September, 1951
Montreal Train Factory Transformed into LEED Office Complex and Low Income Housing
A building of the former Canadian Pacific Angus Shops - Date unknown Lori Zimmer.
Montreal Quebec - The Angus Shops of Montreal are part of a small neighborhood centered around a green commercial and industrial
complex that includes many top companies and a large grocery store. The site on which the new destination sits was once a historic
Canadian Pacific Railway factory that produced freight cars and locomotives for all of Canada for almost a century, until 1992. Since its
closing, the disused site has been transformed into a mixed-use neighborhood featuring low and moderate-income homes. The historic
buildings that were once the backbone of the area have been given a new life.
Since the factory and its buildings were such an important part of many Montrealer's history, the industrial site was
redeveloped to respect as much of the original complex as possible - Date unknown Lori Zimmer.
During most of the 20th century, the Canadian Pacific Railway factory was the lifeblood of the neighborhood, employing 12,000 locals.
The industrial buildings were once guarded with a closed entrance, and employed the many families that lived in the homes built around it.
As the train transportation industry declined after the 1970s, the neighborhood became more and more sparsely populated, and the factory
finally closed its doors in 1992. Renovation of the neighborhood began in the early 1980s by the Rosemont Housing Committee, who focused
on creating a socially mixed residential area.
Loblaws, a popular supermarket chain, located a giant superstore in the CPR Angus Locomotive Shop. The parking lot which
connects the Loblaws with the office complex is encased in the walls of a former factory building. The brick enclosures, rising three
stories high, are supported by steel buttresses, and pay tribute to the history of the site - Date unknown Lori Zimmer.
Since the factory and its buildings were such an important part of many Montrealer's history, the industrial site was redeveloped to
respect as much of the original complex as possible. The main factory was re-purposed into an office complex, housing mostly technology
companies. The interior still has the industrial windows and catwalks that workers looked up to each day one hundred years ago.
Loblaws, a popular supermarket chain, located a giant superstore in the CPR Angus locomotive shop. The parking lot which connects
Loblaws with the office complex is encased in the walls of a former factory building. The brick enclosures, rising three stories high, are
supported by steel buttresses and pay tribute to the history of the site.
Keeping in the vein of adaptive reuse and sustainability, any new building that is developed on the site must meet LEED certification
at the highest level possible.
The new neighborhood of Rosemont offers a comfortable neighborhood for low to moderate income residents, while preserving an important
and sentimental park of Montreal's industrial past.
Lori Zimmer
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