highway 99A, Highway 15, Highway 1, and Highway 1A. Surrey is the location of the peace arch, which is a monument at the Canada-US border. Surrey is also the second biggest city in British Columbia by population and it is expected to beat Vancouver's population as the biggest city in the province by 2020. Surrey is one of the fastest growing cities in Canada and the fastest growing city in Metro Vancouver.

The population in 2016 was 517,887.[4]

Town Centres

Surrey has six town centres:

In 2020 a headline in the DailyHive said that "Surrey is on pace to become Metro Vancouver's new downtown"[6]

References

  1. Reid, Amy (27 June 2019). "Locke splits from Safe Surrey, slamming mayor's 'my-way-or-the-highway' approach". Surrey Now-Leader.
  2. Hasegawa, Regan (18 July 2019). "Mayor's police plan 'will make Surrey less safe,' says councillor leaving party". CTV News Vancouver. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
  3. Zytaruk, Tom (31 May 2019). "Councillor Steven Pettigrew parts ways with Safe Surrey Coalition". Surrey Now-Leader. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Surrey, City [Census subdivision], British Columbia and British Columbia [Province]". Statistics Canada. 2016. Retrieved February 8, 2017.
  5. "Demonyms—From coast to coast to coast". Language Portal of Canada. Government of Canada. Archived from the original on July 21, 2016. Retrieved March 30, 2012.
  6. "Surrey is on pace to become Metro Vancouver's new downtown | Urbanized".