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MONTREAL - CANADA

 

Montreal (officially, Montréal) is the name of the largest city in the province of Quebec, Canada and of the administrative region encompassing it. It is also Canada's second most populated city after Toronto (Statistics Canada), and the world's second largest francophone city after Paris.

Montreal is situated in the southwest of the province, approximately 200 km southwest of the provincial capital Quebec City and 150 km east of Ottawa, the federal capital, located in the neighbouring province of Ontario, at 45°30 north, 73°35 west, in the Eastern Time Zone (UTC-5).

Montreal sits on the Island of Montreal at the confluence of the Saint Lawrence River and Ottawa River; the island divides the Saint Lawrence between the main channel and Rivière des Prairies. The city also includes a total of 74 nearby islands such as Île des Soeurs, Île Bizard, Île Sainte-Hélène, and Île Notre-Dame. The city occupies an area of 482.84 km2.

Demographics

3,511,800 people (Montrealers; French, Montréalais) live in the greater Montreal area (Statistics Canada 2001), which includes the cities of Laval and Longueuil among others. The current mayor of Montreal is Gérald Tremblay.

The city of Montreal per se is home to about 1.6 million people, after the demerger referendum of June 2004, which has force of law on January 1, 2006.

The majority of Montrealers are French speakers. As with all major North American cities, however, a great number of people have a different first language from the majority. About 18.4% of the population of the Greater Montreal Area are of allophone mother tongue and 13.8% are native anglophone. On the island of Montreal, the percentage of anglophones rises to 18.8% while that of allophones reaches 27.7%. A majority of allophones speak French or English as a second language. A May 2004 survey noted that 53% of the people in Montreal speak both French and English, while 37% speak only French and 7% speak only English.

While the official language of Montreal is French, services are also commonly offered in English in downtown and tourist areas as well as in areas designated as bilingual boroughs. The city has well-rooted Italian, Jewish, Greek, Arab, Asian, Hispanic, Haitian and Portuguese communities, as well as a sample of numerous other cultures from around the world.

Places in Montreal

The city's downtown area sits at the foot of Mount Royal, the origin of its name, whose forested top is a major urban green space. Southeast of downtown is Old Montreal, a historic centre with such attractions as the Old Port, Place Jacques-Cartier, City Hall, Place d'Armes, and Notre-Dame de Montréal Basilica.

Downtown contains dozens of skyscrapers including 1000 de La Gauchetière, 1250 René-Lévesque, and Ieoh Ming Pei's Place Ville-Marie. This cruciform office tower (1962) sits atop an underground shopping mall which forms the nexus of Montreal's underground city, one of the world's largest, with indoor access to over 1600 shops, restaurants, offices, and businesses, as well as metro stations, transportation terminuses, and tunnels extending all over downtown.

Montreal was host of the most successful World's Fair in history (Expo '67) in 1967, and of the 1976 Summer Olympics. The Olympic Stadium has the world's tallest inclined tower and, until the end of the 2004/2005 season, was the home of the Montreal Expos baseball team. Montreal is also home to the Montreal Canadiens, the locally revered hockey team which is among the most celebrated teams in North American sports.

Montreal is a major centre of Québécois and Canadian culture. It boasts a Museum of Fine Arts, a Museum of Contemporary Art, and a variety of historical, crafts, and specialized museums such as the Redpath Museum of Natural History and the Canadian Centre for Architecture. The Place des Arts cultural complex houses the Museum of Contemporary Art and several theatres, and is the seat of the Montreal Opera and usual residence of the Montreal Symphony Orchestra (which is scheduled to receive a new concert hall adjacent to Place des Arts). The east-end Olympic complex includes a modern ecology museum, an insectarium, and the Jardin Botanique de Montréal, one of the largest botanical gardens in the world (second only to Kew Gardens in England).

