Tuesday, April 30, 2024

The Lachine Canal comes back to life

Stories in brick and steel
Montreal, QC
September 2023
This photo originally shared on Instagram


It’s been decades since I lived in Montreal and cycled alongside the Lachine Canal.

As I was commuting to work, I didn’t have the opportunity to take in the history of this place, to appreciate the century-plus of history oozing from giant relics of a vanished industrial era.

Yet as I silently cruised between water and crumbling brick, I wished for a renaissance, that one day I’d return here and the area would be home to a new generation. I hoped future cyclists would have more reasons to stop - and fewer reasons to fear the rusty neglect that had come to define this place.

When we visited last year, I was able to walk around the once-abandoned factories, now lovingly rebuilt as homes and offices. Cyclists still whizzed past as they moved from here to there, but now there was a reason - ample reasons, actually - for many of them to stop along the way and lay down some roots.

For much of my life, this had been a city that bulldozed its history in the misguided pursuit of progress and future. What we ended up with was anything but, and I always worried the canal zone would similarly fall victim to this shortsighted urban planning narrative.

Thankfully in my absence, at least a few lessons seem to have been learned. I’ll have to bring my bike along when we next return. I’ll have a whole lot of reasons to slow down and enjoy the ride.

#montreal #quebec #yul #throwback #lachine #canal #architecture #architecturephotography #buildingporn #architectureporn #urban #downtown #city #history #brick #photography #canon #canonphotography #canon_photography

Related:
DQ me, November 2008

No comments: