Quartier international de Montréal

Quartier international de Montréal

The Quartier international de Montréal (QIM) or Montreal's International District is a district of the Ville-Marie borough of downtown Montreal that underwent a major urban renewal as a central business district in 2000–2003.

Purpose

The main purpose of the project was to restore the continuity of Montreal's downtown, broken by the gaping trench of the Ville-Marie Expressway since the 1960s, and thus to bridge the following areas:

* The existing downtown business district centred around Place Ville-Marie (northwest);
* The Saint Laurent Boulevard/Sainte Catherine Street entertainment district and Chinatown (northeast);
* The historic Old Montreal district (southeast);
* The Cité Multimedia high-tech development district (southwest).

Other goals included the beautification of the built environment, creation of elegant city squares, showcase of Quebec design and public art, and stimulation of world-class real estate development at the heart of Montreal.

The completed area of 27 hectares (0.27 square kilometres or nearly 67 acres), 30% of which are in the public domain, spreads on an east-west axis above the Ville-Marie Expressway tunnels. It is bounded by Saint Urbain Street to the east, Saint Antoine Street to the south, University Street to the west and Viger Avenue to the north (plus Saint Jacques Street between McGill and University streets). The area is serviced by three stations on the Orange Line of the Montreal Metro and large portions of the underground city.

Components

The QIM itself has five main components, from east to west:

Palais des congrès

The Palais des congrès de Montréal (Montreal Convention Centre), the only building that was originally built over the expressway trench, was extended towards the west in the same manner, doubling in area while covering the first half of the western trench. The extension followed a similar design than the 1980s original, but with less concrete and more coloured glass, giving it a lighter appearance. The design, which included multicoloured panels and bright pink "tree" sculptures in the lobby, did not please everyone but is generally said to integrate well with the area. This section is connected to the Place-d'Armes Metro station.

Place Jean-Paul Riopelle

The public square built over the trench at the same time as the Centre CDP Capital was named Place Jean-Paul Riopelle in honour of Quebec artist Jean-Paul Riopelle who died in 2002. His fountain sculpture "La Joute" was then moved to the square from the Parc Olympique in the district of Hochelaga-Maisonneuve.

The relocation provoked controversy and outrage from residents of Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, who claimed that moving it from the Parc Olympique deprived it of the context required for its full meaning as an homage to sport. Those who supported the move, including the Quebec government and Riopelle's heirs, argued it would allow the work to be more widely seen and exhibited as the artist intended, including the fountain or fire elements Riopelle designed. [cite news |first=Bernard |last=Lamarche |title=La Joute au Stade olympique - Le Riopelle doit déménager pour assurer sa préservation |url=http://www.ledevoir.com/2002/04/19/861.html |format=HTML |work=Le Devoir |date=2002-04-19 |accessdate=2008-03-20 |language=French] However the use of Riopelle's name for a neighbouring condominium/hotel [http://www.leriopelle.com project] was, and still is, opposed by the artist's heirs. The project also faced expropriation-related hurdles and has diminished in scope in 2005.

The square is bordered to the south by the 27-storey château-style InterContinental Hotel (built in 1994) which, by becoming a sort of terminating vista, acquired great visibility and a boom in business.Fact|date=March 2008

Centre CDP Capital

The Centre CDP Capital is the new headquarters of CDP Capital (formerly known as the Caisse de dépôt et de placement du Québec), the main investment arm of the Quebec government. Entirely suspended over the trench, the 13-storey building was the "enabler" and is now the centrepiece of the district, stretching between Jean-Paul Riopelle and Victoria squares. Despite its strong architectural qualities, construction was marked by opposition to the huge cost overruns of an already very expensive structure, at the same time as the CDP was losing taxpayers' money from questionable investments made during the dot-com bubble.

The building integrates a new W boutique hotel at the west end on Victoria Square, as well as headquarters of two international organisations: International Council of Graphic Design Associations (Icograda) and International Council of Societies of Industries Design (icsid).

