Category Archives: Photo Essay

Diary of a Neighbourhood: a literary work by Michael Toppings

Howdy!

Sorry Miriam, Diary of a Neighbourhood has got to be one of the worst pieces of public/community art I have ever seen in a long time, if not my entire life. I’m addressing Miriam Ginestier, head of Studio 303 and one of the partners in Michael Toppings project called Diary of a Neighbourhood because I really like her and her organization what they do and how they try to do it. But in this case not one bit, so I want to make extremely clear and 100% sure that she understands that this isn’t personal. Now that I got that out of the way, let me backtrack slightly so that the rest of you (all 10 of you) understand as well.

Yesterday, I was walking down Jeanne Mance, when as I crossed Léo-Pariseau and went to take a picture of MAI, I noticed that there was some writing in their windows. I vaguely remembered having seen writing (standard issue plastic stenciled lettering) in some some the other windows in some of the apartments facing MAI. Now normally, I am a big fan of this type of community-building public art. Bringing art to the masses, one for art – art for all, that sort of thing, but this just fails on so many different levels, that it shows how removed from the actual art made the decision makers and signers of checks are, and it is unfortunate, if not really really sad that CALQ gave Mr. Topping $20K to pull this off (the Canada Council also gave a significant chunk of change, but their database stops at 2010, so I have no idea how much he got – and then upon looking a little further it appears as if he got some cash from someone named Margaret Rind, the city and possibly the Cirque du Soleil as well).

If you want the CliffsNotes version of why Diary of a Neighbourhood sucks the big one, aka is really horrible or is just bad art, I have five words for you: unoriginal and impossible to view. Then to make matters worse not only is it unoriginal and impossible to view, but had Mr. Topping had even a moment to pause and reflect, instead of just slapping some letters up on some windows and then wrapping everything in multisyllabic nonsense designed to confuse bureaucrats and take advantage of the fact that he is an English Canadian in Quebec, he actually could have pulled off something cool, interesting, effective and useful. Pity.

Let’s start with the accusation of unoriginality first. Mr. Toppings’ piece is on Jeanne Mance in between Léo-Pariseau and Prince Arthur, for the most part on the east side of the street. If you were to walk two blocks west over to Hutchison, in between Prince Arthur and Pine you’d see some lines of personal poetry, this time engraved in stone, on the facades of some houses on the east side of the street. Back in 1988, Gilbert Boyer, a Quebecois poet decided that he wanted to write poetry on the sides of houses. (Actually come to think of it, there are lots of examples of officially sanctioned public poetry on the side of apartments.) But before I get hopelessly confused in my own parenthetical statements, M. Boyer decided to break up the lines of his poems onto different buildings, one can still be seen on the facade of 3703 Hutchison. yes, his was only two lines on Hutchison and the rest elsewhere around the city. But it’s close enough both by geography, theoretically and aesthetically that Mr. Topping should be somewhat embarrassed. Art, if anything is supposed to be original.

Now that we got that out of the way, let me explain why it’s unreadable,  and that’s simple enough. For some strange reason Mr. Topping decided to use windows that were on the third and fourth floors along with some lower level windows that were obscured by foliage.

Diary of a Neighbourhood: a literary work by Michael Toppings
Diary of a Neighbourhood: a literary work by Michael Toppings
Diary of a Neighbourhood: a literary work by Michael Toppings
Diary of a Neighbourhood: a literary work by Michael Toppings

Plus, I strongly doubt that in the time that MAI has been around there have been more than two dozen people who have walked along Jeanne Mance and looked up at their windows. So while technically it may be possible to see what’s written on their windows, for all intents and purposes no one is going to.

Diary of a Neighbourhood: a literary work by Michael Toppings
Diary of a Neighbourhood: a literary work by Michael Toppings

By using the MAI windows, Mr. Topping also sends a mixed message, because they use the exact same type of signage to publicize the events that they organize, it muddles whatever message Mr. Topping is trying to send. Is a list of visual art exhibits and plays part of the artistic intervention? Or not? I don’t know. You tell me.