Nicknamed 'the city of saints,' Montreal is renowned for its wealth of beautiful churches. Mark Twain once remarked, "This is the first time I was ever in a city where you couldn't throw a brick without breaking a church window." The city contains four Roman Catholic basilicas: Marie-Reine-du-Monde Cathedral, Notre-Dame Basilica, St. Patrick's Basilica, and St. Joseph's Oratory. This last is the largest church in Canada, with the largest dome of its kind in the world after that of Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome. Other well-known churches include pilgrimage church of Notre-Dame-du-Bon-Secours (called the Sailors' Church), and the Anglican Christ Church Cathedral, which was completely excavated and "suspended" in mid-air during the construction of part of the Underground City. All of the above are major tourist destinations, particularly Notre-Dame and the Oratory.

Other notable installations include legacies of Expo, such as the Biosphère (a geodesic dome and museum about the St. Lawrence River, formerly the American Pavilion) and Six Flags La Ronde amusement park on Île Sainte-Hélène, as well as the Casino de Montréal (formerly the French and the Quebec Pavilions) on Île Notre-Dame and Habitat '67 on Montreal Island.

Montreal is the headquarters of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), a United Nations body, and of the International Air Transport Association (IATA).

Montreal has a small Chinatown (le quartier chinois), just south of the city core. It is home to Chinese shops and restaurants, as well as a certain number of Vietnamese establishments.

Visitor's guide

Montreal is informally known as a party city. This may be due to the number of students and pubs. First time visitors wanting to discover Montreal's nightlife should travel down two streets: boulevard Saint-Laurent and rue Sainte-Catherine.

Boulevard Saint-Laurent, known as "the Main", runs north-south through the "heart" of Montreal. Indeed, St-Laurent is the street that divides the island east from west, and has some historical significance as the linguistic barrier of Montreal -- with anglophones typically inhabiting the west side of St-Laurent and francophones inhabiting the east. This "barrier" is more porous today than before, but St-Laurent is lined with a number of restaurants, bars, cafes, and retail stores, making it one of the liveliest streets in the city. The street runs from Chinatown, up through the eastern portion of Montreal's downtown, and passes through the Plateau Mont-Royal and Mile-End districts (inner-city neighbourhoods that have become gentrified).

Rue Sainte-Catherine is an east-west street that passes straight through the downtown core. There are many boutiques and restaurants, as well as strip clubs (which are legal and regulated in Montreal).

Rue Saint-Denis, a street six blocks east of boulevard Saint-Laurent, and the old port area situated next to the river, are also prized destinations for tourists as well as locals.

Rue Crescent is a relatively small south-to-north street that crosses Rue Sainte-Catherine near downtown's westernmost extremity. It houses a variety of more upscale night-clubs and terrasses, including Montreal's Hard Rock Café.

Part of rue Prince Arthur is a pedestrian street or auto-free zone (Montreal's first). The pedestrian-only section runs east from boulevard Saint-Laurent to Carré Saint-Louis, next to rue Saint-Denis. The street is lined with restaurants and bars, which keep it lively even in the winter.

For those who prefer to go closer to nature, the famous Sunday Mount-Royal Tam-Tams is the place to be. On the east side of the mountain, every sunny Sunday hundreds of people gather to enjoy the live beats, the sun and the simple gathering of countless indivituals. It is well renowned to be the place to chill after a night of dancing in one of the four main afterhours clubs: Stereo, Aria, Sona and Gravity.

Since 1980, Montreal has hosted the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal, a very popular music event that attracts some hundreds of thousands every summer.

Montreal is also home to several internationally known dance companies including Les Ballets Jazz de Montreal, Les Grands Ballets Canadiens and La La La Human Steps.

The city, with its huge Village, one of the largest gay villages in North America, hosts several major circuit parties and is an epicentre of gay life in Canada. The city was slated to hold the Gay Games in 2006, but the FGG and Montréal 2006 were unable to agree on the size of the event. Instead, Montreal will be hosting the first edition of the World Outgames, under the name Montréal Rendez-vous 2006.

Sports

Montreal Alouettes, Canadian Football League
Montreal Canadiens, National Hockey League
Montreal Expos, Major League Baseball (National League) - franchise moved to Washington DC for 2005 season
Montreal Impact, A-League Soccer
Montreal is the site of the Canadian Grand Prix, a Formula One auto race held annually at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve on Île Notre-Dame. On July 13, 1982, Montreal hosted the first baseball All-Star Game outside the United States.
 

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