
Mount Robson Corridor Protected Area is a small corridor running through Mount Robson Park. Its official BC Parks page directs visitors to the Mount Robson Park page for activity and facility details.
On the Mount Robson Park page, BC Parks describes the corridor as a 63-kilometre east-west route through the middle of the park along Highway 16, also called the Yellowhead.
The corridor is the part of the Mount Robson landscape many travellers experience from the highway. BC Parks notes that it offers facilities and activities ranging from peaceful campgrounds and short walks to exciting hikes. Driving through, visitors can see mountain, creek, wetland, and valley scenery.
The larger Mount Robson Park page also identifies corridor highlights such as waterfalls and salmon-viewing walks. Behind the Welcome Centre, the one-kilometre self-guided Journey Through Time interpretive trail is popular. The corridor connects travellers to Mount Robson's broader setting, including the highest peak in the Canadian Rockies and the headwaters of the Fraser River.
Use the corridor for scenic driving, short walks, waterfall stops, salmon viewing, campground access, visitor information at the Welcome Centre, and onward planning for Mount Robson Park hikes and frontcountry areas.
Do not let scenery or roadside wildlife distract from safe driving. The Mount Robson Park page warns of slippery rocks, cliffs, fast rivers, waterfalls, wildlife, limited cell service, and winter hazards. Check advisories, keep pets leashed where allowed, avoid harvesting plants or fungi, and use official Mount Robson Park information for current facilities.