Diary of a Neighbourhood: a literary work by Michael Toppings
Diary of a Neighbourhood: a literary work by Michael Toppings

Then, again while I realize that technically a neighborhood can and does include the people who work there. Practically, it means the people who interact with each other in some kind of loosely (or tightly) defined geographic area. So the people working in a neighborhood would be for the most part the store clerks, cashiers, bus drivers, waiters, etc. Faceless bureaucrats working in a low-rise office building (even if it for the most part only has artistic organizations as tenants) really don’t do much to a neighborhood. They show up at about 10 o’clock in the morning, work in their cubicles, eat lunch in the food court or park nearby depending on the weather and how much their salary is, then leave and go home at about 6 o’clock, to their own neighborhoods. Yes, there might be some people who work at 3680 Jeanne-Mance who walk to work. But the vast majority of the couple of hundred or so people who work there drive, bike or take the 80/435 to get to work and as a consequence are minimally part of the neighborhood around Jeanne Mance and Léo-Pariseau. The lines written in the windows of MAI imply a completely different type of story than those on the windows of a house.

Nor do I understand why the church at the corner of Prince Arthur that was turned into condos was not included. Aren’t the people living there as much a part of the neighborhood as the people on the east side of the street?

Diary of a Neighbourhood: a literary work by Michael Toppings
Diary of a Neighbourhood: a literary work by Michael Toppings

The, don’t even get me started on the voyeuristic nature of this project. In order to read it you have to stare directly into people’s living rooms and bedrooms.

Apparently, there were some events happening as part of this intervention. Unfortunately, I wasn’t aware of them until way too late, so I was unable to participate, but it strikes me that these would be events that were fairly insular in nature and designed and organized around the people already participating instead of being more open inviting and inclusive. There was nothing on the street explaining to the outsider what was happening or why. Given the very strong negative values associated with being a voyeur and/or inquiring into things that are obviously not your business, I’d be hard pressed to believe that anyone besides the aforementioned people in the neighborhood and the people involved in the project took part in any of the events. And as there are over 40 people (not including “all those volunteers making up the mob scene”) mentioned by name on Mr. Toppings website in the credits, and I counted over 60 separate entrances to apartments I would hope that in his reports to the various funding agencies that he got at least 1,000 people to participate in his 21 separate events. While 1,000 sounds like a lot of folk, that’s actually less than 50 per event. With 60 apartments and 40 people involved, that’s a very low threshold to cross.

To me this is a perfect example of what I would call Grant Art. It involves what the grant officer would presume were not regular grant recipients. There were two well established arts organizations willing to help. It was multicultural. Sounds way more complicated than it is. Used large multisyllabic words. And is forgotten as soon as it is over.

Then, to get very specific (I was scanning Mr. Topping’s description of the project, while writing that last paragraph) if Diary of a Neighbourhood is truly “a self-penned literary work.” Then what exactly are the “quotations from a large pool of disparate sources – David Wojnarowicz, Hart Crane, WU LYF, Nietzche, Jeanette Winterson?” Is he implicating himself as a plagarist? And I’m not quite certain what he means when he writes “With the actual neighbourhood as stage, performers infiltrate by assuming the role of resident, rendering portrayals of the everyday and the banal alongside deconstructions and gender inversions of film and theatre classics such as Network and A Streetcar Named Desire.” He self-penned it (whatever that means) then has quotations included, and during the events he’s going to have one person yell out their window

And another one yell

Gimme a break! But as long as I am discussing the content, I might as well add that what bits I was able to read were not compelling in any way, shape or form. It appeared to me as more of “ain’t I cool, that I can everyone (or almost everyone) to do this.” Thank any real literary work. I realize that there is such a category as Experimental Fiction, but until I see otherwise Mr. Topping can’t hold a candle to what Robert Coover, Gail Scott or Georges Perec write. Add to that, the fact that easily a third to half of the entire project is physically unreadable and I just guess that in practice the actual content of this “literary work” was secondary, if not tertiary to whatever the main objectives really were.

