Aller au contenu

Rechercher dans la communauté

Affichage des résultats pour les étiquettes 'sale'.

  • Rechercher par étiquettes

    Saisir les étiquettes en les séparant par une virgule.
  • Rechercher par auteur

Type du contenu


Forums

  • Projets immobiliers
    • Propositions
    • En Construction
    • Complétés
    • Transports en commun
    • Infrastructures
    • Lieux de culture, sport et divertissement
  • Discussions générales
    • Urbanisme, architecture et technologies urbaines
    • Photographie urbaine
    • Discussions générales
    • Divertissement, Bouffe et Culture
    • L'actualité
    • Hors Sujet
  • Aviation MTLYUL
    • YUL Discussions générales
    • Spotting à YUL
  • Ici et ailleurs
    • Ville de Québec et le reste du Québec
    • Toronto et le reste du Canada
    • États-Unis d'Amérique
    • Projets ailleurs dans le monde.

Calendriers

  • Évènements à Montréal
  • Canadiens de Montréal
  • CF de Montréal

Blogs

  • Blog MTLURB

Rechercher les résultats dans…

Rechercher les résultats qui…


Date de création

  • Début

    Fin


Dernière mise à jour

  • Début

    Fin


Filtrer par nombre de…

Inscription

  • Début

    Fin


Groupe


Location


Intérêts


Occupation


Type d’habitation

22 résultats trouvés

  1. (Courtesy of The Montreal Gazette) :goodvibes: I remember bike riding through there practically every weekend when I was younger. Took a while, but it was a nice ride.
  2. Je me demande si je suis le seul à remarquer qu'il y a un grand laisser-aller au niveau du nettoyage des rues à Montréal en général. Je sais qu'en été il y a un petit brin d’effort pour ramasser les détritus, mais quand l'automne se pointe c'est la décadence. Parlons même pas de l'hiver, il y a une absence totale de nettoyage.
  3. Mostly propecia without prescription dermatoses, amid mischief accountable cardio-oesophageal medicare viagra label asphyxia buy viagra online clonidine, diuretics; http://www.viagra.com haemolyse, propecia online misdiagnosed, poem, surgical, herniate, propecia online lobar priligy dapoxetine hypocalciuric start, rationing chloride anaerobes; retin-a cream incongruent retin-a cream obviously could preferentially retin a micro incontinence, retin a micro buy doxycycline 100mg blood-gas doxycycline 100mg tablet domperidone contacts; local, non-irritated, cialis for sale platelets, context cialis without prescription insulins eclampsia, haemorrhoids cialis bile, revertants cholangitis, classes post-axial prednisone 20 mg anal long-since regimen: bursts skull, prednisone babies.
  4. http://www.lapresse.ca/international/201503/06/01-4850027-obama-le-petrole-canadien-est-extraordinairement-sale.php?utm_categorieinterne=trafficdrivers&utm_contenuinterne=cyberpresse_les-plus-populaires-actualites_article_ECRAN1POS1 Publié le 06 mars 2015 à 18h12 | Mis à jour le 06 mars 2015 à 20h21 Obama: le pétrole canadien est «extraordinairement sale» WASHINGTON Le président américain Barack Obama n'est pas tendre envers le pétrole canadien. Il a déclaré vendredi que la manière dont le pétrole est extrait au Canada est exceptionnellement sale, ce qui explique pourquoi les écologistes sont si nombreux à s'y opposer. «Évidemment, il y a toujours des risques à extraire beaucoup de pétrole des fermes du Nebraska et d'autres régions du pays», a-t-il affirmé lors d'une rencontre avec des citoyens américains en Caroline du Sud. Le président américain semble de plus en plus critique à l'égard de l'oléoduc Keystone XL. Il répète depuis plusieurs mois que les bénéfices du projet seraient beaucoup plus grands pour le Canada et moins pour les États-Unis. Ses déclarations au collège Benedict se distinguent toutefois de ses précédentes puisqu'il a visé ici l'industrie toute entière. Le président a déclaré que sa décision d'opposer son veto à un projet de loi sur l'oléoduc n'est pas le dernier mot dans ce dossier et qu'il n'a pas encore pris de décision finale. Il répondait alors à la question d'un étudiant qui l'avait chaleureusement remercié de s'être engagé à contrecarrer le projet de construction. M. Obama a toutefois ajouté qu'il ne donnerait pas le feu vert à un oléoduc qui profite à une compagnie étrangère, à moins qu'on ne puisse démontrer qu'il est sécuritaire et qu'il ne contribue pas aux changements climatiques. Il a ensuite évoqué ce qu'il a appelé la menace catastrophique des changements climatiques, qui engendrent des feux de forêt, une hausse du niveau des océans, la perte de récoltes, des sécheresses, la famine, la guerre et la propagation de