Peace Park (Montreal)
Peace Park or Place de la Paix is an urban square in Montreal. Peace Park is the colloquial name for Place de la Paix, which directly translates to “Place of Peace”. Often, even in French newspapers, Place de la Paix is referred to as “Parc de la Paix”.[1] It is on Saint-Laurent Boulevard and, as such, it follows different by-laws than parks. For example, Peace park is open to the public at all times, unlike parks with visiting hours.
History
The decision to build Peace Park came during Jean Doré’s administration after he helped Montreal become a Nuclear Free Zone in 1986. With Montréal’s new commitment to peace the mayor Jean Doré announced in 1989[2] that he would build a place of peace in remembrance of the tragedies of nuclear warfare, located on Saint-Laurent Boulevard in front of the Monument-National and the Montreal Pool Room.
The park was designed by Robert Desjardins and was inaugurated on the 20th of November 1994.[3] It is largely constructed of granite with grass around granite tiles in the middle, and with trees contouring the park. The park originally had green metal benches under the trees that surrounded the park, but they were removed in 2005 to help with the gentrification of the area. Montreal’s city officials are trying to "clean up" Peace Park, meaning that they want to decrease the amount of alcoholics, homeless, drugs, prostitutes, and skateboarders who are there due to its location at the center of the red light district in the heart of Montreal.
Skateboarding
Peace Park has appeared in many skateboard videos, magazine, and books because of its design, which embodies long, high, and wide granite ledges, and stairs. The layout allows for good flow when rolling around the park. Being centrally located in the city of Montreal the park also serves as a meeting place for many skateboarders.[4]
Skateboarding is not legal in the park; city by-laws are enforced with hefty tickets.[5] In 2004 the Société des arts technologiques, which is across the street from the Peace Park put together a project with the aim of legalizing skateboarding, by incorporating it with the Quartier des spectacles, but the proposal was refused by the city. Despite skateboarding being against the law, the parks reputation continues to grow.
Adding to the skateboard presence in the park Temple Skate Supply moved their store to 1201 St-Dominique in 2007, which is across the street from Peace Park.
Documentary
In 2001 local skateboarder David 'Boots' Bouthillier began filming the parks activities. After accumulating extensive footage over time, the park’s history, natives, and its vibrant visitors inspired him to release a narrated feature-length documentary on the park. The documentary titled Peace Park / Place de la Paix for which he received grants[6] from the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec, the Canada Council for the Arts, and support from the La Société des arts Technologiques will be released as an MQC production.
Events
Represent 2004 - MC's, DJ's, Breakdance, Grattiti
Represent 2005 - MC's, DJ's, Breakdance, Grattiti et Skateboard
Peace Pressure 2006 -Best Trick Skateboard Contest
Under Pressure 2008 - International Graffiti Convention
Under Pressure 2009 - International Graffiti Convention
Access
References
- ↑ Le VM - Media Transcontinental
- ↑ King, M. (30 October 1989), "City will build peace park, Doré says", Montreal: The Gazette
- ↑ Trottier, A. (Lundu 21 Novembre 1994, p.C9). "Un Jardin pour la paix...et les échassiers", Montreal: La Presse.
- ↑ MacFarlane, J.(Saturday 25 May 2002. pg. A.1). "Cramping their style: City's skateboarders hemmed in by city by law, police;"
- ↑ Ravensbergen, J.(Thursday 5 March 2009). "His Wheel dilemma- a $628 fine", Montreal: The Gazette
- ↑ Block, I. (Tuesday 24 March 2009). "Documentary deal eases pain of city fine", Montreal: The Gazette
External links
- Peace Park
- Skatespotter
- Concordia Link
- Murphy, B. (2 June 2005). "Sizzling Summer: Montreal skate parks", Montreal: Hour.
Coordinates: 45°30′34″N 73°33′44″W / 45.5094°N 73.5622°W