Guichon Creek (Still Creek tributary)

[2] The family owned a hunting cabin at the top of a ravine near Willingdon Avenue - then also known as Guichon Road.

[3] In 1912, Guichon Creek became home to the Phillips-Hoyt Lumber Company, who "put a dam on the waterway to create a canal for transporting logs to a storage pond and a sawmill located on the site now occupied by the British Columbia Institute of Technology."

Locals commonly used the creek as a fishing place and swimming hole.

By 2006, Guichon Creek had been restored to a largely natural state thanks to the efforts of BCIT students and the City of Burnaby, among others.

This article related to a river in British Columbia, Canada is a stub.