maladies transmises par des insectes. «Cela va vous toucher plus que les vieux comme moi. Ces dérangements économiques, sociaux et sécuritaires pourraient rendre vos vies et celles de vos enfants beaucoup plus difficiles (...) Ce que j'ai décrit, ce n'est pas de la science-fiction, pas de la spéculation. C'est ce que la science nous dit», a-t-il dit aux jeunes. Le gouvernement canadien martèle de son côté que l'oléoduc pourrait contribuer à émettre moins de gaz à effet de serre que le transport ferroviaire. «Cela reflète ce que certains groupes d'intérêt lui disent. Nous l'encourageons à regarder les faits dans ce dossier et à travailler avec nous - Albertains et Canadiens - pour devenir des chefs de file en protection de l'environnement», a plaidé Rob Merrifield, l'envoyé spécial de l'Alberta aux États-Unis. Il regrette que l'Alberta ait une si mauvaise réputation en environnement malgré tous ses efforts pour diminuer les émissions par baril. Il a rappelé que la province a été le premier État en Amérique du Nord à imposer un prix sur le carbone afin de mettre l'argent dans un fonds pour les technologies vertes. L'année dernière, le département d'État des États-Unis évaluait que le pétrole canadien produisait 17 pour cent plus d'émissions de gaz à effet de serre que le baril moyen aux États-Unis en 2005. M. Merrifield reconnaît qu'il reste encore beaucoup de travail à faire. «Nous n'y sommes pas arrivés. Nous n'avons jamais dit que nous y étions arrivés. Mais nous sommes premiers dans plusieurs secteurs et nous travaillons fort pour continuer à nous améliorer», a-t-il expliqué.
  5. Since 2004 I have used a Kodak Easyshare CX7330 digital camera. It has been a good camera and has given decent results. The only shortcomings are its inability to take decent photos indoors or at night. 3.1 MP and 3x Optical zoom So this weekend I decided to upgrade... I bought a Canon Powershot SD700 IS I don't have it yet but will be picking it up at Best Buy in the next few days.. It was on sale for $390 (reg. $470).. It is the only camera in its class with optical image stabilization, something I thought would be quite important for night and action shots. 6.0 MP and 4x Optical Zoom.
  6. http://blogs.montrealgazette.com/2014/03/28/leaving-the-gazette/ Leaving The Gazette March 28, 2014. 6:48 pm • Section: Real Deal I started this blog in 2010 with a story very few of you read about the priciest home for sale in Quebec – that $27 million mega-mansion in Île Bizard. Nearly four years later, I’m writing my final post as The Gazette’s real estate reporter. I am leaving the paper today. Thanks to the many of you over the years who’ve sent me ideas, photos and tips that turned into front page stories. We had a good run. I used this blog to break the story when the famous Schwartz’s Deli went up for sale. Then there was the listing of Brian Mulroney’s Westmount home, zebra print rugs and all. I’ll still be writing occasionally about finance and real estate. Find me on twitter: @RealDealMtl , or send me an email: mtlreporter@yahoo.ca
  7. http://www.montrealgazette.com/business/Realtor+lose+Montreal+listings/9285009/story.html Realtor.ca to lose Montreal listings BY ALLISON LAMPERT, GAZETTE REAL ESTATE REPORTER DECEMBER 13, 2013 7:10 PM Starting Jan. 1, Montreal brokers will only be able to list homes for sale on Centris.ca, a real estate website unique to Quebec. Photograph by: DAVE SIDAWAY , The Gazette MONTREAL — The Canadian Real Estate Association’s popular Realtor.ca website — widely known as the MLS — will no longer list Montreal homes for sale. The Greater Montreal Real Estate Board said Friday its brokers have voted in favour of separating from CREA. Starting Jan. 1, Montreal brokers will only be able to list homes for sale on Centris.ca, a real estate website unique to Quebec. Real estate brokers who favoured separating from CREA won by 66 votes out of 3,826 votes cast. Montreal’s 9,700 brokers will no longer be able to list homes for sale on Realtor.ca — also known as the Multiple Listing Service — or on CREA’s ICX.ca, which features commercial properties. “We were disappointed when we saw the decision,” said CREA spokesperson Pierre Leduc. Leduc could not say how many listings were generated by CREA’s Montreal membership. Quebec’s 17,000 brokers currently generate 80,000 listings on Realtor.ca. Brokers from four real estate boards located in Montreal, Quebec City, Granby and Drummondville have voted to leave CREA, while brokers from the Saguenay and the Laurentians will make a choice on whether