Montreal
City Informations!
Population: 3.4 million
Area:
61 sq. miles
Time:
Eastern Standard Time (When it is 12:00 Noon in New
York City; it is 12:00 Noon in Montreal.
When
to Go
Summer
and fall are popular because of the mild weather and
a number of festivals: the 10-day Festival International
de Jazz in late June, the International Fireworks
Competition in late June and July, and the World Film
Festival and Just for Laughs Comedy Festival in August.
For winter sports enthusiasts, December – March
are the months of choice. Fierce weather is never
a problem in Montreal – visitors can always
retreat to the pleasant year-round climate of the
Underground City! Montreal is beautiful at any time
of the year.
Holidays
New
Year's Day, (January 1)
Good
Friday, Easter Monday,
Victoria
Day (third Monday in May)
St.
Jean Baptiste Day (June 24) is a provincial holiday.
Canada
Day (July 1)
Labour
Day (first Monday in September)
Thanksgiving
(second Monday in October)
Remembrance
Day (November 11)
Christmas,
and Boxing Day (December 25, December 26)
Banks & Offices
Most
banks in Canada are open Monday through Thursday 10-3
and Friday 10-5 or 6. Some banks are open longer hours
and also on Saturday morning. All banks are closed
on national holidays. Banks, shopping malls, many
large hotels, and some gas stations have automated
teller machines (ATMs) that are accessible around
the clock.
Museums & Sights
Hours at museums vary, but most open at 10 or 11 and
close in the evening. Some smaller museums close for
lunch. Many museums are closed on Monday; some make
up for it by staying open late on Wednesday, often
waiving admission.
Churches
are usually closed and locked (to prevent vandalism)
except during scheduled religious services The Basilique
Notre-Dame-de-Montréal, however, is open daily,
usually from 9-6.
Customs
& Duties
Arriving
in Canada
For
information, contact: Revenue Canada (2265 St. Laurent
Blvd. S, Ottawa, ON K1G 4K3, 204/983-3500; 800/461-9999
in Canada).
Emergencies
Ambulance,
fire, police ( 911).
Hospital
Emergency Rooms
Montréal
General Hospital (1650 av. Cedar, 514/937-6011).
Late-Night
Pharmacies
Many
pharmacies are open until midnight, including Jean
Coutu and Pharmaprix. Some are open around the clock,
including the Pharmaprix on chemin de la Côte-des-Neiges.
Guided
Tours
Boat
Tours
From
May through October, Amphi Tour ( 514/849-5181 or
514/386-1298) offers a unique one-hour tour of Vieux-Montréal
and the Vieux-Port on both land and water in an amphibious
bus.
Bateau-Mouche
( 514/849-9952) runs four harbor excursions and an
evening supper cruise daily May through October. The
boats are reminiscent of the ones that cruise the
canals of the Netherlands : wide-beamed and low-slung,
with a glassed-in passenger deck. Boats leave from
the Jacques Cartier Pier at the foot of Place Jacques-Cartier
in the Vieux-Port.
Bus
Tours
Gray
Line ( 514/934-1222) offers almost a dozen different
tours of Montréal and environs from May through
October, fewer the rest of the year. It has pickup
service at the major hotels and at Info-Touriste (1001
Sq. Dorchester).
The
double-decker buses of Imperial Tours ( 514/871-4733)
follow a nine-stop circuit of the city. You can get
off and on as often as you like and stay at each stop
as long as you like. There's pickup service at major
hotels.
Language
Although
Canada has two official languages : English and French
: the province of Québec has only one. French
is the language you hear most often on the streets
in Québec; it is also the language of government,
businesses, and schools. Most French Canadians speak
English as well, but it is useful to learn a few French
phrases before you go. Canadian French has many distinctive
words and expressions.
Money
ATMs
ATMs
are widely available.
Currency
The
units of currency in Canada are the Canadian dollar
and the cent, in almost the same denominations as
U.S. currency ($5, $10, $20, 1¢, 5¢, 10¢,
25¢, etc.). The $1 and $2 bill are no longer
used; they have been replaced by $1 and $2 coins (known
as a "loonie" because of the picture of
a loon that appears on the coin, and a "toonie,"
respectively).
Taxes
A
goods and services tax (GST) of 7% applies on virtually
every transaction in Canada except for the purchase
of basic groceries.
A
$15 airport tax (for capital improvements) is charged
when you leave. You can pay cash or with a credit
card.
You
can get a refund of the GST paid on purchases taken
out of the country and on short-term accommodations
of less than one month, and more than two days.Rebate
forms, are available from the Canada Customs and Revenue
Agency (Visitor Rebate Program, Summerside Tax Centre,
275 Pope Rd., Suite 104, Summerside, PE C1N 6C6, 902/432-5608;
800/668-4748 in Canada, www.ccra-adrc.gc.ca). (Be
sure to use the official government form. Private
firms distribute “official looking” forms,
obtain the refund from the government on your behalf,
and charge a commission for the service. The government
charges no fees. )
Always
save the original receipts from stores and hotels
(not just credit-card receipts), and be sure the name
and address of the establishment is shown on the receipt.
