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Café Continental: 108, Sainte-Catherine West street, now demolished to make way for the Complexe Desjardins. Café du Nord – 10715, Pie-IX Boulevard; Café St-Michel – 770, De la Montagne Street (south of St-Antoine) Café Rialto: 1217, Saint-Laurent boulevard (1930–1983), at the end under the name of New Rialto Café
The Bay on St. Catherine Street, with KPMG Tower in the background The entrance to the Eaton Centre on St. Catherine St., Montreal, Quebec, Canada Former Eaton's store, now Complexe Les Ailes St. Catherine Street has been home to many of Montreal's prominent department stores, including such former retailers as Eaton's , Morgan's , Simpson's ...
Place des Arts, facing Sainte-Catherine Street. 2-22 Sainte-Catherine Est. Promenade des Artistes [].. Quartier des Spectacles (French pronunciation: [kaʁtje de spɛktakl]) is an arts and entertainment district located in the eastern section of Downtown Montreal, designed as a centre for Montreal's cultural events and festivals.
Les Foufounes Électriques is a club and concert venue located at 87 Saint Catherine Street East in the city of Montreal, Quebec, Canada in a neighbourhood known as the Quartier Latin (Latin Quarter). [1] [2] It is a multi-level establishment with two concert spaces and a dance floor.
Montreal has the second largest Italian population in Canada after Toronto. There are around 250,000 Montrealers of Italian ancestry living within its Metropolitan Area. Montreal's Little Italy, located on St. Lawrence Boulevard between Jean-Talon and St. Zotique, is home to Montreal's original Italian Canadian community. Although many Italians ...
According to Daniel Proulx, it was defined early in the twentieth century by Sherbrooke Street to the north, Saint-Denis Street to the east, Bleury Street to the west, and by Old Montreal to the south. Proulx claims that today, it has shrunk to centre on the corner of Sainte-Catherine and Saint-Laurent, the area's historical heart. [2]
The west end of Montreal's downtown had bars on Stanley Street and Drummond Street, with Shaughnessy Village west of Guy Street as a gay residential neighbourhood. [2] By the 1950s, Dominion Square (now Dorchester Square) was seen as an area where men could meet and cruise [citation needed] and the centrally located Dominion Square Tavern was known as a place where gays could meet (it still ...
Montreal and its culinary landscape was the focus of Gourmet magazine's March 2006 issue. [7] Montreal's unique cuisine has also given birth to a number of Montreal-centric restaurants and restaurant chains, such as Dagwoods, Dic Ann's Hamburgers, Dunn's Famous, Moishes Steakhouse, Schwartz's, and Lafleur Restaurants.