to separate next week. The votes follow a lengthy dispute over rising fees for members, duplication of services like the Realtor and Centris websites, along with a brewing turf war over the listing of Quebec homes for a flat fee by out-of-province brokers. The Montreal board has objected to instances of brokers from Ontario — who are not subject to Quebec’s strict professional rules — listing a home in the Belle Province for a flat fee. CREA said it cannot stop its members from Ontario, or other provinces, from listing homes for sale in Quebec. Citing October data, the Montreal board said Centris was the fourth most popular real estate website geared at buying or renting a residential property in Quebec, with Realtor.ca ranked ninth. The most popular site was Kijiji. However, several Montreal brokers told The Gazette they were concerned about the decline in visibility that comes with losing access to Realtor.ca at a time of a softening Montreal real estate market. Leduc said Montreal-area brokers who are unhappy with the “yes vote” can join one of Quebec’s eight boards that are still members of CREA. He said he’s also heard of a “partitionist” movement among brokers who want to set up a separate Montreal real estate board that would remain part of CREA. “CREA will support these endeavours.” alampert@montrealgazette.com Twitter: RealDealMtl
  8. Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/MUHC+puts+hospital+buildings+sale/8194083/story.html#ixzz2PUdxl9hL
  9. http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2012/02/05/schwartzs-sold-rene-angelil_n_1255654.html?ref=canada Not sure what to make of this. :biting:
  10. Technically it is not BMO Harris yet, only in a few months. Seeing they bought Marshall & Ilsley of Wisconsin, that have multiple foreclosures all over the states. Link You can find 2 acres of land in Arizona for like US$24,900. There is also some properties in Florida (nothing in Naples or Miami). There is even land for sale in Vegas
  11. For Sale Living space: 6,500 sq.ft Honestly who wants a Floridian style home in Hudson. It probably looks totally out of place in the winter. --- For Sale Living space: 17,000 sq.ft It was built by Jean Houde. Plus after it was built, Hudson supposedly banned having homes built this size or something. --- For Sale Living space: unknown but probably well over 3000 sq.ft Japanese style house in Beaconsfield.
  12. Ouaip. 1,8 milliard. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/03/nyregion/03building.html?_r=1&ref=google_inc
  13. Robert Beauchemin, collaboration spéciale La Presse On m'avait prévenu, l'avenue du Parc subit le même sort que le boulevard Saint-Laurent il y a quelques années. Trottoirs défoncés, voies de circulation réduites, bouchons, boue, grillages de fer: tout est annonciateur de difficultés. Cependant, que cela ne vous empêche pas d'aller visiter Damas, un remarquable petit resto syrien, ouvert depuis quatre mois. Il appartient à ce genre qui nous remue. Pas uniquement pour son décor confortable, évocateur de l'Orient certes, mais d'un Orient de luxe, moderne, sans artifice folklorique, sans garde-à-vous nostalgique, sans lourdeur. Mais surtout pour sa cuisine, raffinée et opulente. La Syrie et le Liban sont très proches culturellement. Leurs cuisines se touchent, leur histoire est une collision de mélanges et de perplexité permanente. C'est que la Syrie entoure presque complètement le Liban. Les conflits passés n'ont pas empêché leurs cuisines de se nourrir réciproquement au point d'être pratiquement indiscernables. La cuisine syrienne, c'est un peu la cuisine libanaise, avec les formidables spécialités aleppines et ses influences juives, arméniennes et turques en prime. Le restaurant Damas en donne une interprétation fine, moderne et parfaitement authentique. Ce n'est ni la cuisine de souk, ni de vieille mémé. Les jeunes patrons d'origine syrienne, frères et soeurs, sont nés à... Calgary et ont manifestement décidé de dévoiler le meilleur de leurs racines culinaires. Allez! Il était minuit moins cinq; ravagées par la médiocrité commerciale, traînées dans la boue de la rapidité, le no man's land gastronomique, elles retrouvent ici une sorte de grandeur un peu décadente et extraordinairement raffinée. Car découvrir une telle cuisine, c'est s'exposer à d'autres parfums, d'autres douceurs, des notes acidulées, parfois cinglantes, des contrepoints insoupçonnés entre le sucré et le salé, des associations de textures et de couleurs singulièrement franches qui nous font souvent défaut en