Montreal Gazette

OCPM issues report on Lachine East

OCPM issues report on developmen­t that will feature 4,000 housing units

- DANIEL SUCAR dsucar@postmedia.com

Following months of informatio­n sessions and community workshops, the Office de Consultati­on Publique de Montreal (OCPM) released its report Wednesday on the Lachine East developmen­t, which is poised to be the largest project of its kind on the island.

“The people have spoken, and they want something that responds to the needs of the future while respecting the heritage of the past,” said Lachine borough mayor Maja Vodanovic. “Now it’s our job to build just that.”

The developmen­t project will see the constructi­on of 4,000 housing units on 50 hectares of converted industrial land. It is expected to increase Lachine’s population by more than 25 per cent. The proposed area sits between the Lachine Canal to the south, Victoria St. to the north, 6th Ave. to the west and the railway line to the east.

While constructi­on was initially slated to begin in 2016, the project was placed on hold after it was discovered that the land, initially designated as having been decontamin­ated, was in fact still polluted with heavy metals.

“This was one of the most contaminat­ed areas in Canada, and now we want to transform it into something beautiful,” Vodanovic said. “We always knew there were going to be a few challenges involved, and the decontamin­ation was certainly one of them.”

In February, work on the project resumed with a three-month public consultati­on process that included more than 800 participan­ts. In its report, the OCPM notes the overall enthusiasm of Lachine residents and also offers nearly 40 recommenda­tions for the project to the developers and the municipali­ty.

But although these suggestion­s range from affordable housing to the establishm­ent of a bike network, according to OCPM president Dominique Ollivier, the report features two prominent themes.

“Most of our recommenda­tions revolved around heritage and eco-friendly initiative­s,” she said. “With regards to heritage, our recommenda­tions favour cultural transforma­tion over demolition.”

The Lachine East developmen­t project will be built on the site that used to house the Jenkins Valves and Dominion Bridge companies, the latter of which secured the contract to erect the Jacques-Cartier Bridge in 1925. In its report, the OCPM stresses the historical value of these factories and encourages the borough to prohibit any demolition until a heritage study has been conducted.

“The public made it clear that it doesn’t want important cultural sites to disappear,” Ollivier said. “We want to ensure the borough preserves what needs to be preserved.”

Meanwhile, Vodanovic says she has always pushed to develop eastern Lachine in an environmen­tally responsibl­e, climate-aware manner. By integratin­g environmen­tally friendly features such as geothermal heating and parks that absorb heavy rainfall, the mayor says she hopes to mitigate the impact of spring flooding, wildly fluctuatin­g temperatur­es and mixed precipitat­ion that have plagued the greater Montreal area in recent years.

“I’m a painter that became mayor because I wanted to do something about the environmen­t,” she said. “There’s a possibilit­y for us to create something good for the planet, and I think that’s why so many people came to the public consultati­ons.”

“A lot of people want to do good, they just don’t know how. Maybe this is a way.”

The people ... want something that responds to the needs of the future while respecting the heritage of the past.

 ?? DAVE SIDAWAY ?? The Lachine East project will see the constructi­on of 4,000 housing units on 50 hectares of land.
DAVE SIDAWAY The Lachine East project will see the constructi­on of 4,000 housing units on 50 hectares of land.

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