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mtlurb

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Tout ce qui a été posté par mtlurb

  1. Ah wow!! Pas fort me semble...il s'attendait vraiment à de bonnes ventes le promoteur?
  2. Dans mes rêves, j'habite cette tour...elle est vraiment vraiment belle. Le projet prévoit l'ajout d'un 9e étage sur le dessus, qui sera le penthouse. Il y a présentement une grue sur le site. La construction est donc commencée. ---------------------------------------------------------- Projet : Europa Secteur : Vieux-Montréal Adresse : 750 Places d'Armes Prix : Plus que 3 unités... #31, 1942 pc., 799 000$ #81, 1920 pc., 799 000$ #90, 4000 pc., 2 000 000$ Nombre d'unité : 22 Chambre : 2 Salle de bains : 1+1 Garage : disponible Agent : Mickaël Chaput, agent immobilier affilié Montréal Téléphone : 514.502.7519 Site Web : www.projeteuropa.com ----------------------------------------------------------
  3. Ouais ben je comprends que les ventes aillent aussi mal...ça semble perdu au milieu de nul part (concessionnaires automobiles, boulevard aucunement attrayant, etc.) C'est ordinaire, très ordinaire. Pas d'arbres en plus.
  4. Moi je crois pas que les immeubles valent 15 millions, je crois que c'est le terrain qui vaut ca... 15M/565 logements = 26500$ par logement. C'est surement pas sur ca qu'ils se sont bases pour calculer la valeur du 'package'
  5. Pas mal hors sujet, mais disons que ce bout la est une excellent nouvelle. Il faudrait faire aussi quelque chose pour les tondeuses et autres moteurs a 2 temps.
  6. Prolongement de la ligne bleue vers l'est Prolongement de la ligne bleue vers l'est. La mise en chantier est prévue en 2022, pour une livraison en 2026. Connexion avec le SRB Pie-IX, stationnement de 1200 places aux Galeries d'Anjou. Coût évalué à 3.9 milliards de dollars. Le projet en chiffres 5 nouvelles stations de métro accessibles, pour une longueur de tunnel de 5,8 km 2 terminus d’autobus et 1 stationnement incitatif de 1 200 places 1 tunnel piétonnier souterrain assurant le lien avec le futur SRB Pie-IX Plusieurs infrastructures opérationnelles : 6 structures auxiliaires renfermant des équipements nécessaires à l’exploitation, 1 poste de district, 1 garage de métro, 1 centre d’attachement hébergeant des véhicules d’entretien des voies et 1 centre de service pour l’entretien des infrastructures Budget estimé de 3,9 G$ Échéancier préliminaire Début 2019 : début de la conception des plans et devis. Printemps 2019 : approbation du mode de réalisation, du plan budgétaire et de l’envergure du projet. Fin 2019 : début de travaux préparatoires sur certains sites. Début 2020 : démarrage des processus de changement de zonage et de consultations publiques. 2021 : dépôt du dossier d’affaires, lancement de la construction des nouvelles infrastructures. 2026 : inauguration du nouveau tronçon. Information : http://www.stm.info/fr/a-propos/grands-projets/grands-projets-metro/prolongement-ligne-bleue Consultations publiques : http://www.stm.info/fr/consultations/prolongement-de-la-ligne-bleue Commande architecturale : http://www.stm.info/sites/default/files/media/Travaux/Ligne_bleue/commande_architecturale_pl5.pdf Rapport final & emplacement des stations: http://www.stm.info/sites/default/files/media/Travaux/Ligne_bleue/rapport_final_commission_plb_200529.pdf Plan d'action : http://www.stm.info/sites/default/files/media/Travaux/Ligne_bleue/plb_commission_publique_plan_daction_stm.pdf
  7. Ah ça explique le défonçage du terrain sur bois-franc coin henri-bourassa. Ajout: Bon ça creusait là depuis un bon moment, je croyais que c'était un terrain acheté par l'AMT... eh bien non, ça sera une tour résidentielle, et la grue était présente hier. Pas de rendu ou quoi que ce soit sur le terrain... à voir.
  8. J'ai des doutes que le port voudrait faire une expansion de ses terrains, ils parlent plutôt d'améliorer l'utilisation du port, plus d'efficience.
  9. what 2 highways? Its henri bourassa. Its cheap housing, there's a market for that.
  10. heuuu... wtf? Il est où le problème à ce que je demande à cataclaw et toi de faire attention à vos propos? Est-ce que j'ai dit quelque part que tu devais t'excuser et/ou te rétracter? Personne ne sera banni. T'as eu une réaction bizarre, Yara...
  11. Un peu hors sujet, mais j'ai été à la tour CGI dans le CCE... et devinez quoi, ils sont en sur utilisation des locaux... j'ai été averti que presque toutes les salles de réunions sur les 25 étages sont maintenant utilisés pour mettre des employés (temporairement) jusqu'à ce qu'ils trouvent une solution! De plus CGI compte embaucher 4000 dans du court-moyen terme! CGI va surement déborder dans une autre tour!
  12. 41 000!!! WFT!! Et 150 millions pour développer un quai...je sais pas si c'est moi, mais il me semble que c'est beaucoup quand on sait qu'il n'y aura aucune tours! On pourra s'attendre à quelque chose de qualité! Vous trouvez pas que ça va super bien ces temps-ci?!?
  13. La même chose : 120 mètres. C'est la limite pour ce secteur. Il serait, selon moi, suicidaire de vouloir construire plus haut.
  14. Heu... Y'a eu une mauvaise compréhension de mon message là. Je ne suis aucunement vexé et ça ne se voulait pas aussi agressif que tu semble l'avoir pris... Je venais juste de dire, en plus, à cataclaw et a yara de se calmer un peu sur le débat. Je répondais avec le même style que toi tu l'avais fait, simplement. Si tu l'as mal pris...je m'en excuse.
  15. Voici le quai Alexandra: http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&ll=45.502256,-73.55116&spn=0.005008,0.010042&t=h&z=17
  16. mtlurb