Personally, if I had $50,000 (what I guess he raised from the various sources) and really wanted to do “a community-based initiative, implicating the residents of one street in one Montréal neighbourhood. Envisioned as a trans-disciplinary project… [encompassing] public art, print art, installation, street theatre and performance but remains, in essence, a literary work.” I would have thrown a street party to end all street parties, and then simply asked everyone who participated to write down their thoughts and impressions. I would have then published everything and given each participant a copy of the book. But then, maybe that’s why I don’t apply for grants.

Oh, and one last thing. I might be blind, but while I was looking at and taking pictures of the various texts on the windows, while I did see text in French, English, Spanish, Arabic, and Chinese, I did not see the Braille.

An Abécédaire of Montreal Apartment Buildings (almost)

Howdy!

The Abbey on Sherbrooke W
The Abbey on Sherbrooke W
La Baronnie on Lincoln
La Baronnie on Lincoln
Le Cardinal on Ellendale
Le Cardinal on Ellendale
La Tour D'Auteuil on de Maisonneuve W
La Tour D'Auteuil on de Maisonneuve W
Ellendale Apartments on Ellendale
Ellendale Apartments on Ellendale
La Fayette on de Maisonneuve W
La Fayette on de Maisonneuve W
Grazia on Sherbrooke W
Grazia on Sherbrooke W

Anyone know any buildings with names beginning with an H or an I in Montreal?

The Jurihome on Saint Hubert
The Jurihome on Saint Hubert

Anyone know any buildings with names beginning with a K in Montreal?

The Lambert Apartments on Lambert Closse
The Lambert Apartments on Lambert Closse
Le Majestic on Sherbrooke W
Le Majestic on Sherbrooke W
No 1 Wood on Wood
No 1 Wood on Wood
Oliver House West on Olivier
Oliver House West on Olivier
Le Pierce on de Maisonneuve W
Le Pierce on de Maisonneuve W

Anyone know any buildings with names beginning with a Q in Montreal?

Le Rigaud on Sherbrooke E
Le Rigaud on Sherbrooke E
Le Saguenay on Sherbrooke E
Le Saguenay on Sherbrooke E
La Tadoussac on Sherbrooke E
La Tadoussac on Sherbrooke E

Anyone know any buildings with names beginning with a U in Montreal?

The Viceroy on de Maisonneuve W
The Viceroy on de Maisonneuve W
The Warwick on Clarke
The Warwick on Clarke

Anyone know any buildings with names beginning with an X, Y or Z in Montreal?

Résidence Le Rigaud

Howdy!

One of my favorite buildings in town. Built in 1976, I’d love to know who the architect was, because whatever he was smoking at the time was some powerful stuff.

Slant-end ventilation
Slant-end ventilation
The Penthouse
The Penthouse
Résidence Le Rigaud
Résidence Le Rigaud
Slant-end ventilation (in spring)
Slant-end ventilation (in spring)
Résidence Le Rigaud
Résidence Le Rigaud
Slant-end windows covered with landscaping
Slant-end windows covered with landscaping
Slant-end windows covered with landscaping
Slant-end windows covered with landscaping
Résidence Le Rigaud
Résidence Le Rigaud
Résidence Le Rigaud
Résidence Le Rigaud

Elevators in Montreal

Howdy!

Elevators are extremely difficult to photograph. I think I need to get a special lens.

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

Unfortunately, I didn’t keep any notes when taking the pictures.

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

So while I have some vague memories of where these are, I’m not 100% certain

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

100% of the time, and as a consequence prefer to leave them all unidentified

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

Instead of identifying some of them, and not identifying others.

