Subscribe and save!
magazine / mj06 / indepth

In-depth

Clogged and congested, drivers suck back exhaust during their commute to and from Montréal’s gridlocked island.

Photo: ©iStockphoto.com/Tony Tremblay
FEATURES
The natural city
• Toronto's green rooftops

Beat the street
• City Repair Ottawa
• It’s off telework we go…

Back-to-the-future urbanism
• Urban planning timeline
• Ode to Jane Jacobs

Building up sustainability
• Green technologies
DEPARTMENTS
• Knowledge Toolbox
• Cartographer’s table
• Just the facts
• CG vault

Beat the street
Avenue Verte Mont-Royal pushes the pedestrian envelope in Montréal
By Katie Wallace

To the rest of Canada, Quebec — and especially Montréal — often appear as a laissez-faire New World enclave of Old World living; a cosmopolitan bastion where a European-style existence lies no further than the nearest pâtisserie.


Advertisement

In Montréal, the car is still king.

Owen Rose, an architecture intern who has lived in Montréal’s central Plateau neighbourhood for almost five years, says he savours the fact that, within a three or four minute stroll from his door, he passes two bakeries, three fruit and veggie stalls, a well-known butcher and fish market, not to mention a gaggle of cafés, a pharmacy and a hardware store. But, says Rose, there is still one element that tarnishes Montréal’s continental joie de vivre: unlike many European cities that have been limiting automobile access to their urban cores, in Montréal, the car is still king.

Learn more:
• It’s off telework we go…
• City Repair Ottawa: a different approach to achieving social sustainability
• Gridlock
• City livin’
• Comfort now

External links:
• Avenue verte Mont-Royal
Just under four years ago, Rose and a group of fellow citizens united to take back the street in their neighbourhood which, with more than 100,000 denizens, is one of the most densely populated regions in the country. Within six months, Avenue Verte Mont-Royal had collected more than 18,000 signatures from other pedestrian-minded residents in support of the group’s proposal to ban cars on Avenue Mont-Royal, the Plateau’s central artery and commercial hub. The plan allowed for access by emergency vehicles, delivery trucks and public transit with car crossings at all major intersections.

The petition was presented to the Bureau Council and the group has since lobbied the Plateau’s local council to adopt their plan but, to date, Mount Royal is as congested as ever - the avenue’s regular bus, the 97, is rumoured to be the slowest in the city.

When the project first launched, Rose says he and his colleagues were not surprised that there was considerable resistance from Plateau shopkeepers and merchants, who feared a loss of business from car-driving customers. Now, Rose says, after considerable consultation with area businesspeople, there is a three-way split between merchants who are for, against, and don’t care about the plan.

And, as Rose points out, pedestrian traffic already accounts for the lion’s share of business along Mont Royal with approximately 80 percent of customers walking or biking to do their shopping.

He points to Copenhagen, a city that began creating car-free zones over 40 years ago. Rose says Danish merchants initially showed the same sort of resistance that Plateau shopkeepers have demonstrated. But, he says, it wasn’t long before merchants on car-free streets reported significant boosts in their business, so much so that businesspeople on auto-accessible streets cited the ban as an unfair business subsidy.

"You know that old expression, ’you can’t fight city hall?’ When you live the experience, it’s a smack in the face."

—Owen Rose, member of Avenue Verte Mont-Royal

In Montréal, the main barrier to putting the plan into action, Rose says, is at the political level. He scratches his head over this especially since the director of public works for the Plateau explained to him that Avenue Mont-Royal prevented no major barriers to going car-free. But the group has seen no movement on their file at the municipal level. "You know that old expression, ‘you can’t fight city hall?’ When you live the experience, it’s a smack in the face," says Rose.

Conversely, an unexpected side effect of Rose’s group’s work has been a rise in social activism on the Plateau. "Our activities have given a functional vocabulary to other groups," he says, pointing to citizen coalitions pushing for affordable housing or cleaner streets, groups that formed in the wake of Avenue Verte Mont-Royal’s inception.

These causes mesh with Avenue Verte Mont-Royal’s aim to improve life in its backyard by actively promoting the potential ease and healthiness, both physical and social, of urban life, and, Rose says, to reinvent the way people live in downtown neighbourhoods in Montréal. "It’s a question of what it is to live in the city, to create a convivial public space," he says.

On International Car-Free Day in 2004 and during the summer festivals that see Avenue Mont-Royal temporarily closed to vehicles, Rose and his foot soldiers catch a fleeting glimpse of their vision brought to life — the public space Rose speaks of teeming with bikes and strolling citizens.

But for now, that space includes thousands of cars.

top




Subscribe to Canadian Geographic Magazine and Save
Province 
Privacy Policy  







Canadian Geographic on Facebook

Canadian Geographic on YouTube

Canadian Geographic on Twitter
Canadian Geographic Magazine | Canadian Geographic Travel Magazine
Canadian Atlas Online | Canadian Travel | Mapping & Cartography | Canadian Geographic Photo Club | Kids | Canadian Contests | Canadian Lesson Plans | Blog

Royal Canadian Geographical Society | Canadian Council for Geographic Education | Geography Challenge | Canadian Award for Environmental Innovation

Jobs | Internships | Submission Guidelines

© 2012 Canadian Geographic Enterprises