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Maisonneuve

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Messages posté(e)s par Maisonneuve

  1. On 2024-02-09 at 3:36 PM, mtlurb said:

    Opinion non populaire: rénover le stade au complet ou laisser faire le projet et attendre un autre gouvernement avec plus de couilles. 
     

    Fermer le stade pendant 4 ans (minimum), pour qu’en y rentrant la première fois le commun des mortels va se sentir arnaqué… hey coudonc le milliard a passé où. Ça aidera pas au cynisme ambiant envers la classe politique. 

    I think the government made the wrong decision. Quebecers do not like the idea of putting good money after bad on the Olympic Stadium. Period.

    They said that this $870 million project is easier to sell to the population than a $2 Billion demolition. Putting that questionable demolition figure aside for a moment, let's just say we accept it as real for the sake of argument.

    If they wanted to announce a project that the population would be completely (85-90%) in favour of, they should have announced the following:

    Today, we're announcing an $8 Billion project to completely reimagine the Olympic Park site. We're building 30,000 social housing units all over the Olympic Park site, spread out over X-number of buildings, with Y-number of mixed-use amenities. Our private developer partners, Company ABC and Company EFG are investing in the project too allowing us to integrate market-rate units in 10% of each building because we think it's socially responsible to mix classes. This is the largest social housing project in all of North America. This project will take 10 years to complete. And the demolition of the Olympic Stadium is part of the project.

    Had the government announced that, less people would be upset. 30,000 units of social housing, plus we get rid of the Big O too, we're killing two birds with the same stone!

    An $8 Billion mixed-use project that gives us affordable housing would have been an easier sell to the population than: We're investing $870 million into a new roof for the Big O Taylor Swift, Taylor Swift, Taylor Swift!

    (Conversation for another thread: Sure, we'll still need a stadium, but something we're only going to use maximum 20-50 days of the year can be anywhere, like at the end of the REM line in Brossard. No roof required. Grey Cups, Canada Soccer matches, European soccer exhibitions matches, NFL regular season games, NHL outdoor games, and international artist concerts. There's virgin land at the end of the REM line in Brossard to do build whatever stadium we want. To build our version of Foxboro, Metlife, or Soldier Field. I wouldn't put an MLB stadium there, but a special events stadium sure. If it's once in a while, people would take the REM to Brossard just like they go off island to go to Osheaga. But as I said, another convo for another thread).

     

  2. 5 hours ago, Julpyz said:

    When will people realized that our tiny skyscrapers doesn't protect the Mount Royal's view, viewing corridors does.

    They probably said the same thing in Hong Kong. "oh no, we won't see Kowloon Bay from the mountain tops anymore with all the skyscrapers." 

    Even if we wanted to preserve the view of the St. Lawrence River from Mount Royal, I don't see why certain blocks can't allow for buildings that are higher than the mountain. There should be at least between 1 and 3 supertalls downtown, preferably on blocks between Maestria and 1 Square Phillips. If we're going to have buildings that pass the top of Mount Royal they should be centralized in a certain part of downtown. Most of our tallest buildings seem to be forming east of PVM anyways. That should please the "we won't see the river from the mountain" people. Who cares if they don't see Île Sainte-Hélène or Notre-Dame from the Island anymore, big deal. 

    From Mount-Royal, they can still see the Champlain Bridge, the Jacques Cartier Bridge, the historic Victoria Bridge and will still see the fireworks. Plus, on bright sunny days and clear skies, they can see the mountains in the east, and the mountains of Upstate New York and Vermont. The "we won't see the river from the mountain" people like Lambert need to chill because they will always see quite a lot from Mount Royal no matter how many skyscrapers get built.

    • Like 2
  3. Like many of you, I hope that they are able to bury this new portion of the REM, particularly the René-Lévesque part. If the decision is the keep it above ground, then a whole redesign of René-Lévesque would have to occur. They could reduce the roadway to two lanes in both directions and shift it to the north side, build a bike/walkway with trees in the center, and build the elevated REM structure on the south side.

    • Like 3
    • Thanks 1
  4. On 2019-08-06 at 7:33 AM, SupremeMTL said:

    De Atwater au Palais de Justice de Montréal

    image.png

    A photo like this, from the MUHC to the Jacques-Cartier Bridge, ten years from now is going to make the skyline more stretched out. More Chicago-like (spread out) and less Los Angeles-like (concentrated).

