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montreal light rail

Your commute is about to get a futuristic facelift with a dash of déjà vu. As the city revs up for the launch of the Réseau Express Métropolitain (REM), you have to cast a glance back at Expo 67 and the visionary Expo Express.

Sixty years ago, a driverless train was so far-fetched, human 'conductors' were hired to play pretend and keep passengers calm. Now, as the REM prepares to whisk people around with no driver in sight, the question begs: have Montrealers outgrown the self-driving jitters, or are we just circling back to the future?

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Montreal's REM may be sleeping on its planned December 1 opening, instead pushing back the launch of the light rail system until next spring at the earliest. La Presse credits unnamed sources with the update, saying REM owner CDPQ Infra will officially announce the news on October 21.

The company must publicly share any opening delays with other public transit organizations within 30 days of the decision being made.

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Some commuters will have to wait a bit longer to board the city's new automated light-rail line. Three segments of Montreal's REM (Réseau express métropolitain), from downtown to the North Shore and West Island, now aren't projected to open until the end of 2024.

That's a postponement for the central (from Gare Centrale to the borough of Saint-Laurent) and West Island segments, which were supposed to open in fall 2023 and spring 2024, respectively. The previous schedule already put the opening of the line to Deux-Montagnes on the North Shore in fall 2024.

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The REM de l'Est, a planned 32-kilometre light-rail network connecting the East End, Montréal-Nord and downtown, has been delayed as the company behind the project, CDPQ Infra, postpones a critical environmental review process.

Consultations through the Bureau d'audiences publiques sur l'environnement (BAPE), which CDPQ Infra had outlined as a final step before the beginning of construction, were initially planned for sometime this year.

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We finally know how the announcer's voice on the REM (Réseau express métropolitain) will sound — and apparently, it's someone relatively famous.

Greater Montreal's impending light rail transit network put the voice of its future announcer to a public vote, which closed in August.

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