
Place Viger, circa. 1900

Place Viger in 2006
'Place Viger' was both a grand hotel and railway station in
Montreal,
Quebec,
Canada, constructed in
1898 and named after
Jacques Viger, Montreal's first mayor. Although combined stations and hotels were common in the
United Kingdom in the late 19th century, the concept was unique to Canada.
Place Viger was designed by
Bruce Price for the
Canadian Pacific Railway, and was built near what was then the central core of Montreal, in proximity to the
financial district, the
city hall, the port and the court house. The mayor of Montreal,
Raymond Préfontaine, strongly encouraged its construction in an area central to the
French Canadian élites, in contrast to the rival
Windsor Hotel to the west, which was perceived to cater to the city's
anglophone classes.
Constructed in the
château-style common to
Canada's railway hotels, Place Viger housed the railway station in its lower levels and a luxurious hotel on the upper floors. Place Viger enjoyed an enviable setting among the Viger Gardens, allowing both railway travellers and hotel guests to stroll along the garden paths.
The shifting of Montreal's commercial core to the north-west, and the onset of the
economic depression of the 1930s, proved disastrous for Place Viger. The hotel closed in 1935. In 1951, the railway station was also closed, and the building was sold to the City of Montreal. The interiors were gutted and transformed to non-descript office space, and the building was renamed ''Édifice Jacques-Viger''. Much of the Viger Gardens was destroyed in the 1970s to allow for the construction of the
''Autoroute Ville-Marie'' highway, and the remainder of the gardens was transformed into a little-travelled public square (named "Viger Square"), with much-criticized concrete landscaping by artist
Charles Daudelin. For decades, Place Viger sat isolated and neglected, a striking historic building surrounded by concrete and a highway.
In 2003, the ''Commission scolaire de Montréal'', the City of Montreal and the Quebec provincial government announced that Place Viger would house a new ''École des métiers du tourisme'' (a school of tourism). In 2004, the
Borough of Ville-Marie announced that it would restore what remains of the nearby public gardens, by replacing much of the concrete in Viger Square with trees, paths and other soft landscaping.
References
★ Chisholm, Barbara, ed., ''Castles of the North: Canada's Grand Hotels'', Toronto: Lynx Images, 2001. (ISBN 1-894073-14-2)
★ Gournay, Isabelle and Vanlaethem, France, eds., ''Montreal Metropolis: 1880-1930'', Montreal: Canadian Centre for Architecture, 1998. (ISBN 0-7737-5974-3)
External links
★
Commission scolaire de Montréal - Le château du tourisme (in French)