    Canadiens de Montréal

    J'ai passé ma commande à mon chum qui va être au centre ville après la game... une télé plasma 42 pouces
  17. Je me rapelle avoir lu que le port avait demandé au Fédéral de changer sa constitution corporative pour pouvoir aller chercher plus d'emprunts, un peu comme les autres ports canadiens.
  18. http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&ll=45.532823,-73.679895&spn=0.002503,0.005021&t=h&z=18
  19. mtlurb

    Canadiens de Montréal

    From the desk of Scott Moore, Executive Director of CBC TV Sports, comes a look at emerging trends in the world of sports broadcasting and what weighs into decisions at Canada's public broadcaster We love Montreal. We really do. Wednesday, April 16, 2008 | 11:06 PM ET Montreal is one of the greatest cities in the world. It certainly has the best restaurants. And it arguably has the best hockey fans in the country. I’m a little biased. I grew up there and am a Canadiens fan. My biggest idols growing up were Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard and Yvan Cournoyer. So as a former Montrealer, it really bugs me to hear the press in that city say that CBC Sports is anti-Habs. Nothing could be further from the truth. Especially recently. The Canadiens are a great team. They are a legitimate Stanley Cup favourite, and may be for several years. The Boston-Montreal series has produced some of the most entertaining hockey of the playoffs. I am hopeful we’ll be covering the Habs for quite a while into the spring. The Habs form a major part of the history of Hockey Night in Canada - and its future. What long-time Montreal fan doesn't get chills from Danny Gallivan's classic calls? No broadcaster in the world is more closely associated with a single team than Dick Irvin, who remains a valued member of the Hockey Night in Canada team. Hockey Night in Canada and the Habs will hopefully always be intertwined. So let me dispel a few myths: #1: “Hockey Night in Canada is only showing Montreal in the playoffs because Toronto is not playing.” This is crazy. We show EVERY Canadian team in the playoffs. In fact, this year, we have worked hard with the NHL to ensure that none of the Habs, Senators or Flames games overlap, so that the biggest possible audiences can see every game. #2: “CBC never shows the Canadiens on Saturday Nights.” This year, we had 19 Habs games on Hockey Night in Canada. That’s up from 13 last year. (And we’d really love to do more next season). That's more than any other English network, and more games than any team in the league other than Toronto. Some broadcasts were national, some were just in Quebec, some everywhere but Southern Ontario, but all were available on our regional feeds. Additionally, we devoted an entire Saturday pre-game show to the live ceremony of Bob Gainey’s sweater retirement - in both languages. #3: “Don Cherry is anti-Montreal.” Not true. Just last night, Don was adamant that Carey Price should be the hands-down rookie of the year. He has been one of Price’s biggest promoters this season. Don has always been a huge fan of Kirk Muller. Nobody was a bigger supporter for Saku Koivu when he was being criticized for his linguistic shortcomings earlier this season. But all this will probably never convince ardent Habs fans that we somehow are rooting against them. That’s OK. I love passionate hockey fans. But just know that as a guy that bleeds Canadiens blue and red, that’s a tough criticism to stomach. http://www.cbc.ca/sports/moore/2008/04/we_love_montreal_we_really_do.html Les commentaires des gens sont assez corrosifs envers CBC... malade!