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

After these, which are just a tiny, tiny selection of elevators in Montreal

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

I might have to start taking pictures of escalators that are not in the metro.

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

There are probably fewer escalators than elevators by a factor of at least 10, if not 100.

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

Which would mean, theoretically, that I might be able to get snapshots of all the escalators in town.

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

That all being said, I could also try to find a very wide angle lens

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

And use some website like this

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

Combined with a spreadsheet

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

To actually enable me to photograph all the elevators in town in an organized fashion.

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

But somehow, I don’t think that beyond the concept of paying attention to things that we normally don’t pay attention to

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

That there would be any real demand, desire or interest in compiling a pictorial database of the Elevators in Montreal.

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

That all being said, are there any quote, cool or interesting, unquote elevators that you think are particularly noteworthy?

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

201 Notre Dame O would have been a good one to catch before it was turned into “luxurious living spaces.”

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

And are there any express elevators in town?

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

And if I were to do this seriously I probably should also snap pictures of the panel

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

And the plate to identify the manufacturer.

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

it sounds like an awful lot of work.

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

Let’s see if I get the wide angle lens first.

An elevator in Montreal
An elevator in Montreal

And then we’ll see what happens.

Jackie Robinson Statue at the Olympic Stadium

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There is no more forlorn statue in Montreal than the Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium.

Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium

Moved there in 1996. It now hangs out with skateboarders in a place that has no baseball.

Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium

Smaller than life size, it was initially designed for a miniature baseball field where Delormier Downs was.

Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium

It was moved to “celebrate” the 50th anniversary of Jackie Robinson playing baseball in Montreal.

Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium

It woudl be very nice if they would return it to the corner of de Lormier and Ontario.

Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium

Jackie Robinson actually wore number 9 when he was playing for the Royals.

Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Jackie Robinson Statue by Jules Lasalle at the Olympic Stadium
Place des Royaux, the former location of Jules Lasalle's stautue of Jackie Robinson, picture by Gates of Ale
Place des Royaux, the former location of Jules Lasalle's stautue of Jackie Robinson, picture by Gates of Ale

Montreal Apartment Building Entrances and Awnings

Howdy!

I don’t know who designed all of these, but I certainly am in awe of either the drugs they took or how they were able to make something so mundane so cool. Apologies in advance, I didn’t write down any addresses.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awnings
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awnings

Why three semi-circles?

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance

Dead-on-balls-accurate art deco with a capital a.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

Some sort of gliders perhaps? And if they’re curved, why so angular?

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

This one is just kind of graceful.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

Telescoping tunnel effect through the vegetation in Westmount.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

A more refined and demure glider effect.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

This one was just so awesome I had to take its picture twice.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

What’s up with the plexiglass bubble?

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

This is just so cute I want to go up and hug  it.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

I think whoever designed it couldn’t make up their mind, and decided to try both styles at the same time.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

Man the way those arches punch through the awning reminds me of some kind of alien space ship or something.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

This one I don’t understand. Saw-tooth?

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance

Another tiny and cute entrance.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

A less threatening saw-tooth.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance

All fine and dandy until you realize that it is on a 45 degree angle to the street.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance

Mirror, mirror. Did the architect only get paid half of what they thought the project was worth?

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

A truncated glider awning, in brown.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance

These next three apartment buildings all are the same on paper, but someone had fun dressing them up so that they look different.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance

The second

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance

And the third.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

Where, why and how they figured out this one I have no idea.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

You’d figure that the lights would be all lined up properly instead of following the ceiling line.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

A two-step awning with two pillars.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

A different two-step awning.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

Anticipating the style in hat brims by some 40 or 50 years.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

A nice sloping dome effect.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

Two-step awning.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

A rare reverse curve.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

OK, maybe not so rare.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Entrance

Bet you dollars to doughnuts this was built in 1967.

Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning
Cool Montreal Apartment Building Awning

Make me think of the hand motions of a very excited eight year-old girl.