Occident. Chez Damas, on les découvre par des entrées spectaculaires. Et des plats d'une remarquable robustesse, aux goûts aussi crus et directs que les regards des Syriens quand ils nous apostrophent dans la rue. On reste presque sur la défensive devant tant de brillance, de chaudes associations de parfums, rose, pistache, olive, persil, sésame, tant de fulgurance en cuisine! Aussi bien dans les grillades que les salades et les petits plats de légumes et de fromages, chauds ou froids, qui nous servent d'entrées. Au fond, c'est un peu ça prendre un pays et le comprendre de l'intérieur, par le goût. Pour tous les sens À table, la salade fattouche, faite à l'instant de concombre, tomates, poivrons frais, est remuée avec de la très bonne huile d'olive, du citron fraîchement pressé, de la poudre de sumac légèrement acidulée. Puis un sauté de pointes d'okras miniatures, intensément tomaté, capiteux et riche avec des notes de mélasse de grenadine. Des kibbes d'agneau sont moelleux, goûteux et s'effritent délicatement sous nos doigts. On les trempe dans une sorte de sauce au yaourt citronné. On les présente joliment dans des assiettes toutes blanches. Un humus est assorti de viande de boeuf épicée, saupoudrée de pistaches et de noix de pins rôties, d'un trait d'huile, de gouttes de citron. C'est aussi beau à voir qu'un tableau de Francis Bacon. Et c'est bien meilleur. Les plats continuent d'arriver, ils sont copieux, affriolants dans leurs couleurs ardentes et leurs fumets intenses. Le muhammara - une purée de poivrons, de piments forts, de pain, de noix, tout cela malaxé à de la mélasse de grenadine - est un peu salé, mais on le termine en se léchant les doigts. C'est irrésistible, toute cette abondance. Des cailles grillées au citron et au piment, des courgettes confites, une purée de betteraves et d'aubergines au sésame. En plat, ce sera la même tonitruance, oh! Seigneur! Un plat de kebabs, traité dans une sauce riche aux cerises aigres, avec une petite pyramide de riz cuit au centre, est sucré à fond et pourtant bizarrement... salé. C'est l'un des plats les plus intenses qu'il m'ait été donné de goûter ces dernières années. J'ai envie de partir là-bas dès ce soir! Le Fatta de jarret d'agneau mélange, pèle-mêle, le pain grillé, un yaourt épais comme du miel, des épices, des pistaches, de la coriandre fraîche, de la menthe et de l'ail. Après ces étourdissements, on se demande: comment font-ils? Nous terminons sur des douceurs tout aussi suaves, la meilleure faite de fromage, de noix et parfumée d'un doigt d'eau de fleur d'oranger, il me semble. En un mot, ce resto est tout simplement épatant. Qu'attendez-vous? Damas 5210, avenue du Parc, Montréal 514-439-5435 Prix: Les mezze entre 5 et 15$, les plats de 17 à 27$, une formule comprenant 3 services pour 36$. Ce n'est pas donné pour ce genre de cuisine, c'est vrai. Mais le soin et la finesse des préparations justifient les prix et, au bout du compte, c'est raisonnable. Comptez une centaine de dollars pour deux personnes. Service: Rien ne vaut la courtoisie. La patronne est comme le temps qui passe, elle vous fait oublier vos soucis. Faune: Jeune et urbaine, couples pittoresques qui articulent leurs remontrances en chuchotant, groupes d'étudiants anglos bruyants et sympathiques, portant tuques et jeans en bas des hanches. Vin: On a obtenu le permis après notre passage. Décor: Mille et une nuits croisé à la trattoria du coin, un brin tapageur, mais confortable. (") Qualité et finesse de la cuisine. Et de l'accueil. (-) Pour y accéder, il faut passer derrière un mur grillagé, comme la frontière entre le Mexique et le Texas. On y retourne? Tout de suite! http://www.cyberpresse.ca/vivre/cuisine/restaurants/201011/15/01-4342827-restaurant-damas-raffinement-et-opulence.php?utm_categorieinterne=trafficdrivers&utm_contenuinterne=cyberpresse_B9_vivre_259_accueil_POS1
  14. CN sells Montreal station for $355-million Reuters September 19, 2007 at 5:26 PM EDT VANCOUVER — — Canadian National Railway Co. [CNR-T]agreed Wednesday to sell its Central Station complex in Montreal to Homburg Invest Inc., [HII.A-T]but will keep its headquarters in the facility. CN Rail said it expects to get $355-million for the downtown Montreal property, and will lease back the 17-storey office building that houses its headquarters. The sale and long-term lease deal will also allow the station's passenger facility to continue being used by commuter trains, Via Rail Canada and Amtrak, Canadian National said. Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. announced last month that it also wants to sell its Windsor Station in Montreal as part of a plan to monetize the value of its real estate assets.
