Pathway along Lachine Canal east of Atwater Ave. to be extended by 1 km - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:17 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Pathway along Lachine Canal east of Atwater Ave. to be extended by 1 km

The bike path-slash-walkway on the north side of the Lachine Canal heading east will no longer stop at Atwater Avenue.

Parks Canada spending $6M to build path, washrooms and rest area

Work has begun on the area on the north side of the Lachine Canal between the Atwater Ave. and des Seigneurs St. bridges, which will be getting a pathway and a rest area. (Jay Turnbull/CBC)

The bike path-slash-walkway on the north side of the Lachine Canal heading east will no longer stop at Atwater Avenue.

Parks Canada, which oversees the national historic site, says it will be spending $6 million to make the space along the canal from Atwater to Des Seigneurs Street enjoyable.

Right now, that stretch of the canalis lined by the railway, some green space and an empty lot but no "infrastructure for visitors," Parks Canada said in a news release.

Closer to Atwater, the patios of a luxury condo building sit near the water, too. Small industrial lots lie to the east. The area is bookended by two smallcantilever bridges.

A building with washrooms and a rest area will be installed, in addition to the new path.

"This will allow the Government of Canada to provide current and future users with renovated facilities and services that better reflect their expectations as well as the recent transformations in the adjacent neighbourhoods," Parks Canada said.

"Lachine Canal is one of Parks Canada's flagship sites in the Montreal region."

More than 1 million people visit the Lachine Canal every year. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

The canal is 14.5 kilometres long, linking the Lachine neighbourhoodto the Old Port of Montreal. More than onemillion people visit the canal every year.

The investment in the one-kilometre stretch is part of a program spending $3 billion over five years to upgrade facilities and infrastructure on Parks Canada sites, includingnational historic sites, parksand marine conservation areas, across the country.