
MOA on the Move: Native Youth Program Tours at MOV
Follow MOA’s 2023 Native Youth Program members to the Museum of Vancouver for a week of tours.
Read MoreMOA is temporarily closed until late 2023 for seismic upgrades Learn more →
MOA is temporarily closed — from January 16 until late 2023 — for Great Hall seismic upgrades.
Learn MoreBig changes are underway in MOA's Great Hall, which is receiving seismic upgrades in order to augment its structural integrity. MOA is temporarily closed until late 2023 to accelerate the completion of this complex construction project.
Learn MoreTemporarily closed for 2023
MOA Shop open online
Library + Archives open by appointment
Learn MoreJoin the community of MOA Members to enjoy free museum admission and exclusive benefits.
Join TodaySpaces at MOA can be rented for weddings, corporate and community events.
Learn MoreFrom Vancouver: The westbound 4, 14, 25, 33, R4, 44, 49, 84, 99 B-Line, and 480 buses arrive at UBC. Get off at the last stop and walk northwest. See detailed directions.
Once at UBC Exchange, you can also transfer to the 68 Wesbrook Village bus instead of walking to MOA. Get off at NW Marine Dr at West Mall. Full transit information at the Translink website.
From Downtown Vancouver: Cross the Burrard or Granville Street bridges, and then head west on 4th Avenue, Broadway, 10th Avenue or 16th Avenue all the way to UBC.
From YVR Airport: Exit the Arthur Laing Bridge and head west onto Southwest Marine Drive, and follow this road to UBC.
Once at UBC, watch for signs guiding you to MOA. Paid parking can be purchased by cash or credit card. An Evo parking lot is located a 7-minute walk south of MOA.
From downtown Vancouver: Cross the Burrard Street Bridge and exit to the right onto Cornwall Street. Follow to Point Grey Road until NW Marine Drive all the way to UBC.
Please note that this route involves a significant hill, and that Mobi bike shares do not have stations at UBC.
Join us for a behind-the-scenes tour with MOA Curator of Indigenous Programming Damara Jacobs-Petersen and MOA Education Coordinator Amina Chergui.
MOA • $20 Regular, $12 for MOA Members, Indigenous peoples, UBC students/faculty/staff
Join MOA for a rare opportunity to visit the Museum during our temporary closure in 2023.
MOA • $20 regular, $12 for MOA members, Indigenous peoples, UBC students/faculty/staff
In-person • Free
Seismic upgrades and rebuild of MOA’s Great Hall are now underway, in order to strengthen the Museum’s resiliency and protect its irreplaceable collection in the event of a major earthquake.
Read MoreLearn about the seismic upgrades currently underway at MOA and how they are critical in preserving and safeguarding objects and cultural heritage for the future.
Read MoreMOA is deeply saddened by the passing of Gloria Cranmer Webster last week, at age 91. We honour this remarkable ’Namgis (Kwakwaka’wakw) woman whose ties to the Museum of Anthropology date back to the 1960s. The legacy of her repatriation and heritage preservation work has guided MOA’s practices in the ensuing decades and has forever shifted the cultural landscape in BC.
Read MoreIn this MOA Story learn about the newest feature in MOA’s Multimedia Guide: Indigenous Voices, a special listening experience created with the intent to feature and amplify the voices of Indigenous community members, their perspectives on artistic, healing and museum practices.
Read MoreExplore MOA’s nearly 50,000 objects now on the Collections Online (MOA-CAT) system.
Visit Collections OnlineMOA’s ethnographic objects come from around world, including the South Pacific, Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas.
Learn MoreThe Conservation department is responsible for the care, use and preservation of the collections that are housed at MOA.
Learn MoreThe Curatorial department supports initiatives — including research, exhibitions and publishing — that help to build respectful relationships and mutual understanding with cultural communities represented through MOA’s collections.
Learn MoreThe Audrey and Harry Hawthorn Library and Archives Department at MOA includes a library, an archive, and an oral history and language lab.
Learn MoreExcerpts from Theatrum Mundi: Masks + Masquerades in Mexico + the Andes with Former MOA Director, Anthony Alan Shelton.
Read MoreIn honour of National Indigenous History Month, we’re sharing excerpts from the award-winning MOA publication, <Where the Power Is: Indigenous Perspectives on Northwest Coast Art, by Karen Duffek, Bill McLennan, and Jordan Wilson.
Read MoreMOA is committed to promoting awareness and understanding of culturally diverse ways of knowing the world through challenging and innovative programs and partnerships with Indigenous, local and global communities.
Learn MoreMOA supports the principles of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, including originating communities’ right to “maintain, control, protect and develop their cultural heritage, traditional knowledge and traditional cultural expression.”
Learn MoreJoin the community of MOA Members to enjoy free museum admission and exclusive benefits.
Learn MoreLearn more about MOA’s Volunteer Associates program, and how to join our team.
Learn MoreWelcome to the Museum of Anthropology, a place of world arts and cultures with a special emphasis on the First Nations peoples and other cultural communities of British Columbia, Canada.
Read MoreMuseum of Anthropology at the
University of British Columbia
6393 NW Marine Drive
Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z2
Email • info@moa.ubc.ca
Phone • 604.827.5932
Follow MOA’s 2023 Native Youth Program members to the Museum of Vancouver for a week of tours.
Read MoreJoin us at the Museum of North Vancouver for a conversation hosted by Latin Expressions featuring artists and curators from Xicanx.
Read MoreMOA and the Vancouver Latin American Cultural Centre welcome you for a Xicanx Short Stories Reading Group.
Read MoreJoin writer Njamba Koffi in MOA’s Presentation Circle for an interactive session exploring stories from the African diaspora.
Read MoreDon’t miss this special webinar in partnership with the Royal BC Museum and the BC Black History Awareness Society discussing living and ongoing Black belonging.
Read MoreThe Vancouver Public Library presents a special guided, live-stream tour for teens and tweens of Sankofa: African Routes, Canadian Roots in celebration of Black History Month.
Read MoreJoin UBC’s Black Student Union in MOA’s Haida House for an intimate evening of musical performances in collaboration with Exposure UBC to celebrate Black History Month.
Read MoreJoin the African Descent Society BC for an outdoor walking tour of Vancouver, to commemorate Black History Month.
Read MoreJoin MOA staff and volunteers for a celebration of food and culture in support of the UBC Community United Way Campaign.
Read MorePlease join the staff of the Museum of Anthropology at UBC, family members, friends, colleagues, and students in a virtual gathering to celebrate the life of Bill McLennan.
Read MoreMOA acknowledges that it is built on the traditional, ancestral and unceded land of the Musqueam people.