  5. On 2018-12-07 at 2:54 PM, IluvMTL said:

    "Whether local or foreign, investors aren’t stupid. Most shop with a spreadsheet, and you can bet they’ve got a plan to make money somehow. They know there’s more than one way to make a buck in real estate."

    This is exactly what I was thinking last week. There are many ways to make money off of a condo, other than renting it out to someone who lives there permanently. I met a real estate agent about two months ago who was selling a unit in the McGill and Wellington area. He was telling me of all the different options he sees owners renting their units:

    International or out-of-province students: 3 to 4 students pool resources to rent out condo units (many times the condo was purchased by one of the parents of the students in the unit)

    Professionals: After late nights working in the core, professionals rent units during the week, and save the long commute back to the exurbs for Friday.

    Companies: When companies bring employees in from other offices outside Montreal, or bring consultants in from abroad...when these people will be staying for long periods of time, it is more economical for companies to rent a condo than place them in hotel rooms for hundreds of dollars a night.

    Obviously, how you rent it and to who depends on the unit, and your comfort level. But there are people willing and able to pay, you just need people who know how to find them.

    • Like 1
  6. On 2018-07-26 at 3:05 PM, Chris1989 said:

    Because it's the Gazette and if you aren't reminding your readers that Quebec sucks with your own biased numbers, you aren't doing your job.

    Keep scaring people away English-media in Quebec, soon there won't be anyone to read your trash anymore.

    Most of the people I know refuse to watch CTV or listen to CJAD or read the Gazette nowadays. It's just too depressing and fake.

    I agree with mark_ac. I wouldn't call it Fake News, but I do think that English Quebec media tends to skew stories , as all media do. For example, if an undercover reporter in the English media visited 100 stores in Montreal, and managed to get service in French in 90 stores, their story would be French is Being Use in 9 of 10 Montreal Stores. But if an undercover reporter in the French media did the same experiment, their story would be Le Francais Est Seulement Utilisé dans 9 de 10 magasins Montréalais? That's the nature of the media where we live. Some places in this world it is left-right, protestant-catholic,  sunny-shia, muslim-hindu and other combinations. In our corner of the world it is English-French. C'est la vie.

    But I don't worry about people leaving Quebec, because cost of living alone will have those people coming back to Quebec in several years time after they "make a go" in another province. And the way the stats get skewed, the people who leave and come back get counted as New when they are not really New. 

    And everyone is "leaving" somewhere. How many "Millennials are leaving Vancouver" type articles have been published for the past few years? At least a half dozen. And anecdotally, I know quite a few Vancourites that are moving here. Whether they are native to Van City or former Montrealers, I don't know. So I take these "people are leaving [fill in the blank city]" articles with a grain of salt.

    And stats can be skewed and they make things simplistic. It is not as simple as saying people are leaving a city because of problem A, B, C, and D and people are moving to a city because of D, E, F, and G. You get a better idea of why people leave or move to a city by talking to them about their everyday practical experience, not some intangible stat. I have a friend who lives in Syracuse, New York who is African American. He had many friends who lived in New York City, who were also African American, who decided to move down south (African Americans leaving NYC in the tens of thousands for the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida has been a thing for about a decade or more). It is said that they left NYC because it is too expensive even in the suburbs, houses are cheaper down south, less taxes, and less traffic/congestion. What my friend told me was that he thought of moving too, but things don't always turn out as well as they would hope. Sure, there is more house for your buck in Atlanta than Brooklyn, but jobs are harder to get down south if you are not from down south. People there like to hire other southerners like them, even if they happen to be the same race. Now these people don't necessarily move back to NYC, but it serves as an example to remind people that the grass may be greener on the other side, but how much greener is it really? If the grass is greener with a smaller yard, can you live with that? If the greener grass is bordered by concrete walls, whereas at home you had great views, can you live with that? People often overlook the practical day-to-day experience of moving to a city. The streets of Los Angeles are full of people who thought they knew the city they moved to and the promise it would offer them, but things don't always pan out. Don't let stats or people's public image on social media fool you: things don't always pan out.