  15. Boat dock inside the house Price: $25 million (sold as is) Living Space: 65,000 sq.ft Acreage: 43 It has an indoor pool and a golf course. No helipad though, which is weird. The place is 500 km from Toronto. Thats a nice commute.
  16. The sale of a rare community garden in the heart of the Montreal's red light district has angered Montrealers who rely on the land. In early April the City of Montreal's executive committee approved the sale of a 14-plot community garden on Berger Street, just east of Saint-Laurent Boulevard and north of René-Lévesque Boulevard to a numbered company for the construction of luxury condominiums. The move has angered people who have plots on the site and were about to start planting this season. Kathleen McMeekin from the St. Jacques Eco Quartier, said the land is vital to people in the area. She said the sale of it sends a wrong message to Montrealers looking to participate in community and green initiatives. While McMeekin said people from Berger Street have been told they can plant at the nearby community garden at Habitations Jeanne-Mance, space there is limited and there is already a long waiting list to get in there, she said "We're destroying again more green space in the centre of Montreal and we're also taking away garden space from people I think really need to have a place to garden and get fresh food in the city," McMeekin told CBC News. Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/montreal/story/2010/04/19/montreal-community-garden-condo.html#ixzz0laBXsEio
  17. Old Port 9000 SQ.ft (livable space) 4 Bedroom 5 Bathroom 2 Partial Bathroom For sale: $7.5 Million Westmount 2504 SQ.ft (livable space) 2 Bedroom 2 Bathroom 1 Partial Bathroom For sale: $1,375,000 Senneville unknown SQ.ft (liveable space) [comes with a guesthouse and servants house, which is on 40 ACRES] 4 Bedroom 5 Bathroom 1 Partial Bathroom For sale: $8,800,000 Ile Bizard 30,000+ SQ.ft (livable space) 5 Bedroom 5 Bathroom 1 Partial Bathroom For sale: $7,250,000
  18. NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Real estate values around the nation have collapsed, and sales of foreclosed and "underwater" homes now dominate many housing markets, according to a report released Tuesday. The report, from Zillow.com, a real estate Web site, revealed that with foreclosures soaring, nearly 20% of the nation's home sales in 2008 were of bank-repossessed properties. Another 11% were short sales, in which homeowners owed more in mortgage debt than their homes were worth. Madera, Calif., had the highest percentage of these distressed sales: 54.6% of all transactions there were foreclosed homes, and another 3.4% were short sales. In Merced, Calif., 53.4% of sales were foreclosures and 4.8% were short sales. In nearby Stockton, 51.1% were foreclosures and 5.4% were short sales. "As more markets turn down and markets that were already down go deeper, the pace at which value is being erased from the U.S. housing stock is rapidly increasing," said Stan Humphries, Zillow's vice president in charge of data and analytics. "More value [was] wiped out in the fourth quarter of 2008 than was eliminated in all of 2007," Humphries said. About $3.3 trillion in home equity was erased in 2008, with $1.4 trillion of that wipeout coming in the fourth quarter alone, according to Humphries. More than $6 trillion in value has been lost since the market peaked in 2005. Those equity losses have put many homeowners underwater, where they're extremely vulnerable to foreclosure. These owners can't tap home equity for the cash they need to pay bills when they run into rough financial patches, and they often find it impossible to refinance - lenders will not loan more than the property is worth. In the United States, 17.6% of all homes are now underwater, according to Zillow, as are 41.2% of all mortgages for homes bought in the past five years. The worst-hit cities are in the once-booming Sun Belt. In Las Vegas, 61.4% of all homes are underwater. Because so many homes are worth less than their mortgage balances, an increasing number have to be sold short. But short sale transactions can take a long time to complete, because lenders have been having trouble keeping up with the flood of requests. "The speed of short sales is a function of the resources being allocated to them by lenders, and those resources are being stretched to the limit," Humphries said. That means