Where is montreal quebec canada
Montreal is just one of the best cities in the world. This is is my thirt time visiting, and all I can say is that it is amazing. There are plenty of parcs everywhere, the Parc Mont-Royal is wonderful; there are always so many people there and a great energy,music, food, beers just like on avenue Saint-Laurent and street Saint-Denis. Museums, churches, parcs, the whole lot!
The people are incredibly nice, always willing to help. There are young people everywhere, and the cops are not like in the US much less stricter Restaurants, bars, nigthclubs are all really good. And I have noticed, that the majority of the population was attractive because of all the international people. I am thinking of studying there and the rent is so cheap! Besides this, this city is wonderful! Emma montreal is one of the worst cities in the world like a third world country and unless you live here or spend several years you will have a different opinion.
So if you are a tourist sure you will say it was great and breathtaking and what not! Try living the experience before visiting for a limited time only! On a positive note, what we can always take away from this is even bad experience is part of the experience. Moreover, stop idealizing Montreal or anything, anybody, any city. Take it all in, enjoy all the good things Montreal has to offer, tune out the bad ones?
People here are not so nice. Very hard to make friends. Nice place to look around but over all a very bad place to live.
Rents are very high. Hard to find rental places that take pets in many areas. A real turd world country type of place. So many bad drivers. Courtesy is mostly dead. Hard to get into a hospital. The ongoing politics going no where for the past 40 years is sickening as well as all the corruption, mismanagement and BS. Nice place to visit but living here is limited. The truth. I was there for three weeks at the end of winter, with my family, and found it to be the complete opposite of what Sheri is saying.
I speak very little French and was surprised to find that most people in Montreal are bi-lingual, even if many prefer to speak only French.
Service in restaurants and cafes, and in stores, was friendly and efficient. I walked everywhere and felt safe, even very late at night.
Obviously, like any big city, you need to be aware of your surroundings and not engage in risky behaviour but I never felt any cause for alarm. We visited Montreal lately and found it to be unfriendly and you get the feeling a civil war is about to break out. People are violent and aggressive all nationalities and smash right into you when walking by. The people are really uptight and looking for someone to unload on.
We suggest avoiding congested areas and unsafe areas. We do not consider it to be a safe city at all, The people seem really miserable and depressed and there are a lot of political tensions and animosity between people.
The food in restaurants used to be good, not any more. There are some interesting places to visit and things to do, but we found the city overpriced, including the transit system. Many drivers refuse to speak English so it is hard to get directions.
They must lose passengers like that which means they lose money. The city could be cleaner too. We go by what we see, not by what a guide book or statistics say.
That is heresay, not the real experience. There are better places to visit, and we would not live here. Sounds like bad humour noir. Go to New York City and you could write about positive or negative comments but above and beyond New York is an extraordinary place, so is Montreal. What wrong with those people??!! Wish I could live here!! What city did you visit? We just got back from Montreal and we had the most wonderful experience. The people were warm and friendly at each store and restaurant we visited maybe with the exception of some tourist destinations.
We encountered tons of graffiti and at first, were concerned walking through these neighborhoods. Eventually, we realized that graffiti in Montreal was not necessarily territorial gang markers. The Metro system was amazing. We had to travel from the D. O area about 30 min. Many of them, wonderful. After visiting Montreal, we are now looking to move there. Cheap homes, great transit system, low crime rate, low violent crime, great health care system, low cost of living, wonderful art and food scene… hard not to love this city.
AJ — that is so true. I used to live in SAn Francisco and people used to tell me it is this and that. Same goes for montreal. My Goodness, Sheri! Montreal is such an amazing place and very, very friendly. Perhaps you are from Toronto or perhaps you were simply in a very bad mood for the duration of your visit? From the minute we landed here in Montreal airport as new permanent residents we have come as Skilled Workers we have heard nothing other than Welcome to Canada.
As for racial or other types of tensions, in fact this is far less obvious than other major cities such as London or New York. Yes, recently I have met people who instantly strike up a conversation about the new legislation proposed here in Quebec to ban religions gear like headscarves, turbans, large Christian crosses, etc.
New immigrants are specifically told that they must accept secular regulations and are expected to sign up to a secular system of government. In my experience, this is in sharp contrast to the UK. British people talk about a tolerant, non-racist society, yet UK governments still manage to get involved in wars, following the USA like lap dogs. The UK today, just like colonial, imperial Britain has been complicit in the support of dictatorships as well as the torture and murder of civilians AND they blatantly spy on the public, just like the USA.
On the surface it seems that the UK with its long history of democracy is a benevolent state and that so-called English CHARM and tolerance are something to be admired. Underneath it all, you will find hypocrisy and political and social double-standards wherever you turn. My 9 year old son has a far better, more liberal place to call his home and one day he will be proud to be a Canadian citizen.
No country or state is perfect, but some are more perfect than others! Sheri — I completely agree with you. I have lived in many major cities in Europe as well as in North America; I have never seen anything like Montreal. As you said, people are very aggressive and full of animosity and they are ready to discharge on anybody that looked new to the place. The city is very depressed and some parts are scary and dangerous.
Hard to say, what they want from you — on the streets or mall, they kind of want to smash into you, stalk you closely or make strange sound to make you feel uncomfortable.
