Car-Free Montreal Street Hailed as Success

A summer pedestrianization project is widely popular with residents and local businesses.

1 minute read

July 13, 2023, 6:00 AM PDT

By Diana Ionescu @aworkoffiction


Pedestrians walk down car-free Mont-Royal Avenue next to green outdoor dining kiosks in Montreal, Canada

Mont-Royal Avenue in the summer, Montreal, Canada. | City of Montreal / Avenue do Mont-Royal

A pedestrianization project on Montreal’s Mont-Royal Avenue is proving to be a hit with local residents and businesses, writes Eric Andrew-Gee in The Globe and Mail. 

Born out of the pandemic, the Mont-Royal project, which has closed the street to cars for the last four summers, has gained support from two-thirds of local business owners and 90 percent of visitors questioned in a survey by a local business association.

Voting with their feet, Montrealers have turned the street into a daily festival, with thick crowds almost around the clock, shopping, wandering, packing private patios, or sinking into the baby-blue Adirondack chairs laid out for public use.

According to Andrew-Gee, “With a span of 2.5 kilometres blocked off to traffic, covering more than 30 intersections, it’s about twice as expansive as more famous, albeit permanent, promenades such as Bordeaux’s Sainte-Catherine or Stroget in Copenhagen.”

In the wake of this success, the city is working to convert nine other commercial street segments to pedestrian areas.

Tuesday, July 4, 2023 in The Globe and Mail

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