Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Montreal

New Griffintown housing project to prioritize residents displaced by Turcot

Residents of warehouse expropriated to make way for the Turcot Interchange will be given priority in a new $24.5-million affordable housing development in Montreal's Griffintown neighbourhood.

Plans for $24.5M affordable housing development unveiled by Quebec government

The new project will cost an estimate $24.5 million, $13.5 million of which is funded by Transports Qubec.

Residents of a Saint-Rmi Streetwarehouseexpropriatedto make way for the newTurcotInterchange will be given priority ina new$24.5-million affordable housing development in Montreal's Griffintown neighbourhood.

Plans for the 103-unit, 13-storeydevelopment wereunveiled Tuesday at a news conference that brought together threeQuebec government ministers and Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre.

The Quebec government was represented by Transport Minister Jacques Daoust, Municipal Affairs Minister Martin Coiteux as well asSaint-Henri-Sainte-Anne MNA and Minister of EconomyDominique Anglade.

The new project will be built at Les Bassins Du Nouveau Havre development, located at 1400 Ottawa Street. (Google Maps)
The units will be built in a development called LesBassinsDu NouveauHavre,located at 1400 Ottawa Street.

Former residents of 780 Saint-Rmi Street, a 107-unitwarehouseexpropriated to make way for the newTurcotInterchange, will be given priority for the new apartments.

"It's certainly a response to the needs of the people who have been displaced in the construction of Turcot," Coiteux said.

"The message being sent is that there will be more affordable housing in Saint-Henri-Sainte-Anne," Angladesaid.

'I'm not happy'

Former resident Andrew Kolakowski said, '780 Saint-Remi was the best building in Montreal.' (CBC)
For Andrew Kolakowski, an artist who lived at780Saint-RmiStreet for 14 years, the eviction is still fresh in his mind.

"I'm living here in a new place but I'm not happy," he said.

Kolakowski said tenants got $5,000 to $15,000 in compensation, but henow paystwice asmuch in rent for a comparable apartment in theNotre-Dame-de-Grce neighbourhood.

Benoit Ferland, the project coordinator for Griffintown development, said much effort is goinginto making the new units feel like home for evicted tenants like Kolakowski.

This included adding details like loft ceilings, large windows, and finding the right spot for the development.

Benoit Ferland, project coordinator for the new housing development, says features of the new building were designed to make displaced residents feel at home. (CBC)

Despite this, the new apartments arestill a hard sell for Kolakowski.

"Tenants, neighbours in this building was like a team, like a family," he said.

"780 Saint-Remi wasthe best buildingin Montreal."

Much needed affordable housing

Work on the new development is slated to begin in 2017 and will take an estimated two years to complete.

The project will be overseen by the non-profit organization L'Habitation 21.

Quebec's Transport Ministry is putting in$13.5 million of the estimated costs.

Benoit Dorais, mayor of the Southwest borough, said the new project brings an end to years of uncertainty for the residents displaced by the Turcot project.

"By the time they move into their new homes, 12 years will have passed since the expropriations were announced, and five years since they took place," he said.

"It was time for the government to stop procrastinating and move forward with this," he said.

Doraiswelcomed the promised units, but said much more affordable housing is needed in the Southwest borough.

Here are the project plans (available in French only):

Mobile users: View the document
(PDF KB)
(Text KB)
CBC is not responsible for 3rd party content