Montreal had some "interesting" arty constructions, like this odd circle affair in the rather prosperous looking downtown area linking two office blocks but for no obvious reason:
The city also has some strange looking and controversial housing that was built for the 1967 Expo. Well worth having a look at the website Habitat 67 website - here is a distant view from across the river to give you a flavour of it:
The concept of modules linked in a way so that they all had serious amounts of privacy was pretty clever but a little like Marmite for the local inhabitants. The waterfront hosted a couple of large marinas, old grain stores and the Jacques Cartier bridge:
which for the terminally bored is apparently the third busiest bridge in Canada. The joys of building a city on an island.... We have to question some of the city planning decisions though. This church tower looked a little out of place, or should we say that the things erected around it are very out of place?
No such problem with the cathedral. Truly amazing place. Stunning architecture and attention to detail within, emphasised by clever, atmospheric lighting:
The enormous balcony area dedicated to the organ was quite something. The instrument has over 7000 pipes so must sound quite amazing. Our visit wasn't at the right time to experience it though:
After all that culture (the cathedral was one of those rare places that just makes you stand and stare for ages), we did the proper touristy thing and took a boat trip. Yes, we were missing the boating fix. Our craft was less than elegant:
but gave us views of the old Olympic stadium and the massive dock area. Miles of alongside berths, mainly empty at the time we visited. The trip was shared with three ladies from Chicago who bemoaned the weather and possibility of being shot in their home city. Mum was enjoying her trip and as a 90 year old was setting a great example for older folks:
After the rather sedate trip, we walked the length of the waterfront and admired the bungee jumpers - the larger framed ones only just avoided a dunking before they were hoisted skywards once more. The little dinghy that was used to rescue them from the bungee line and ferry them back to the shore once the oscillations had stopped was amusing. It looked way more dangerous being released into the dinghy than actually doing the jump:
Montreal was great. Cheap public transport with only one major drawback - the airport which is pretty busy, is only served by road at the moment. The bus service was OK but the traffic around the airport was manic. Roll on the train link they are constructing. We enjoyed a wonderful Indian fusion meal, some good coffee and cake stops and learning more about the city in general. So far the trip was going well.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for your ideas / cheek / corrections / whatever! They should hit the blog shortly after the system checks them to make sure they will not put us or you in jail.....