NDG residents frustrated by dozen construction sites in neighbourhood - Action News
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Montreal

NDG residents frustrated by dozen construction sites in neighbourhood

Work has started on Cte St-Luc Road between Wilson and Girouardavenues forcing drivers heading east to take a detour.According to the city of Montreal's Info-travaux website, there are a dozen active construction sites west of Dcarie Avenue, in the Cte-des-NeigesNotre-Dame-de-Grce borough.

One project isn't expected to end until spring 2025

A roadblock with several signs attached to it saying
Most of the work in the Notre-Dame-de-Grce neighbourhood should be done by the fall except for a major project along Somerled Avenue which is set to end in the spring of 2025. (Kwabena Oduro/CBC)

Blerina Rukahas to call her children's bus driver every morning to co-ordinate a new pickup spot based on the daily shuffle of orange cones and road closures in Montreal's Notre-Dame-de-Grce neighbourhood.

She repeats the process every afternoon as well.

"It's not easy at all living here every daywith this noise, with this dust," says the mother of two.

Today, work started on Cte St-Luc Road between Wilson and Girouard avenues, forcing drivers heading east to take a detour through Fielding Avenue, Cavendish Boulevard and Monkland Avenue.

According to the city of Montreal's Info-travaux website, there are about a dozen active construction sites west of Dcarie Avenue, in the Cte-des-NeigesNotre-Dame-de-Grce borough.

Theseincludea major overhaul of Somerled Avenue between Beaconsfield and Cte St-Luc Road that will be done over two years until the spring of 2025.

"Those infrastructure are aging, the water pipe is 100 years old," spokesperson for the city of Montreal Philippe Sabourintold CBC News. "Everything will be changed."

A construction site blocks access to two roads. A large red dump truck is parked on an unpaved stretch of the road. An excavator is parked behind it. The morning sun is peering out from some trees.
Sabourin says 53 NDG residents will have their lead pipes replaced. (Kwabena Oduro/CBC)

Sabourin says 53 residentswill have their lead water pipes replaced in the process.

The smaller sites have different end dates between nowand November.

Resident Sarah Smithsays she doesn't mind the construction if the end-goal is new pipes she's not impressed with the water quality in the area butas a commuter, she wishes it wasn't so difficult to decipher when and where to take the bus.

"You're kind of blindly trying to find where they relocated a bus," saidSmith.

She's waited long periods of time before noticing the bus stop she was standing at was no longerin service.

"With my daughter, after daycare, it's kind of a nightmare," she says.

a woman pumps gas into her car.
NDG resident Sophie Martin says signs with clear messaging could help frustrated drivers better navigate the different construction sites in the area. (CBC News)

She also says she's observed several drivers struggle to read and understand the signage put in place to help them navigate through the different detours.

Sophie Martin also lives in the area andsays she shares similar frustrations. This morning, she turned into a one-way only to find out along with the drivers in front of her that the street ended at a construction site, forcing them to do do a u-turn.

"Drivers were pretty frustrated," she says.

She says she hopes things will calm down soon, especially since she's started dropping off her kids at school again. In the meantime, she's doing her bestto be courteous even to visibly frustrated drivers.

"I also understand, I can put myself in their shoes, they need to get somewhere this morning, so it is what it is I guess," she said.

Sabourin says work at the intersection ofCte St-Luc Road and Somerled Avenue should be done by the end of October.

With files from Kwabena Oduro