Original receipts are not returned. To be eligible
for a refund, receipts must total at least $200, and
each individual receipt must show a minimum purchase
of $50.
Telephones
The
country code for Canada is 1. The area code for Montréal
is 514. You do not need to dial the three-digit area
code when making a call from within the same code.
Arriving & Departing
By
Air
Dorval
International Airport (YUL) (975 blvd. René-Vachon,
Dorval, 514/394-7377), 221/2 km (14 mi) west of the
city, handles all scheduled foreign and domestic flights
and some charter operations.
Mirabel
International Airport (YMX) (12600 rue Aérogare,
Mirabel, 514/394-7377), 541/2 km (34 mi) northwest
of the city, serves most charter traffic.
Passengers
departing Montréal must pay a $15 airport-improvement
fee before they can board their plane.
Flying
time to Montréal is 11/2 hours from New York,
2 hours from Chicago, 6 hours from Los Angeles, and
61/2 hours from London.
Transfers
Between the Airport and Town
By
Bus
L'Aerobus
( 514/931-9002) offers shuttle service into town from
Mirabel and Dorval. Shuttle service from Mirabel to
the terminal next to the Gare Centrale (777 rue de
la Gauchetière) is frequent
By
Bus
Greyhound
Canada ( 800/661-8747) has service from Toronto and
points west in Canada.
All
buses arrive at and depart from the city's downtown
bus terminal, the Station Central d'Autobus Montréal
(505 blvd. de Maisonneuve Est, 514/842-2281), which
connects with the Berri-UQAM Métro station.
By
Car
Montréal
is accessible from the rest of Canada via the Trans-Canada
Highway (Highway 1), which enters the city from the
east and west via Routes 20 and 40. The New York State
Thruway (I-87) becomes Route 15 at the Canadian border,
and then it's 47 km (29 mi) to the outskirts of Montréal.
U.S. I-89, from New Hampshire and Vermont, becomes
Route 133 at the border, eventually joining Route
10 to reach Montréal. I-91, from Connecticut,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont, becomes
Route 55 at the border and also joins up with Route10.
By
Train
The
Gare Centrale, on rue de la Gauchetière between
rues University and Mansfield (behind Le Reine Elizabeth),
is the rail terminus for all trains from the United
States and from other Canadian provinces. It is connected
underground to the Bonaventure Métro station.
Amtrak
( 800/872-7245) Adirondack leaves New York's Penn
Station every morning for the 101/2-hour trip through
scenic upstate New York to Montréal. The Vermonter,
which travels between Washington, D.C., and St. Alban's,
Vermont, is also connected with Montréal, via
a through bus connection provided by Amtrak.
VIA
Rail ( 514/989-2626; 888/842-7245; 800/361-5390 in
Québec) connects Montréal with all the
major cities of Canada, including Québec City,
Halifax, Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, Edmonton, and
Vancouver.
By
Bus
Société
de Transport de Montréal ( 514/288-6287), (STM),
administers the buses as well as the Métro,
so the same tickets and transfers (free) are valid
on either service.
By
Car
Car
Rentals
Rental
cars are readily available in Montreal.
Insurance.
For
insurance information, contact Insurance Bureau of
Canada ( 416/362-9528; 800/387-2880 in Canada, www.ibc.ca).
Gasoline
Gasoline
is always sold in liters (a gallon=3.8 liters). Lead-free
is called sans plomb.
Rules
of the Road
Road
signs are in French in Québec. The speed limit
is posted in kilometers; on highways the limit is
100 kph (about 62 mph), and the use of radar-detection
devices is prohibited : possession of such a device
in a car, even if it is not in operation, is illegal
in Québec.
Québec
law forbids you to turn right on a red light.
By
Subway
The
Métro, or subway, is clean, quiet, and safe
and it's heated in winter and cooled in summer. The
Métro is also connected to the 18 miles of
the Underground City. Each of the 65 stops has been
individually designed and decorated. Free maps may
be obtained at Métro ticket booths.
By
Taxi
Taxis
in Montréal all run on the same rate.
Neighborhoods
Montreal is laid out in a grid pattern and defined
by neighborhoods and districts.