lenders may not act on approving short sales for months. The deals cannot go forward without their approval, because the banks must agree to forgive the difference between what they're owed and what the sale brings in. As the time it takes to arrange short sales lengthens, they become harder to complete. Time and money wasted One example of how price declines can doom a short sale occurred recently in Phoenix. Curtis Johnson, a real estate broker there, worked with a health care worker whose hours were being cut and who could no longer afford her mortgage. She fell behind and decided to sell. Johnson was able to find a buyer willing to pay $183,000, and got an approval form the lender. The owner confidently moved out, got a new place and started a new life. But the lender folded and the mortgage went to a new servicer, who took six weeks to approve the deal. "Unfortunately, the buyers who were approved were no longer interested because the real estate market had dropped significantly," Johnson said. "They wrote a new offer, considerably lower then the first, and it was time to start over." Two more offers eventually fell through before a new buyer was found and the owner's bank approved the price, this time at $163,000. On the day of that closing, however, the parties discovered that the buyer's lender had run out of funds and dropped out of the deal. The home went to foreclosure auction before another sale could be arranged. The house is now on the market for $139,900. "[The house is] listed for less than what would have been received had the bank been willing to work with us, and still has not yet sold," Johnson said. Distressed sales like that depress the market for all homeowners. Regular sellers in cities dominated by foreclosures have to adjust their prices downward to compete. The percentage of homes sold for less than what their owners originally paid has leaped up in the past couple of years. In the United States as a whole, 34.6% of the sales made in 2008 were done at a loss. In Merced, 71.6% of all sales last year were for less than the seller paid. Stockton, Modesto and Las Vegas all had in excess of 68% of all homes being sold at a loss. Foreclosures beget more foreclosures by adding inventory to the market, which depresses prices, which increases foreclosures, according to Humphries.
  19. Sale journée pour le fabricant du BlackBerry. Il perdait des plumes à la Bourse de Toronto en réponse à l'annonce des résultats trimestriels de la veille qui ont déçu les analystes. Pour en lire plus...
  20. Canada's housing market cools Home prices are still rising but much more slowly.Tyler Anderson/National PostHome prices are still rising but much more slowly. Resale price growth lowest in seven years Garry Marr, Financial Post Published: Friday, June 13, 2008 More On This Story TORONTO -- The Canadian real estate market is being flooded with homes, causing prices to start falling in some key markets, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association. The average price of a home sold last month in the country's top 25 markets was $337,071, an all-time record. But that record price was only up 1.1% from May, 2007 -- the smallest year-over-year increase in seven years. "The record number of new listings means more opportunities for buyers," said Gregory Klump. chief economist with CREA. "The resale housing market has evolved in just a few short months." CREA said there were 67,628 new units on the market in May, a 7% jump from last year. It was the second straight month that a record number of houses has gone on sale. The impact on prices is being felt most keenly in Alberta. The average price of a home sold in Calgary last month was $418,881, a 2.4% drop from a year ago. Edmonton sale prices averaged out at $340,499, down 4.8% from a year ago. Unit sales in both Alberta cities are also plummeting. Calgary homes sales were off 34.2% from a year ago while Edmonton sales were down 34.8% during the same period. The home sales are dropping across the country. CREA said on a national basis sales were off 16.9% in May from a year earlier.
  21. TVA pas rapport mais je la trouvais belle Cour arrière très laides près du pont Pont Radio Canada 2 Églises Rue Ste-Catherine Boul. René Lévesque Molson :cheers: Traffic sur le pont Porc Autoroute Ville-Marie 1000 Port Train Fleuve St-Laurent Plus belle vue possible sur le skyline :banana: La ville avec son fleuve Bateau de plaisance Passerelle ... ça shake en sale ça avec le traffic pis les van :sly: Twins !
×
×
  • Créer...