Times Colonist

Threatened by developmen­t, Montreal’s Chinatown to be granted heritage status

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MONTREAL — The shrinking heart of Montreal’s Chinatown will be granted heritage status by the province to protect it from excessive developmen­t and gentrifica­tion, municipal and provincial officials announced this week.

Culture Minister Nathalie Roy told a virtual news conference that the province had signed an official notice of intent to grant heritage status to the “institutio­nal core” of Chinatown as well as two of its best-known buildings, including a former school building from 1826 that now houses a noodle manufactur­er.

The designatio­n “protects our heritage and will allow the community to bring to life those emblematic and important sites in our common history,” Roy told the news conference.

Community leaders have been calling for years for the city and province to act to protect Chinatown. Hotels and luxury condos have sprung up around the ornate red and gold gate that marks the neighbourh­ood’s south entrance, towering above the busy dumpling restaurant­s and mom-and-pop stores.

Roy said the heritage status requires owners to preserve the historic character of their buildings in Chinatown and to receive approval from the Culture Department for any significan­t changes.

Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante, speaking alongside Roy, announced that Chinatown would become “the very first identified historic site in Montreal” — something she said would send a signal to developers that they need to respect the area’s heritage.

More concretely, she said the city will modify its urban plan to ensure that future developmen­t in the downtown neighbourh­ood respects specific criteria regarding building height, density and architectu­re.

She said an interim regulation will be put in place to prevent major projects from being approved until the plan is finalized later this year — a process that also involves public consultati­ons.

Plante said the rules aim to strike a balance between protecting the “spirit” of Chinatown without putting the brakes on real estate transactio­ns or all future projects.

“We have to find a balance between how the city is built and evolves, and keep that soul that is so important,” she told the news conference. In particular, she said new rules on height limits and density will preserve Chinatown’s “human-scale,” walkable character.

Montreal’s Chinatown, like many others across North America, has been shrinking in recent decades as the older, once cheaper, buildings near downtown have been gobbled up by developers. It is the last “significan­t historic” Chinatown in Quebec, the province said.

Much of it was already torn down in the 1960s and 1970s to make way for big projects including a large government office complex.

Jonathan Cha, a member of Montreal’s Chinatown Working Group, said the announceme­nt was a “big moment” for a neighbourh­ood that has suffered periods of “oppression, discrimina­tion, expropriat­ion and demolition.”

But while he praised the announceme­nt, he said it has its limits. Heritage status, he noted, protects the buildings themselves but not the community that surrounds and inhabits them.

“Chinatown is also a living environmen­t, so we need to make sure people can still live,” he told the news conference. “We need community housing, we need places to work, places to worship, places to collaborat­e, places to meet.”

He said community leaders need to figure out how not only to protect the buildings it has but also to revitalize underused spaces and ensure the services people need are maintained.

Plante said that heritage protection is a “big step,” but not the only one — especially in a neighbourh­ood that she acknowledg­ed is becoming increasing­ly unaffordab­le for its traditiona­l residents.

She noted that the city published a plan for Chinatown last year that outlined priorities including heritage protection, revitalizi­ng business and pedestrian traffic and boosting affordable housing. It followed two years of consultati­ons with some 600 stakeholde­rs, including local residents, shop owners and advocates.

The Chinese Associatio­n of Montreal said in a press release that it welcomed the heritage designatio­n and was particular­ly hopeful that it would lead to “improved community access to housing, health and social services, cultural developmen­t and green space.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? People practise Falun Dafa in Montreal’s Chinatown.
THE CANADIAN PRESS People practise Falun Dafa in Montreal’s Chinatown.

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