Notre-Dame Street merchants reach construction compromise with Sud-Ouest borough
CBC
Some Montreal merchants who were upset about major upcoming repair work on a stretch of Notre-Dame Street West in Little Burgundy, are hoping their summer terrasse season can be salvaged.
This comes as the Sud-Ouest borough has tweaked its schedule to wrap construction a bit early.
Work to fix the street's 100-year-old water main between Vinet and Atwater Streets will begin as planned in mid-April, but will end before the end of June, instead of stretching into July.
Toby Lyle, co-owner and founder of the Burgundy Lion Group, is happy to have come to a compromise with the borough.
"Once the city got the pressure and started working on it, they were very good, I have to admit," he said.
Lyle agrees the work is necessary, as the water main has already burst in the past, leading to flooding. The borough considers the main to be in "critical condition."
But he said after weathering two summers under COVID-19 restrictions, bars and restaurants were looking forward to the street coming alive again, and were caught off guard by the borough's plans.
"That was what made the timing so terrible. What we've gone through in the last two years has been a challenge to say the least," he said. "Just when we started to see the light at the end of the tunnel, we got this news."
While he said the timing is still not ideal, bars and restaurants will now only lose about two or three weeks of prime terrasse weather, as outdoor dining doesn't pick up much until the end of May.
Lyle said he was told that, barring workers uncovering an unexpected issue once they open up the street, the work will be done on June 13, just in time for Grand Prix weekend — a major draw for many tourists.
But Massimo Lecas, owner of Fiorellino restaurant, is skeptical that the work will be done in time.
"Obviously experience and history tells us that it's very, very, very difficult to respect deadlines when it comes to construction," he said.
If construction does go long, Lecas would like to see the city agree to stop construction, no matter what stage they've reached, in time for the Grand Prix, and resume in September.
The borough said it would keep "good communication" with business owners and residents "before, during and after the work" to keep nuisances from construction to a minimum.