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Peace Arch Park, Surrey BC: Two countries, one park explained

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Peace Arch monument with Canadian and U.S. flags above, framed by trees at Peace Arch Park on the Canada–U.S. border.
The Peace Arch marks the boundary between Surrey, BC, and Blaine, WA—an international park where a single lawn is shared by two countries.
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A Line You Can Walk, Not Cross

Most borders are steel and shadow. Here, it’s grass and agreement. You can share the same wind, yet two steps change the law under your shoes. The park asks a quiet question: what keeps a soft border strong?

One Field, Two Rulebooks (What It Is, Legally)

Peace Arch Park functions as two parks forming one shared green: Peace Arch Provincial Park (B.C.) and Peace Arch Historical State Park (Washington). Visitors mingle freely inside the grounds. Exiting the park into the other country without inspection is not permitted.

Peace Arch on the U.S.–Canada border with shared lawns and Semiahmoo Bay in the background at Peace Arch Park.
The Peace Arch straddles the Canada–U.S. line at Peace Arch Park, where shared lawns meet Semiahmoo Bay and the Surrey–Blaine border crossing.

Words Carved in Stone, Still Doing Work

Dedicated in 1921, the Arch carries inscriptions—“Children of a common mother,” “Brethren dwelling together in unity,” and “May These Gates Never Be Closed.” It is architecture that argues for conduct, not just memory.

Close-up of the Peace Arch inscription reading “May These Gates Never Be Closed” at Peace Arch Park on the Canada–U.S. border.
“May These Gates Never Be Closed” — the Peace Arch’s 1921 pledge for an open, peaceful border, carved directly into the monument.

When the Lawn Became an Aisle

During pandemic restrictions, families and binational couples met here; some married at the line. Later, authorities restated reporting requirements. The stories remain: policy is written in statutes, but people read it on the grass.

How To Be Here Without Crossing

  • Movement: Walk both lawns within the park; do not step into the other country beyond the boundary without clearing customs.
  • Hours and logistics: Two agencies, two sets of hours/parking. Check both before you go.
  • Best light: Clear mornings or late afternoon flatten the lawn and Arch into one composition.
Split image of the BC Parks “Peace Arch Park” sign and a “Welcome to the United States of America” sign, illustrating the binational park at the Surrey–Blaine border.
Two stewards, one shared lawn. The Canadian side is managed by BC Parks; the U.S. side by Washington State Parks—hours, parking, and rules can differ, so check both before visiting.

A Border That Welcomes—By Design

Security and welcome are not opposites here. The line is visible, the rule is plain, and the space invites ordinary life. In a decade of hard edges, this feels like policy made legible.

Field Notes: What To Notice

  • The seam: Crews change at an invisible point; the lawn stays continuous.
  • The sound: Highway hush on one side, everyday laughter on both.
  • The choreography: Picnics, photo shoots, occasional exhibits—civic life performed atop international law.
People standing on the grass near the Peace Arch with Canadian and U.S. flags above, at the Canada–U.S. border in Surrey–Blaine.
Everyday life on an international line. Visitors pose and stroll beneath the Peace Arch, where a single lawn is shared by Canada and the United States.

First-Timer’s Loop (A Simple Route)

Enter from the Canadian gate for a wide view. Walk to the Arch, read both faces, then step back twenty paces to see the whole. If you carry a notebook, write one line you’d want carved here a century from now.

Watch This Space

  • Cross-border programming that uses the park as a shared classroom without turning it into a checkpoint.
  • Peak-season crowd management on both sides while keeping the lawn open and legible.
  • Whether the Arch’s language continues to guide practice—or slips into poetry alone.

This article is original and written specifically for SurreySpeak.com 

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