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Montreal

Drivers can still motor over Mount Royal this summer, but not on Sunday mornings

This summer, Montreal isn't going to stop motorists from using Mount Royal as a shortcut through the city nor will an alternating one-way section be installed near the top, but Camillien-Houde Way will be free of cars one morning a week.

Cyclists say more should be done to keep Camillien-Houde Way safe for them

bollards
Bollards dotted the centre line of Camillien-Houde Way last summer to prevent motorists from making illegal U-turns a manoeuvre that killed a cyclist in 2017. (Isaac Olson/CBC)

Montreal isn't going to stop motorists from using Mount Royal as a shortcut through the city this summer, nor will an alternating one-way section be installed near the top, but there will still be plenty of flexible posts and speed humps dotting a road that draws hundreds of cyclists every day.

AndCamillien-Houde Way will be closed to cars every Sunday morning so athletescan power up and down the hill without fear of encountering vehicles.

Mayor Valrie Plante's administration has been striving to make Mount Royal safer ever since 18-year-old cyclistClment Ouimet was fatally struck on Camillien-Houde Way three years ago, but the city's drastic traffic-calming measures have drawn plenty of backlash from motorists.

This summer's plan appears to be a compromise, allowing vehiclesto cut through the park while installing various measures to keep cyclists safe.

But Vlo Qubec's Magali Bebronne said keeping Camillien Houde Way and Remembrance Roadopen to through traffic creates an unnecessary conflict between cyclists and cars.

"We're not meaning to cut anyone's access to the mountain, but we don't see why it should be used as a shortcut for people looking to go east to west or west to east," she said.

"It's just mathematics. At the end of the day, the more vehicles you have, the more chance you have for crashes."

Motorists bemoans new plan

While Bebronne says the city is still doing too little, Notre-Dame-de-Grce resident Michael Silassays it's still doing too much.

"The reality is it's one more step toward closing this road permanently, which is what they wanted to do for the longest time," he said.

Michael Silas, who has long opposed any interruption to his daily car commute over Mount Royal, says the city is still doing too much to slow traffic through the park. (CBC)

Silas, who uses the scenic shortcut to get to work in the Plateau, was a key player againstMontreal's decision to close the route to through traffic in the summer of 2018.

The Office de consultation publique de Montral (OCPM) eventuallyrecommended the roadway stay open.

Closing to cars every Sunday

Planteagreed to keep it open, but her administration ensured driving over the mountain was much slower than usual last summer.

However, not all of those traffic-calming measures will stay in place. For example, the city announced Tuesday thatthe alternating one-way near the summit will not be reinstalledas the results "were not conclusive in terms of safety."

Instead, Montreal will again line the shoulder and middle of Camillien-Houde Way with the reflective bollards, preventing illegal U-turns and providing a safe buffer between cyclists and traffic,the city says.

In the summer of 2019, the shoulders were made wider in some areas and reflective, flexible posts were installed to help keep the hundreds of daily cyclists safe from cars. (Isaac Olson/CBC)

The speed limit through the park will also be reduced, and Mount-Royal Avenue will be narrowed to a single lane near theCamillien-Houde Way intersection.

And from July 5 to Sept. 27,cyclists, pedestrians and other athletes will have free reign on Camillien-Houde Way every Sunday morning, 7:30 a.m. to 12 p.m.

During that period, access to the mountain and cemetery will be maintained as vehicles can still use Remembrance Road on the western side of Mount Royal. There will also be a free shuttle service from Laurier Metro station.

Cyclists keep climbing the hill

Despite Ouimet's deathin 2017, cyclists like Jean Parare still drawn to the mountain as it is the only place to train on a steep slope in the area.

He climbs Camillien-Houde Way about700 times per year, and while he feels this summer's plan is a good start, he said the city could do more.

For example, working to better enforcethe reduced speed limit would be a key step to making the road safer for everybody, he said.

"My feeling is that there's a need for more people to die here before something actually gets done seriously, sadly," Par said. "I feel, on this road, a lot of stuff could be done to make cyclists' lives better."

With files from Jay Turnbull