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Bell Centre was also host to two pool games in the 2004 World Cup of Hockey. The Bell Centre was the host of the 2009 NHL All-Star Game and hosted the 2009 and 2022 NHL Entry Drafts, the latter of which saw the Canadiens take Juraj Slafkovský first overall. [19] Montreal Canadiens home games have been consistently sold out since January 2004. [20]
It operates 61 lots, many that are adjacent to metropolitan bus terminals, commuter rail stations, or rapid transit stations. In 2012, over 60% of all ARTM park and ride lots for cars had a usage rate over 75%, with 1 in 5 being used over 90%. [1] The following are the specific ARTM park and ride lots in Montreal and its surrounding area. [2]
The station is intermodal with the Exo commuter rail lines; the entrance is connected by an enclosed walkway to Lucien-L'Allier station, a station that serves as the Downtown terminus for the Vaudreuil-Hudson, Saint-Jérôme, and Candiac lines. That train station was built as part of the Bell Centre and replaced the former Gare Windsor. It was ...
As in the case of the Bell Centre, the naming rights for the Laval arena were acquired by Bell Canada. [3] The cost of the project roughly doubled after it was first announced. Originally announced to cost $92.6 million, the estimate was revised less than a year later to $150 million. In March 2014, Laval's new mayor, Marc Demers, estimated ...
The project was initiated by Montreal Mayor Jean Drapeau, who would later bring the Summer Olympic Games to Montreal in 1976. The Metro system has long had a station on the South Shore in the city of Longueuil, and in 2007, extended to the city of Laval, north of Montreal with 3 new stations. [26]
The Montreal Metro aims to have over 30 accessible stations by 2025, [76] 41 stations by 2030, [77] and expects all subway stations to be accessible by 2038. [ 78 ] [ 79 ] In comparison, the Toronto subway (first opened in 1954) will be fully accessible by 2025 , and all Vancouver SkyTrain stations have been accessible from that system's ...
By the year 2031, the Montreal Metro will consist of 73 stations once constructions of the extension of the Blue Line (or in French, "Prolongement de la ligne bleue") will be finished, inaugurating 5 new stations.
Lucien L'Allier station takes its name from the nearby Lucien L'Allier Montreal Metro station. This station is in turn named for rue Lucien-L'Allier, the original name of which, rue de l'Aqueduc, was changed in order to commemorate Lucien L'Allier, chief engineer for the initial network of the Montreal Metro and for the construction of Saint Helen's Island and Île Notre-Dame for Expo 67.