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The Château Ramezay is a museum and historic building on Notre-Dame Street in Old Montreal, opposite Montreal City Hall in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Built in 1705 as the residence of then-governor of Montreal , Claude de Ramezay , the Château was the first building proclaimed as a historical monument in Quebec and is the province's oldest ...
Meteocentre (also named UQAM Weather Centre) is a website displaying real-time weather information for North America and Europe organized in three different portals, each adapted for a given area and named after a town part of the region of interest: 1) Montréal, for Québec, 2) Toulouse, for France and 3) Reading, for the United Kingdom.
This is a list of castles in Canada. Most cannot properly be described as true castles. Most cannot properly be described as true castles. They are primarily country houses, follies , or other types of buildings built to give the appearance of a castle.
Hochelaga (French pronunciation:) was a St. Lawrence Iroquois 16th century fortified village on or near Mount Royal in present-day Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Jacques Cartier arrived by boat on October 2, 1535; he visited the village on the following day. He was greeted well by the Iroquois, and named the mountain he saw nearby Mount Royal. [2]
Get the Montreal-Est, QC local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days. Skip to main content. Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to ...
Château Dufresne is located at 4040, rue Sherbrooke Est (4040, Sherbrooke Street East), adjacent to the Olympic Stadium and Montreal Botanical Garden, near the Pie-IX metro station. Château Dufresne is situated at an altitude of 35 m.
The cliff created in the construction of the reservoir is used as an ice climbing location. [ 6 ] Nine million dollars was spent in 2008 to 2009 on upgrading the pump-houses and reservoir for infrastructure security and preventing water contamination, but the security features have proven to be ineffective and easily infiltrated. [ 7 ]
Chateau St. Louis Ruins at the former site. The Chateau St. Louis (French: Château Saint-Louis, pronounced [ʃato sɛ̃ lwi]) in Quebec City was the official residence of the French Governor of New France and later the British Governor of Quebec, the Governor-General of British North America, and the Lieutenant-Governor of Lower Canada.