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 streets

If you've got weekend plans that involve driving through Montreal, you might want to reroute.

The Tour de l'Île and Tour la Nuit are rolling through the city this weekend, and more than 70 street closures are planned between Friday night and Sunday afternoon.

Keep readingShow less

Don't be surprised if you see a bunch of naked cyclists biking through the city soon. Montreal's annual World Naked Bike Ride is set to return for a 20th edition this month as a protest against the over-consumption of oil.

And, yes, participants can use BIXI bikes, as they have in previous years, so long as they cover their seats, a BIXI spokesperson told MTL Blog.

Keep readingShow less

Whether you refer to yourself as a cyclist or a biker, have your own bicycle or ride a BIXI, prefer e-bikes or keep it classic, 'tis the season to hop on a two-wheel pedal-powered vehicle and cruise the streets of Montreal — ideally taking advantage of the city's many pathways.

However, while there are numerous benefits to cycling — from skipping traffic to exercising to environmental sustainability — it can also be dangerous. Between 2021 and 2022, the Canadian Institute for Health Information reported 1,183 cases of injured cyclists being hospitalized in Quebec, and just as recently as this month, a cyclist was seriously injured after colliding with a car in the Plateau Mont-Royal.

Keep readingShow less

Montreal's biggest bike festival is back, and it could wreak havoc on your weekend plans if you’re driving. Tour la Nuit will shut down major streets on Friday, May 31, turning parts of the city into a cyclist’s playground from 8:00 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Then, Tour de l’Île will follow on Sunday, June 2, extending the road closures and detours into the weekend.

Jeanne-Mance Park will be the starting and finishing point for both events. Tour la Nuit will see cyclists weaving through Plateau Mont-Royal, Ville-Marie, and Sud-Ouest, leading to street closures on:

Keep readingShow less

It's no secret that Montreal is notorious for a few things. Sure, we've got bagels, poutine and Montreal-style smoked meat, but the Island is also known for its non-stop construction and poor road conditions.

For anyone who lives here, avoiding potholes is essentially an Olympic sport many of us have mastered. For those visiting, chances are your car has dipped into a deep hole at some point while driving, which was likely followed by a few not-so-nice words. But that's simply the Montreal experience. Non?

Keep readingShow less

As Montrealers, we don't need anyone (not a ranking nor an expert nor a tourist) to tell us how bad our roads are. Trust us — we already know.

For drivers in this city, the question isn't if our roads are awful, but rather, "Which ones are the most awful?"

Keep readingShow less

In case you weren't sure that spring is here and summer's on its way, behold the tell-tale signs: flowers are in bloom, festival season has begun and Montreal streets are starting to become pedestrian-only.

While 11 streets, totalling 9.4 kilometres, are set to be pedestrianized this summer, a few are already car-free, ready for you to enjoy on foot without having to worry about noise pollution, tailpipe fumes or getting injured.

Keep readingShow less

Montrealers can look forward to strolling along 11 pedestrian streets this summer, without having to worry about the dangers and annoyances that cars can bring. Goodbye, noise pollution and tailpipe fumes!

In a press release published on Tuesday, the City of Montreal announced that 9.4 kilometres of streets would be reserved for pedestrians in 2024, "allowing residents and visitors to enjoy local businesses and cultural programming in seven boroughs."

Keep readingShow less

A Montreal street once known for its array of '80s-style prom dress shops, freaky mannequins and dilapidated buildings — which even a seemingly endless supply of dollar stores couldn't fill — has risen from the ashes to be named among the coolest streets in the world in 2024.

Following a $50-million cash injection from the city and two years of construction ending in 2020, Plaza Saint-Hubert has made Time Out Magazine's list of the 30 coolest streets in the world, which it released on March 13.

The 2-kilometre strip, the heart of which is bordered by rue de Bellechasse and rue Jean-Talon, has become an eclectic mix of its past charm. You'll still find sparkly wedding dresses, exotic dancewear and Le Roi du Smoked Meat but now they're intermingling with modern wine bars and trendy boutiques.

The strip's 400 businesses now sit alongside widened cobblestone sidewalks, new street furniture and a fresh awning in place of the iconic green-trimmed glass one — protecting pedestrians from rain and snow.

Time Out contributor Isa Tousignant, who referred to Plaza Saint-Hubert as a "Latin enclave and hipster hotspot," recommends taking a walk between contemporary gallery Art Mûr and inventive brunch joint Le Toasteur as well as exploring the area's thrift stores, independent book stores and local streetwear shop Pony before bowling at Quilles G Plus and catching a show at Ausgang Plaza.

In terms of bars and restaurants, she suggests popular Mexican spot Place Juárez, the "pillowy dumplings" at La Maison de Mademoiselle Dumplings, the pizza and clams from Marci and "bol with a side of Texas Ranch Water" from Spaghetti Western. She also praises Montreal Plaza, known for its higher-end creative fare. If you fancy a strong tropical beverage, the kitschy Snowbird Tiki Bar is her top pick.

If all that isn't reason enough to mark Plaza Saint-Hubert as a a cool destination on your list of cool things to do in Montreal, you should also remember to keep an eye out for some exciting developments that are in the works. For instance, the City of Montreal announced that the entire length of the plaza will be blocked off to traffic and transformed into a pedestrian street this summer.

Plaza Saint-Hubert was ranked number 27 on Time Out's list of cool streets. The number one coolest street was High Street in Melbourne, Australia. Other cool streets that made the cut include Commercial Drive in Vancouver, Hollywood Road in Hong Kong, East Eleventh in Austin and Guatemala Street in Buenos Aires.

Keep readingShow less

Old Montreal is going to become more pedestrian-friendly in the coming years, beginning with the pedestrianization of a big chunk of the neighbourhood.

The city announced the plan as part of its goal to achieve carbon neutrality in transportation by 2040.

Keep readingShow less

Montrealers can look forward to more pedestrian streets this summer, as part of a municipal program aimed at boosting foot traffic around restaurants and shops.

The pedestrianization of major streets has become a hallmark of Montreal summers, drawing thousands of residents and visitors to the city's main thoroughfares every year. Tourisme Montréal predicts that nearly 9.5 million visitors will take advantage of the city's car-free walkways this summer.

Keep readingShow less

Montreal is set to add new reserved bus lanes to parts of four major thoroughfares, adding to its extensive network of public transit corridors. The city already claims to have the most kilometres of bus-only lanes on the continent. The additional lanes will bring Montreal's total to 300 kilometres, facilitating upwards of 20,000 daily trips, officials say.

The new lanes will be on chemin de la Côte-Saint-Luc and rue Sherbrooke Ouest in the borough of Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, rue Provost in the borough of Lachine, and boulevard Saint-Laurent in the boroughs of Ahuntsic-Cartierville and Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension.

Keep readingShow less