    As far as our situation here in Montreal, things can always be better, as is the case in any city. But I left Montreal a decade ago for Toronto and lived there for a few years. I loved Toronto, wanted to stay there, not because I hated Montreal, but it was fun getting to know the ins and outs of Toronto. Learn its strengths, its weakness, its people, etc. But the way things worked out, several years ago I had to come back to Montreal. As much as I love Toronto, I can tell you the practical negatives of living in that city as good as I can tell you Montreal's. That's why when I visit Toronto, I'm ironically happy that I moved back to Montreal. For example, many condo towers in Toronto are built on Yonge. If you fly into Billy Bishop and look out the window as the plane lands, there is a canyon of condos stretching from the Lake Ontario to Steeles Avenue. A top selling point for condos on Yonge is that they are on the Yonge-University subway line (they gave them numbers now to be like New York: a typical Toronto gesture. When they don't copy NYC, they copy Montreal) for people's convenience. There is one big problem: during the morning rush hour it is not convenient. If you live at Yonge and Bloor and you work at King and Bay, the subway is already packed by the time it gets to Yonge and Bloor, by people who thought the same thing - that living on the subway line will be convenient to get to work/school, etc... And when I say packed, I mean can't step on packed. Let 2 or 3 trains pass before I get on packed. And that was 10 years ago with less condos on Yonge, so today it must be even worse (I guess people take Uber and get stuck in traffic on Bayview or the DVP now). Sure, Tory says he will build a Downtown Relief Line, but Toronto needs 6 Downtown Relief Lines. One flaw Toronto has is public transit: they have New York City geographic scale, but a subway system slightly bigger than Montreal's. What Toronto needs is a New York scale of a subway system, but Ontario is broke now, and that will never happen. That's why the day the REM opens cue the stories in the Star, Sun, and Globe and Mail of "How come Montreal built the REM and we can't even...."  And if Plante somehow manages to get her Pink Line built, I would hate to be a Toronto mayor explaining to his or her constituents ( Jennifer Keesmaat maybe)why the second largest city in the country can manage to build two substantial subway (type) lines, but all we can get from Ford is money to built one Downtown Relief Line? Lack of scale of Toronto's subway system, and how that can influence how you get to work or a meeting, is a practical negative that I wouldn't expect a Montrealer or Vancouverite who wants to move to Toronto to understand, until they live there. That's what I try to tell my Toronto friends who visit Montreal and want to live here because they love the vibe: You want to move to Montreal? Well, take the bus or metro, speak to the STM worker in English, and after he tells you off, tell me if you still like Montreal. Oh, and just try driving around from point A to point B without being Detoured, Rue Barréd, or throwing up because your car hit a million potholes, and then tell me if you like Montreal....Some of them say they still like it. I say: You guys are crazy man! Congratulations, you are now genuine Montrealers! lol

     

     

     

    • Like 3
  7. 6 hours ago, Philippe said:

    CTV News had the same non-sense. Why is there such bad journalism in Montreal? This headline is like the crap you will see in MTL Blog. Note the third line of the article contradicts the headline. 

    If the report said that it is too early to determine the price, then why even write this article in the first place?

    I wouldn't be surprised if this article gets "corrected" without notifying the readership.

    Cost of REM could increase

    https://montreal.ctvnews.ca/cost-of-rem-could-increase-1.3972803

    The Canadian Press 
    Published Wednesday, June 13, 2018 9:41PM EDT 

    According to the auditor general, the Quebec government may have to spend more on the REM.

    In a report requested by the National Assembly, Guylaine Leclerc found that some of the initial price estimates may need to be recalculated. 

    Her report said that it’s still too early to determine if the price of the rapid transit system will increase. 

    Right now the REM is estimated to cost $7 billion, half of which is coming from public funds.

     

    Quote

     

    REM: Québec pourrait avoir à payer davantage

    http://www.lapresse.ca/actualites/grand-montreal/201806/13/01-5185638-rem-quebec-pourrait-avoir-a-payer-davantage.php

     

    Je pourrais aussi attraper la gastro en visitant la garderie de ma fille. N'importe quoi. La Presse est réellement rendu un torchon digne de son plus grand concurrent. 

     

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