Downtown: This area displays the
most striking elements of the dramatic Montréal
skyline and contains the main railroad station, as
well as most of the city's luxury and first-class
hotels, principal museums, corporate headquarters,
and largest department stores .It is loosely bounded
by rue Sherbrooke to the north, boulevard René-Lévesque
to the south, boulevard St-Laurent to the east, and
rue Drummond to the west,
Downtown Montréal incorporates the neighborhood
formerly known as "The Golden Square Mile,"
which once held dozens of mansions erected by the
wealthy Scottish and English merchants and industrialists
who dominated the city's politics and social life
well into the 20th century. Many were torn down and
replaced by skyscrapers after World War II. At the
northern edge of the downtown area is the urban campus
of prestigious McGill University.
Rue Crescent
One
of Montréal's major dining and nightlife districts
lies just west of western shadow of the downtown skyscrapers.
It holds hundreds of restaurants, bars, and clubs
of all styles between Sherbrooke and René-Lévesque,
The party atmosphere is ongoing every evening, especially
in warm weather, as the sidewalk cafes and balconies
fill with revelers.
St.-Denis
Rue
St-Denis, from rue Ste-Catherine Est to avenue du
Mont-Royal, from the Latin Quarter downtown and continuing
north into the Plateau Mont-Royal district is the
entertainment center. Cafes, bistros, offbeat shops,
and lively nightspots make this area what boulevard
St-Germain is to Paris.
Boulevard St-Laurent
Métro
St-Laurent and up Blvd. St-Laurent,
In
the 1880s the first of many waves of Jewish immigrants
escaping pogroms in Eastern Europe arrived. They called
the street the Main, as in "Main Street."
The Jews were followed by Greeks, Eastern Europeans,
Portuguese, and Latin Americans. The 10 blocks north
of rue Sherbrooke are filled with boutiques, restaurants,
and galleries.
Chinatown
The
Chinese first came to Montréal in large numbers
after the transcontinental railroad was completed
in 1880. They settled in an 18-block area between
boulevard René-Lévesque and avenue Viger
to the north and south, and near rues Hôtel
de Ville and de Bleury on the west and east, an area
now full of mainly Chinese and Southeast Asian restaurants
and shops.
Quartier Latin
The
Université de Montréal was established
here in 1893, and the students and academics called
it the Latin Quarter. The university later moved to
a larger campus. The area declined, but revived in
the 1970s, after the opening of the Université
du Québec à Montréal and the
start of the Annual International Jazz Festival.
Vieux-Montréal
Home
to the first European settlers, for almost three centuries
this was the financial and political heart of the
city. Government buildings, office buildings and warehouses,
the largest church, the stock exchange, and the port
were here. Vieux-Montréal (Old Montréal),
was revitalized over the past 40 years.
Today
it is a center of cultural life and municipal government.
Most of the summer activities revolve around Place
Jacques-Cartier, which becomes a pedestrian mall with
street performers and outdoor cafés, and the
Vieux-Port, one of the city's most popular recreation
spots.
Place Jacques-Cartier
This
two-block-long square at the heart of Vieux-Montréal
opened in 1804 as a municipal market; during the summer
it becomes a flower market. Rue St. Amable, a one-block
lane southwest of Place Jacques-Cartier, is a marketplace
for artists and craftspeople. The fashionable Rue
St-Paul runs north-south through Place Jacques-Cartier.
The Underground City
During
Montréal's long winters, life slows on the
streets of downtown. People move down escalators and
stairways into la ville souterraine. In the controlled
climate, there is no worry of disruption of activities
by the outdoor elements, It is possible to arrive
at the railroad station, check into a hotel, go out
for lunch at any of hundreds of fast-food counters
and full-service restaurants, see a movie, attend
a concert, conduct business, go shopping, and even
take a swim-all without a thought for the weather!
There
are now more than 1,600 shops, 40 banks, 200 restaurants,
10 Métro stations, and about 30 cinemas within
easy reach of one another, and with no traffic snarls.
The Village
The
city's gay and lesbian enclave, one of North America's
largest, runs east along rue Ste-Catherine from rue
St-Hubert to rue Papineau. This small but vibrant
district, is filled with clothing stores, antique
shops, bars, dance clubs, cafés, and the Gay
and Lesbian Community Centre, at 1301 rue Ste-Catherine
Est. A rainbow marks the Beaudry Métro station,
in the heart of the neighborhood. Two major annual
celebrations are the Diver/Cité in August and
the Black & Blue Party in October.
Ile
Ste-Helene
St.
Helen's Island in the St. Lawrence River was altered
extensively to become the site of Expo '67, Montréal's
very successful world's fair. In the 4 years before
the Expo opened, construction crews reshaped the island
and doubled its surface area with landfill, then went
on to create beside it an island that hadn't existed
before, Ile Notre-Dame. The city built bridges and
83 pavilions. When Expo closed, the city government
preserved the site and a few of the exhibition buildings.
Parts were used for the 1976 Olympics, and today the
island is home to Montréal's popular casino
and an amusement park, La Ronde