Victoria Square

Once an empty space crossed diagonally by Beaver Hall and McGill streets, Victoria Square was restored to its original configuration, that of a tree-lined square between parallel avenues. Trees and benches were added, the statue of Queen Victoria was reinstated, and special care was given to Hector Guimard's Art Nouveau outdoor entrance to the Square-Victoria Metro station. The square is now fronted on the east by the Centre CDP Capital and the Montreal World Trade Centre, to the west by Tour de la Bourse and Place de la Cité internationale, and to the south by the Quebecor building, its outdated façade fully re-designed for the occasion.

Place de la Cité internationale and surroundings

Place de la Cité internationale, northwest of Victoria Square, is a complex that currently consists of the [http://www.icao.int/icao/en/hq.htm headquarters] of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). The modern 17-storey building, completed in 1995, has its main entrance on the west side on University Street. A taller [http://www.emporis.com/en/wm/bu/?id=135638 second phase] has been announced on the site for quite some time, to fill the void near Tour de la Bourse.

Northwest of Victoria Square is the Complexe Maisonneuve, made of the two aluminum-clad Bell and National Bank of Canada towers built in 1982. Neighbouring Place Bonaventure, connected to the Bonaventure Metro station, marks the western boundary of the QIM. A tunnel built under University Street between Place de la Cité internationale and Place Bonaventure finally connected the eastern and western parts of the Underground City which had previously been separated.

Design

Sidewalks were widened and re-paved in order to increase the pedestrian area by 40%. Open-air parking lots were eliminated and replaced with 1,300 new parking spaces added under the Palais des Congrès, Place Jean-Paul Riopelle, and the Centre CDP Capital. Several trees were planted, and distinctive street furniture and street lighting was installed, including 22 backlit columns adorned with world flags in the median divider on University Street, welcoming southern arrivals from the Bonaventure Expressway.

Clément Demers was responsible for overall project design, working with [http://www.daoustlestage.com Consortium Daoust Lestage] and Provencher, Roy et associés, with engineers [http://www.genivar.com Groupe conseil Genivar] . Architect and urban planner Jean-Claude Marsan also consulted on the project. [cite news |first=Libby |last=Ellis |title=Urban Inspiration |url=http://www.pmi.org/pathfinders/articles/N06JAN28.pdf |work=PMI Network |publisher=PMI.org |date=2006-01 |accessdate=2008-04-03 ]

As of September 2005, the project had received 22 awards in 13 different domains, including the "PMI Project of the Year 2005" from the Project Management Institute of Philadelphia. The project's success played a part in the decision of the World Anti-Doping Agency and International Design Alliance to move to Montreal, joining the ICAO, IATA and several other international organizations. Chef Normand Laprise's world-famous Toqué! restaurant moved from its tiny Saint Denis Street location to the Centre CDP Capital on Place Jean-Paul Riopelle, putting the QIM on the international gastronomy map. The district has become a prestigious address for real estate development, with upscale housing built and under construction totalling approximately 1000 units as of 2005.

Management

The project was managed by the "Société du Quartier international de Montréal", a non-profit organization created in July 1999 by the governments of Canada, Quebec and Montreal, as well as the Caisse de dépôt et placement and the "Association des riverains du Quartier international de Montréal" (ARQIM). The initial budget for the project was CAD$76 million (approx. US$57 million); the actual cost was $90 million (US$68 million). According to QIM's management, more than half of the overrun resulted from additional work requested by the city, as well as additional expropriation costs. Total investment in the district from all sources was approximately $860 million (US$650 million) between 2000 and 2003.

Future projects

Current projects include the beautification of McGill Street south of Victoria Square towards Old Montreal. There are long-term plans to continue the covering of the Ville-Marie Expressway further east to the currently dilapidated Viger Square behind City Hall, where the new land may be used for expansion of the future mega-hospital Centre hospitalier universitaire de Montréal to be built north of the expressway.Fact|date=March 2008

ee also

*Architecture of Quebec

References

External links

* [http://qimtl.qc.ca/ Official QIM website]
* [http://www2.ville.montreal.qc.ca/urb_demo/demain/qim/qim-cadre.htm QIM at the City of Montreal website]
*Citation
last = Affleck
first = Gavin
title = IN FULL VIEW: PUBLIC SPACE IN MONTREAL
newspaper = Canadian Architect
url =http://www.canadianarchitect.com/issues/ISArticle.asp?story_id=253210132434&issue=02012008&PC=
.


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