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Montreal

Mordecai Richler gazebo could be finally ready in July

Announced in 2011 and started in 2014, the project has faced delays and cost overruns that saw its price tag nearly double to more than $700,000.

Price tag has nearly doubled for renovations to heritage structure

The project to rename the gazebo after Montreal author Mordecai Richler was launched in 2011. (CBC)

The five-year renovation saga of the Mordecai Richler Gazebo in Montreal's Mount Royal Park could be over for realin July, city officials say.

Announced in 2011 and commenced in 2014, the project has faced delays and cost overruns that saw its pricetag nearly double to more than $700,000.

Renovations were supposed to be finished in the fall of 2014, but the deadline was pushed back as new problems arose.

Projet Montral councillor Alex Norris said Mayor Denis Coderre had promised to have the gazebo finished last summer.

"He even told the media that he would come with a paintbrush, a can of paint and planks of wood to finish the job himself if it wasn't done. Well it wasn't done," Norris said.

Delays and new costs were also linked to the discovery of lead paint that had to be removed from the 1920s structure.

The gazebo dates from the 1920s but had suffered from abuse and neglect prior to the renovations. (CBC)
The city responded with lawyer's letters to the contractors, saying their estimates were unrealistic.

"We didn't get the expert advice needed to make decisions," said City of Montreal executive committee member Ral Mnard.

He said further delays were caused by lengthy discussions with the province, which has jurisdiction over the gazebo because it's a heritage structure.

That jurisdiction also means the province is helping cover some of the unforeseen costs.

Richler, who was born in Montreal in 1931, was known internationally for his literary talent and penned classics such asThe Apprenticeship of Duddy KravitzandBarney's Version,which were both set in Montreal and made into feature films.

Butin some quarters of Quebec, his critiques of the province's nationalist movement earned him scorn.