Toronto Star

Montreal plans airport upgrades

$4B project aims to boost capacity, reduce congestion

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

The authority overseeing the Montreal airport plans to spend nearly $4 billion in a bid to reduce congestion and ramp up capacity at the country’s second-biggest flight hub.

The announceme­nt Thursday comes after rising passenger volumes and surging car traffic last summer prompted a wave of frustratio­n among travellers trying to make their planes on time.

Gridlock on the road leading to Pierre Elliott Trudeau Internatio­nal Airport last year routinely prompted car passengers to exit their vehicles and haul their bags along the highway off-ramp to the airport, particular­ly in late afternoon and early evening.

The blueprint for the airport upgrades includes an expanded roadway running past the main entrance, new parking lots and dropoff areas, a satellite terminal and a connection to the REM commuter rail line.

In a speech to the Chamber of Commerce of Metropolit­an Montreal, airport authority CEO Yves Beauchamp said Thursday it aims to complete the projects by 2028.

“We are engaged in a race. We have four years to be able to welcome four million more people than today,” he told attendees in French at a downtown hotel. “We need to add capacity to our welcome infrastruc­ture, both on the land side and on the air side.”

Travel has rebounded after the pandemic nosedive, with a record 21 million travellers passing through the Montreal airport last year, up 32 per cent from 2022.

“After a forced break of two years, we are back on the growth curve from before. But because of this hiatus, we have less time to carry out the absolutely necessary work,” Beauchamp said.

The CEO also said he was in favour of opening the floodgates to private capital once the work is done in order to finance more constructi­on under considerat­ion for 2035.

The additional investment­s would cost another $3 billion to $4 billion, Beauchamp told reporters.

The chamber of commerce has also put pressure on the federal government to increase airports’ financial flexibilit­y.

“If we are not able to change the way airports finance themselves, we will eventually hit a wall,” CEO Michel Leblanc said.

During the pandemic, airports added about $3.2 billion in debt to maintain operations as revenue plummeted, even as Ottawa provided some $1 billion in support, according to the Canadian Airports Council.

With the resources at hand, Beauchamp plans to add remote plane parking lots as well as a satellite terminal that will host boarding gates by 2028.

Meanwhile, the arm of the REM commuter line connecting the airport to the rest of the network is set to open in 2027, reducing reliance on car traffic. The authority also aims to triple the capacity of the curbside roadway that runs past the airport’s main entrance.

To make room for the wider, multi-level drop-off areas it looks to build in 2027 and 2028, the airport plans to demolish a parking lot that can hold some 5,000 vehicles in 2026.

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