Sometimes, you could get away if you keep your mouth shut and if you speak in English esp in public places, you have put yourself in the soup. Always, try to be in a group when you are outside home. I concur with almost all information given here. Even though, I myself, as an Anglophone, have been experiencing difficulties and the challenges exist but I can confidently say that Montreal is a lovely welcoming city to live overall.
As a matter of fact, if you walk down the street, you hear a variety of languages being spoken from passers by. My city, Montreal, is a wonderful, culturally diverse city where many different kinds of people live in harmony..
There is always something fun to do. Then, maybe you will only see the negative in the place…and even invent some negativity in our own head to fit your construct. I am a Filipino. I studied French, I can speak and understand French but not so fluently. With a travel advise, tourists can be informed about security risks during traveling or vacation in a foreign country.
Be informed about the risks of kidnapping, armed robbery, bombings, natural disasters or war. Know which areas are unsafe in Canadao. Be vigilant, or avoid certain areas when on vacation in Canada.
Alerts and advice. Information on travel documents, visa applications and the cost of a visa. Contact information of embassies in Canada. Different types of travel insurance. In downtown stores, shoppers are greeted with a confident BonjourHi , a term which is becoming more and more popular, indicating bilingualism.
Montreal is build around Mont Royal, from where the city received its name. No building in Montreal can be taller than the famous Cross found on Mont Royal! Montreal has an Underground City, which is a series of interconnected tunnels beneath the city that run for over 32km.
The tunnels connect shopping malls, over stores, 7 metro stations,universities, banks, offices, museums, restaurants and so on. Lawrence Iroquoians disappeared as a distinct nation by the late 16th century.
Montreal was a city of the interior, in contrast to Quebec City , which was the administrative capital and the main port where exchanges with France took place. Montreal soon became the great centre of the fur trade. These traders and explorers methodically explored the North American continent from the Gulf of Mexico to the Rockies and established a network of trading posts to secure furs for the Montreal fur trade.
The fur trade relied on the labour of Indigenous peoples and did not provide much employment in Montreal itself. At the end of the 17th century, for example, the city had just over 1, inhabitants. Almost one century later, in , the population had only reached approximately 5, Religious institutions made their presence felt in the life of the community.
For several decades after the British conquest Montreal's economy continued to depend mainly on the fur trade. The fur trade played an important role in establishing Montreal's influence over the interior, but from the end of the 18th century the city's growth depended increasingly on the settlement of the rural hinterland, including the plain outside Montreal and areas in Upper Canada. The large influx of immigrants from the British Isles, which began in , accelerated the settlement process.
In Montreal already had 22, inhabitants, and by the number had grown to 44, A dynamic merchant class involved in the import and export trade replaced the fur-trade magnates.
This group created the Bank of Montreal in and the Committee of Trade in They also invested in maritime shipping and began to invest in railways in Residents of British origin became the majority in the city around due to large-scale immigration. Conflict between French and English residents and struggles for representative government marked the s, and resulted in the Rebellions of The defeat of the Patriotes in the rebellion gave the new anglophone middle class a political victory, and after francophone leaders had no choice but to co-operate with them.
On 25 April , however, English rioters set fire to the parliament building see Montreal Riots. They were angry over legislation that the British government compensate the French for damage done during the Rebellions of see Rebellion Losses Bill. Expansion of the St. The process of industrialization begun around the middle of the 19th century began to alter the city's face completely. After depending for generations on trade and commerce for its livelihood, Montreal was becoming a major industrial centre.
Montreal grew rapidly from to The population increased from 44, in to , in , , including the suburbs. The city proper overflowed its boundaries and quickly reached suburban communities, annexing 23 between and Immigration increased dramatically at the turn of the century, and Montreal became a more ethnically and culturally diverse city. This meant that much western grain was shipped overseas through the port of Montreal, which was considerably enlarged at the beginning of the 20th century.
James Street was the country's financial centre. However, Toronto was a powerful rival, and benefited more in the long run from western settlement and from the growing trade with the United States. By Toronto had taken over Montreal's place as Canada's centre of economic activity, in part because of American industrial capital invested in Ontario.
Montreal experienced another period of growth after the First World War that was based on industry, trade, finance and transportation. In the population of the city and suburbs reached over one million, but the Great Depression brought this period of expansion to a halt and caused great hardship among the population. At the Depression's height in February there were 62, unemployed people in the city, and , receiving government assistance. The city administration went into debt because of huge relief expenses and in the early s was placed under trusteeship by the provincial government.
The Second World War stimulated production and employment and helped restore prosperity to the city. The s and s saw strong growth, especially in the suburbs where many new cities sprang up, as well as in the downtown area. Montreal embarked upon great projects under the leadership of Mayor Jean Drapeau , several on an international scale. After a long and painful period of industrial reorganization marked by high unemployment Montreal regained a strong vitality in the mids, and entered the 21st century with a modernized and buoyant economy.
Few visible traces of the early French settlement remain. Most of the old buildings still in existence date from the 19th century, as the area's wealthy residents have made way for stores, warehouses and office buildings. This street is lined with skyscrapers, the most famous being the cruciform Place Ville Marie 45 storeys , which was inaugurated in This downtown expansion led to the remodelling of the city. Many buildings with historical value were demolished, ancient residential areas were radically altered, and thousands of low-income residents were displaced.
Around this downtown core are residential districts dating from the beginning of the 20th century that have the highest density of dwellings in the city.
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