Waterloo Region Record

The battle to save ‘shoebox’ homes from extinction

- MORGAN LOWRIE

MONTREAL — A Montreal borough’s quest to preserve its humble “shoebox” homes is highlighti­ng the challenges that come with trying to balance heritage preservati­on with homeowners’ rights in a growing city.

Officials in Rosemont have decided to temporaril­y push back the schedule for passing a bylaw designed to preserve its 561 single-storey, flat-roofed homes after homeowners raised concerns about the process.

The homes were mostly built early in the 20th century, as tens of thousands of workers were arriving from the countrysid­e to work in quarries and factories.

Unable to afford large homes, they bought plots and built modest, flat-roofed cottages along the streetcar line, leaving enough room for a small vegetable garden.

Today, those neighbourh­oods have been integrated into the larger city, where the remaining shoeboxes are often tucked in between larger homes, serving as a throwback to an earlier age.

“They tell the story of the arrival of tens of thousands of people from the countrysid­e who wanted to be homeowners but didn’t have a great deal of money,” said city councillor Christine Gosselin.

Concern over the fate of the quaint homes began rising in recent years when they became a target for developers who would knock them down to build bigger, more profitable housing, Gosselin said.

Before new rules were brought in five years ago, she said they weren’t even in the same category as other houses, which allowed owners to obtain demolition permits in a single day for a few hundred dollars.

The new proposed bylaw presented

this fall would make demolition­s nearly impossible in most cases.

Renovation­s and enlargemen­t projects would have to respect the look and materials of the original facade, including a rule that second storeys be set back at least a metre behind the original face.

Gosselin said the rules are designed to strike a balance between allowing necessary renovation­s and preserving a unique form of housing.

“What we wanted to do is to make sure that the current wave of developmen­t in Rosemont didn’t erase completely the memory of this first phase,” she said. “With sensitive urban planning laws we can accommodat­e growth and developmen­t and preserve the heritage.”

The effort to protect shoeboxes is part of a recent focus on preserving the city’s modest residentia­l history as well as its grand mansions and public buildings.

But that comes with its own set of challenges, and some of the shoebox homeowners have been expressing concern about the

city’s plan.

“We’re talking about houses that are around 100 years old, built with modest materials and not within norms that would necessaril­y be acceptable today,” said Wilfried Cordeau, who founded a Facebook group to inform shoebox owners about the new rules.

Cordeau said most of the owners agree that the homes’ heritage needs to be protected from developers, but he takes issue with the borough’s list of shoebox homes and its claim that 88 per cent of them should have a protected status.

Carlos Costa, who owns a shoebox he inherited from his mother, said his own home was designated “of historical interest” despite having mould and structural issues that make it borderline unsafe to live in.

He had hoped to leverage the equity in his property to demolish it and build a triplex to house his own family and two others. Now, facing a lower property value and new regulation­s that will make renovation­s prohibitiv­ely expensive, he said he’ll have to sell and leave the area.

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Montreal’s shoebox houses were mostly built in the early 20th century, as tens of thousands of workers were arriving from the countrysid­e.
PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS Montreal’s shoebox houses were mostly built in the early 20th century, as tens of thousands of workers were arriving from the countrysid­e.

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