Table of Hope

Howdy!

On Tuesday I was invited to go to the Table of Hope. It’s an annual event that raises money for Share the Warmth. This year they raised over $185,000.

The Stage for the cocktails at Table of Hope
The Stage for the cocktails at Table of Hope
The celebrities at the cocktails for the Table of Hope
The celebrities at the cocktails for the Table of Hope
Fancy hats at the cocktails for the Table of Hope
Fancy hats at the cocktails for the Table of Hope
More (large) celebrities at the cocktail for the Table of Hope
More (large) celebrities at the cocktail for the Table of Hope
The goodie bags at the cocktail for the Table of Hope
The goodie bags at the cocktail for the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope
The food at the Table of Hope

Continue reading Table of Hope

Seen on Saint Denis, x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser

Howdy!

Saw this yesterday in thre alleyway that leads to the library, near the corner of Emory. It’s part of the FTA and called x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser and is exactly what it looks like. Obviously this was a dress rehearsal because they are really supposed to perform today at 6:00 pm and then on May 25 at 6:00 pm, May 26 at 3:00 pm and May 27 at 3:00 pm, for an hour each day.

x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques
x-mal Mensch Stuhl by Angie Hiesl and Roland Kaiser at the Festival TransAmériques

Writing on buildings

Howdy!

1629 St Hubert  Montreal, QC H2L 3Z1, Canada
1629 St Hubert Montreal, QC H2L 3Z1, Canada
Place Victor-Morin, in begtween Saint-Antoine and Saint-Louis, west of Bonsecours
Place Victor-Morin, in begtween Saint-Antoine and Saint-Louis, west of Bonsecours
Rue Notre-Dame Ouest & Rue des Seigneurs Montréal, QC H3J 1M6 (I think)
Rue Notre-Dame Ouest & Rue des Seigneurs Montréal, QC H3J 1M6 (I think)

More information here.

Sherbrooke Ouest & Kimberly Montréal, QC H2X 1X5, Canada
Sherbrooke Ouest & Kimberly Montréal, QC H2X 1X5, Canada
3465 Rue Durocher Montréal, QC H2X 2E7, Canada
3465 Rue Durocher Montréal, QC H2X 2E7, Canada
1155 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montréal, QC H3A 2N3, Canada
1155 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montréal, QC H3A 2N3, Canada
1339 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest Montréal, QC H3G 1G2,
1339 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest Montréal, QC H3G 1G2,
1379 Sherbrooke Street West Montreal (Quebec), H3G 1J5
1379 Sherbrooke Street West Montreal (Quebec), H3G 1J5
1379 Sherbrooke Street West Montreal (Quebec), H3G 1J5
1379 Sherbrooke Street West Montreal (Quebec), H3G 1J5
3415 Redpath Rue, Montréal, QC H3G 2G2
3415 Redpath Rue, Montréal, QC H3G 2G2
2295 rue Saint-Marc Montréal Qc H3H 2G9
2295 rue Saint-Marc Montréal Qc H3H 2G9
4100, rue Sherbrooke O, Westmount, QC H3Z 1A5
4100, rue Sherbrooke O, Westmount, QC H3Z 1A5
4890 Boulevard Saint-Laurent  Montreal, QC H2T 1R5
4890 Boulevard Saint-Laurent Montreal, QC H2T 1R5
5145 Boul. St-Laurent Montréal, QC H2T 1R9
5145 Boul. St-Laurent Montréal, QC H2T 1R9

A bit of ridiculousness on Saint Hubert

Howdy!

I’m certain you know all about the Îlot Voyageur fiasco. Well what I just discovered is that some bright wag at city hall has attempted to put lipstick on a pig! They’ve decided to put some large plastic printing on the side of the unfinished building in a harebrained scheme to try and make it look like nothing is wrong.

The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.
The camouflage on the back of the Îlot Voyageur.