Thousands of Montrealers voice their thoughts on Van Horne warehouse project
CBC
With its industrial brickwork and iconic water tower topping its roof, the Van Horne warehouse has stood for nearly 100 years in Montreal's Mile End neighbourhood.
A developer now wants to turn it into a hotel and office building, with commercial space on the ground floor.
But that would require a zoning derogation, and before the Plateau-Mont-Royal borough council approves such a change, it is getting a feel for what the community thinks with an online survey that people have until Feb. 12 to respond to.
Coun. Marie Plourde said some 5,000 people replied in the first 24 hours after it went up Monday, and that's "really huge," as a good turnout is usually a few hundred.
"It shows how much the people in Montreal are attached to this building," said Plourde, who represents the Mile End district and has a background in urban planning.
Constructed around 1925, the seven-storey building was built to store goods. It was designed with an unusual, triangular shape so it could be wedged between the railway, Saint-Laurent Boulevard and Van Horne Avenue.
The proposed project includes the transformation of the building and new construction on neighbouring land that connects to the warehouse.
However, that won't happen without the council's green light.
"Before we go through that process, we want to see if there's some kind of social acceptance in the neighbourhood," Plourde said.
The development firm behind the project has already posted plans for the property online, stirring a strong response from the community, she said.
And while many people might want housing instead of the proposed project, that's not possible under regulations that require a certain setback from the rail line for residential construction, the city says.
Beyond that regulation, the sector is already designated for economic development in the city's urban plan.
Laurence Morel lives nearby and was one of the thousands to reply to the online survey. She said a hotel is a good thing because it will decrease the need for short-term rental services like Airbnb. Often those services are illegal, she said, and take away long-term housing from the area.
"I think people are more willing to go to a hotel than to Airbnbs," she said.