- IMO
- 7411155
- MMSI
- 316001249
- Call Sign
- CZ8058
Technical Specifications
Key Figures
Live Tracking
Current Position
Where it waited most
Most time stopped at Port Mellon — 5 d across 44 stays.
- 1Port Mellon5 d · 44×
- 2Port of Vancouver14 h · 43×
Derived from the AIS track — runs of near-zero speed (anchored, moored or drifting) snapped to the nearest port. Builds up as we observe the vessel.
Intelligence
Risk & Sustainability
- Bowen Island0.0 dJul 1, 2026
- Bowen Island0.0 dJul 1, 2026
- Bowen Island0.0 dJun 30, 2026
- Bowen Island0.0 dJun 30, 2026
- Bowen Island0.0 dJun 30, 2026
AIS-derived from our live feed.
Compliance
Safety Record
- FIRESeriousMar 13, 2026Mariners Rest, BRITISH COLUMBIA (BC)
On 13 March 2026, the ferry "QUEEN OF COQUITLAM", with 437 people on board, reported a fire in a vehicle on a car deck while approaching Langdale in Thornbrough Channel, BC. The crew extinguished the fire and assessed no apparent damage to the vessel.
- TOTAL FAILURE OF ANY MACHINERY OR TECHNICAL SYSTEMMinorFeb 17, 2026Mariners Rest, BRITISH COLUMBIA (BC)
On 17 February 2026, the ferry "QUEEN OF COQUITLAM" reported a total failure of an engine transmission in Howe Sound off Langdale, BC. The vessel was secured in Langdale, BC and the crew carried out repairs.
- TOTAL FAILURE OF ANY MACHINERY OR TECHNICAL SYSTEMMinorApr 21, 2025Lookout Point, BRITISH COLUMBIA (BC)
On 21 April 2025, the ferry "QUEEN OF COQUITLAM" reported having sustained a propeller pitch control failure in the vicinity of Horseshoe Bay, BC. The vessel was stopped, and the crew investigated the issue while adrift. The vessel later proceeded to its nearby wharf, assisted by the tug "SEASPAN OSPREY".
- STRIKING - Allision with a fixed object (striking - includes berthed/docked vessels)SeriousOct 16, 2023Lookout Point, BRITISH COLUMBIA (BC)
On 16 October 2023, the ferry "QUEEN OF COQUITLAM", with 854 people on board, reported having struck a mooring dolphin while berthing in Horseshoe Bay, BC. A passenger sustained minor injuries and was assisted by the crew before being disembarked. The vessel then resumed its operations.
- TOTAL FAILURE OF ANY MACHINERY OR TECHNICAL SYSTEMMinorApr 7, 2022Grace Islet, BRITISH COLUMBIA (BC)
On 07 April 2022, the passenger ferry "QUEEN OF COQUITLAM" reported one of its engines as not operational in Howe Sound near Grace Islet, BC. The vessel continued with its remaining engines to Langdale, BC where the crew carried out repairs.
- CARGO SHIFT/CARGO LOSS - Cargo shiftedMinorMar 29, 2022Langdale, BRITISH COLUMBIA (BC)
On 29 March 2022, the passenger/vehicle ferry "QUEEN OF COQUITLAM" reported some of its cargo as having shifted upon departing its berth in Langdale, BC. Once arrived at its destination, the cargo was removed from the vessel. Damage to the vessel was reported.
- TOTAL FAILURE OF ANY MACHINERY OR TECHNICAL SYSTEMMinorNov 13, 2017Entrance Island, BC, BRITISH COLUMBIA (BC)
On 13 November 2017, the passenger ferry "QUEEN OF COQUITLAM" reported the failure of its astern propulsion in Nanaimo, BC. The vessel docked at Departure Bay, BC with tug assistance.
- RISK OF COLLISION (near collision) - With another vessel or other floating objectModerateAug 28, 2017Tee Point, Horseshoe Bay, BC, BRITISH COLUMBIA (BC)
On 28 August 2017, the passenger ferry "QUEEN OF COQUITLAM" reported a close quarter situation with a pleasure craft in Howe Sound, BC. The passenger ferry took evasive action.
Recorded marine occurrences naming this vessel.
Operational Status
Activity
Stopped, anchored or moored on its latest broadcast — parked, not necessarily withdrawn.
Read from the single most-recent AIS broadcast we hold for this hull — we keep no position history, so this is a point-in-time posture, not a dwell inference. Derived in-house from our own AIS feed; weight it by the broadcast age above.
Composite Risk
Risk Score
Multiple adverse factors, or a hard ship-specific signal, lift this hull above the fleet norm.
A coverage-weighted blend of the 2 components we could read for this hull — the weights renormalise over only the components present, so a thin read is never inflated and a hull is never credited a “safe 0” for a signal it has no row for. This headline is flagged low-confidence (a thin or structural-only read) and should not be treated as a verdict. Higher means riskier. Derived in-house from government-open port-State-control, flag, sanctions and our own vessel data; weight it by the coverage above.
Estimated
Capacity & Classification
Other · summer draught 3.93 m · 6 t per cm immersion
Estimate only — modelled from deadweight (deadweight only) using a first-principles hydrostatic model, not measured hydrostatic tables. The design draught it is anchored to is unreliable across the fleet.
Commercial
Voyage Estimate
Overview
About This Vessel
MV Queen of Coquitlam is a C-class ferry in the BC Ferries fleet, launched in 1976. She first operated on BC Ferries' Horseshoe Bay to Departure Bay route. For most of her life, she has been a replacement/relief vessel on all the major routes serving Metro Vancouver. She is named for the city of Coquitlam. This ship has the distinction of being the only BC Ferries vessel to have issued a mayday from dry dock when, during a 1980 maintenance layover, she tipped in the Burrard Shipyards drydock, causing approximately CAD $3 million in damage. In November 2002, she started a major rehabilitation that would extend her service life by another 20 years. The refurbishment, costing CAD $18 million, improved her passenger services with some minor work to her engineering. Additionally, over 100 tonnes of steel was either added or replaced, and four evacuation stations were installed. She returned to service by June 2003. Upon return, Queen of Coquitlam started regular service on Horseshoe Bay-Departure Bay route. Queen of Oak Bay, which had a similar refit to Queen of Coquitlam, displaced her from her route in the early Summer 2005. She currently operates as a secondary vessel on Langdale - Horseshoe Bay in the summer, as well as a replacement vessel for any of the other C class or Super C-class vessels when they are sent for refitting.
Fleet Management
Ownership & Management

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