Montréal-Nord

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Montreal North
Montréal-Nord
—  Borough of Montreal  —
Arrondissement de Montréal-Nord
Montreal North Borough Hall
Montreal North's location on the Island of Montreal.
Coordinates: 45°36′N 73°37′W / 45.600°N 73.617°W / 45.600; -73.617
Country  Canada
Province  Quebec
City Montreal
Region Montréal
Merge into
Montreal
January 01, 2002
Electoral Districts
Federal

Bourassa
Honoré-Mercier
Provincial Bourassa-Sauvé
Crémazie
Government[1][2][3]
 • Type Borough
 • Mayor Gilles Deguire
 • Federal MP(s) Denis Coderre (LIB)
Paulina Ayala (NDP)
 • Quebec MNA Rita de Santis (LIB)
Diane De Courcy (PQ)
Area[4]
 • Land 11.07 km2 (4.27 sq mi)
Population (2011)[4][5]
 • Total 83,868
 • Density 7,576.2/km2 (19,622/sq mi)
 • Change (2006-11) Decrease0.1%
 • Dwellings (2006) 38,122
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC−5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC−4)
Area code(s) 514/438
Access Routes[6]
A-25

Route 125
Website www.ville.montreal.qc.ca/mtlnord

Montreal North (French: Montréal-Nord) is a borough (arrondissement) of the city of Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It consists entirely of the former city of Montréal-Nord on Island of Montreal in southwestern Quebec, Canada. It was amalgamated into the City of Montreal on January 1, 2002.

Contents

Geography [edit]

Pierre Granche's sculpture in park in Montréal-Nord.

The borough is an oblong municipal division situated along the Rivière des Prairies, in the northeastern part of the island.

It is bordered to the west by Ahuntsic-Cartierville, to the southwest by Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension, to the south by Saint Leonard, at the southeast corner by Anjou, and to the east by Rivière-des-Prairies–Pointe-aux-Trembles.

Major thoroughfares in Montreal North include Saint Michel Blvd., Pie IX Blvd. (Autoroute 25), Lacordaire Blvd., Langelier Blvd., Léger Blvd., and Henri Bourassa Blvd. The Pie IX Bridge connects Montreal North to the Laval district of Saint-Vincent-de-Paul.

It has an area of 11.07 km² and a population of 83,911.

Politics [edit]

Federal and provincial elections [edit]

The borough is located almost entirely in the federal riding of Bourassa, except for a tiny southeastern corner in Honoré-Mercier.

The provincial electoral district of Bourassa-Sauvé is coterminous with the borough except for a northwestern section in the electoral district of Crémazie.

Demographics [edit]

Home language (2006)
Language Population Percentage (%)
French 37,500 40%
English 6,795 8%
Both English and French 1,075 1%
Other languages 37,345 51%

Borough Government [edit]

As of the November 1, 2009 Montreal municipal election, the current borough council consists of the following councillors:

District Position Name   Party
Borough mayor
City councillor
Gilles Deguire Ind  Independent
Marie-Clarac City councillor Clementina Teti-Tomassi   Union Montréal
Borough councillor Chantal Rossi Ind  Independent
Ovide-Clermont City councillor Jean-Marc Gibeau   Union Montréal
Borough councillor Monica Ricourt   Union Montréal

All councillors were elected under the Union Montréal banner, but Deguire and Rossi resigned from the party in February 2013.[7]

Riot [edit]

For yet undisclosed reasons on Saturday, August 9 of 2008 the officers of the Service de police de la Ville de Montréal shot and killed Honduran immigrant Fredy Alberto Villanueva.[8] This served to set off the tensions that had already been simmering in this multi-ethnic borough, and riots erupted the next evening (2008-08-10), after an otherwise peaceful protest march in the afternoon.

The rioters looted neighborhood stores, several cars and garbage cans were set on fire, one paramedic and two police officers were wounded and one female police officer shot.[9] Firetrucks and firefighters arriving to put out the fires were then targeted by the rioters.[8]

See also [edit]

References [edit]

External links [edit]

Coordinates: 45°36′N 73°37′W / 45.600°N 73.617°W / 45.600; -73.617 (Nontreal-Nord)