Historic Landmarks

Windsor Station: 60 Years of Corporate Credulity and Greed (*Excerpt from Quebec Heritage News)

larger_station.jpegIn response to a plan to connect Montreal’s airport to the downtown by diverting the existing CPR tracks around the Bell Centre and old Windsor Station to a new elevated terminus with multi-story commercial and office space, Michael Fish has publicly expressed his opinion that it would be cheaper to demolish the Bell Centre and reopen the old Windsor Station as a commuter

Westmount Public Library

larger_img_5238.a.jpgWithout a doubt, one of the jewels of Westmount, and probably of Greater Montreal, is the Westmount Public Library.

Established in 1897 in honour of Queen Victoria's diamond jubilee, the library, according to its bylaws, was to be "forever free to the use of the inhabitants and ratepayers of the town."

Echo Lake: The House as Art

larger_echo_001.jpgOne of the most striking features of the architecture at Echo Lake is the large number of round log houses. These were built between 1935 and 1955, initially by George Binns and other members of the Binns family. Round log style was also used by Binns at the Green Acres area on the other side of the village, off what is now Route 239 to Lachute.

Le temple maçonnique de Montréal

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La colonne que l’on aperçoit sur la droite, nommée Boaz, s’élève à l’extérieur de l’entrée principale du temple maçonnique de Montréal, siège de la Grande Loge du Québec. À son sommet se retrouve le globe terrestre. À gauche de Boaz, de l’autre côté de l’entrée se retrouve Jakin, une colonne surmontée d’un globe céleste.

Percé Rock

larger_perce_001.jpgLa Roche Percé, "the pierced rock," stands bold and firm to the end, though the cliffs of Mont Joli, on the mainland, and of Bonaventure Island, two miles out a sea, confirm the Indigenous tradition given by Denys that once there was no break in these perpendicular walls of rich-hued conglomerate, where the reds and browns of sandstone, the bright oli