  20. Shriners ready to build at Glen Will leave Cedar Ave. for MUHC site AARON DERFELThe Gazette Thursday, April 17, 2008 After years of uncertainty about the fate of the Montreal Shriners Hospital, high-ranking Shriners this week finally approved the construction of a new health-care facility in the city's west end, The Gazette has learned. The Shriners' pediatric orthopedic hospital could cost as much as $100 million, and it is to be built in tandem with the future Montreal Children's Hospital in the Glen yard, straddling Notre Dame de Grâce and Westmount. It is to include outpatient clinics, operating rooms and research laboratories, as well as beds for short-term stays, said Ralph Semb, chairperson of the board of trustees for Shriners Hospitals. "Montreal is going to have a new facility," Semb said in a phone interview yesterday from Springfield, Mass. "We're going to eventually move out of what we have on the hill," he added, referring to the existing location on Cedar Ave., on the slopes of Mount Royal, which the Shriners Hospital has occupied since 1925. The decision to build a new hospital marks a dramatic shift in policy by the Shriners, a fraternal charitable organization. On three occasions, senior Shriners had tried to close the Montreal hospital and build a new one in London, Ont. And even when Shriners voted against closing the Montreal hospital, Semb ruled out construction at the Glen site, saying the Cedar Ave. complex would be maintained in its current state. But on Tuesday, the joint boards of the Shriners voted to approve construction of a new facility and to work with the McGill University Health Centre on architectural plans. The MUHC oversees the Montreal Children's and is planning to build the future Children's, along with several adult pavilions and research facilities, on the Glen site. "This is wonderful news," said Gary Morrison, chairperson of the board of governors of the Montreal Shriners Hospital. "Finally, we have gotten past the debate of, 'Do we stay in Montreal?' Now, not only will we stay in Montreal, but we're building for the future. I'm pleased and excited." Morrison is to make the official announcement today at a news conference at the hospital. In 2005, Morrison was part of a delegation, including Premier Jean Charest, Quebec Health Minister Philippe Couillard and Montreal Mayor Gérald Tremblay, that lobbied Shriners at their annual convention to save the Montreal hospital. The campaign was hard-fought, as Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty also attended the convention to press the case for London. In the end, delegates were won over by a group of children who were flown in from the Montreal hospital. Still, even in the last few months, issues kept coming up to block the Montreal project, a Shriner from Ottawa told The Gazette. "A couple of weeks ago we were at a meeting in Manchester, N.H.," Perry McConnell said, "and we were kind of shocked" to find a lack of progress in the matter. At that meeting, Douglas Maxwell, deputy imperial potentate of the Shriners, was persuaded to raise the issue of a new hospital in Montreal before the joint boards. Maxwell could not be reached for comment. In the coming months, the Shriners and the MUHC are to iron out a number of technical issues to avoid a duplication of services. For example, the Shriners might consider renting some operating rooms from the future Montreal Children's, Semb said. The Shriners could also purchase blood tests from the Children's. Both hospitals would stand next to each other and might even be heated from the same boiler room, Morrison said. Construction of the new Montreal Children's Hospital is set for the spring of 2009. Since Semb said the Shriners would want to build in tandem, construction on their project would probably begin at that time as well. The existing Shriners Hospital has 40 beds. Semb said the future hospital will have far fewer beds, but he couldn't give an exact number. Morrison, however, suggested the new facility might serve a greater number of patients than it does now because Ste. Justine Hospital has indicated it would like all orthopedic procedures to be concentrated at the Shriners. What's more, the Shriners hospital is interested in also being affiliated with the Université de Montréal. aderfel@thegazette.canwest.com © The Gazette http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=e9448b86-9c25-4f31-9a1f-7e0d27471580
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