Please complete your profile to unlock commenting and other important features.

Please select your date of birth for special perks on your birthday. Your username will be your unique profile link and will be publicly used in comments.
MTL Blog Pro

This is a Pro feature.

Time to level up your local game with MTL Blog Pro.

Pro

$5/month

$40/year

  • Everything in the Free plan
  • Ad-free reading and browsing
  • Unlimited access to all content including AI summaries
  • Directly support our local and national reporting and become a Patron
  • Cancel anytime.

montreal architecture

Montreal is known as the 'Europe of North America' for good reason. The historic architecture, world-renowned food, and French language can make you feel like you're experiencing a day in the beautiful city of Paris — if you know the right spots, that is.

This means you don't need a plane ticket to live out your very own Emily in Paris fantasy, a show which — by the way — returns to Netflix on Thursday for the second part of its fourth season.

Keep readingShow less

Montreal's history is etched into its architecture, and some of the city's most iconic structures have remained nearly unchanged for centuries. As new buildings reshape the Montreal skyline, these old landmarks provide a direct link to the city's past — one built with skills few possess today.

The intricate stonework required for the Notre Dame Basilica's rebuild is a skill few modern builders have mastered. Just as mind-blowing is imagining these buildings going up without modern technology. One that was a bank now houses a trendy Montreal café, while one that wasn't a bank held the largest shipment of gold in history in secret.

Keep readingShow less

There you are, standing in Montreal's Old Port, gazing at the geometric cascade that is Habitat 67, and the thought pops into your head that it seems somewhat incomplete. Well, you're on to something.

As it stands, the iconic structure is a glimpse of what might have been. But thanks to technology, you can now virtually step into a world where Habitat 67 has finally reached its full potential.

Keep readingShow less

To many Montrealers, squat, closely packed residential areas beat imposing glass towers any day. A March 21 Reddit post asking "why Montreal looks better than Toronto and feels more approachable" has inspired almost two hundred comments, many pointing to the Quebec metropolis' high density as a reason for its lively, walkable neighbourhoods.

"I understand that 'looking good' is a very subjective thing," Reddit user davidliu1007 says in the post, "but after living in Toronto for a while and coming back to Montreal, I have to say that Montreal just looks better and feels more approachable, for some reason. Anyone feel the same?"

Keep readingShow less

Montreal is known for its unique architecture. But sometimes we find properties so unusual they stop us in our tracks — and that's exactly what these weird, wacky and wonderful Montreal houses will do for you.

If variety is the spice of life, then these quirky homes represent some of the spiciest Montreal real estate around.

Keep readingShow less