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Is this a decent area of Montreal?

Romantic1

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Aug 11, 2005
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Hey all:

I'm looking at buying a piece of property in Montreal (I'm from Toronto).

Is this area a "nice" one? And how far is this from Old Montreal? Walkable?

It's on Rue de Coleraine, in the Atwater Market area. Real estate agent says it's "up-and-coming". Does this mean it's rough and tumble now? LOL

Thanks for your help!
 

Consult

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Jan 12, 2005
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You'll have to go and take a look

The area around Atwater market has pockets of absolute yuppy-ism (and also overpriced) and some other pockets of bad poverty. If your realtor says "up and coming", i'd suspect it's in the poor, in-course-of-gentification, part.

It's at least an half hour walk to the western limit of old montreal.

Personally, i'd recommend NDG around Monkland. The area is is well built, fairly young, the stores are perfect (boutiques, cafés, bookstores, specialized groceries) and the schools are good.
 

Romantic1

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Aug 11, 2005
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Interesting, thanks :)

Consult said:
The area around Atwater market has pockets of absolute yuppy-ism (and also overpriced) and some other pockets of bad poverty. If your realtor says "up and coming", i'd suspect it's in the poor, in-course-of-gentification, part.

It's at least an half hour walk to the western limit of old montreal.

Personally, i'd recommend NDG around Monkland. The area is is well built, fairly young, the stores are perfect (boutiques, cafés, bookstores, specialized groceries) and the schools are good.
 

zigezon

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Aug 31, 2005
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I beleive your spot in WestMount? Westmount is not the same south of Sherbrooke, meaning the rich live north of Sherbrooke. That being said, the location seems good. Only thing to watch out is the neiberhood (at least 2 km^2).

Another note, if your note sure, let it pass, there's always the next one...


As far as NDG, it's not bad but forget about walking to the OldPort. We're talking of a 30 minutes bicycle ride if you dont want to take the car or the shitass metro.
 
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eastender

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Jun 6, 2005
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Plateau East Boundary

regnad said:
I've just bought a second home in the Plateau, an area bounded by Park Mont-Royal on the West, Sherbrooke on the South, the railroad tracks on the North, not quite sure of the east.

Wallpaper Magazine (http://www.wallpaper.com) calls the Plateau "the coolest neighborhood in North America." Utne Reader has called it "one of the 15 hippest."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Plateau

The eastern boundary of the Plateau is formed by the northern railway tracks.
Once you pass Papineau they gradually sweep south east crossing Sherbrooke
a few blocks east of Frontenac.
 

HarmonyNYC

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Oct 18, 2003
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How far is it from Downtown Montreal?

How far being either "driving time", "walking time", or "subway time"... answer what best fits the question.

Any well know places or landmark's in the area that may help us know what part of Montreal this is.
 

sybaritic

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Jan 11, 2005
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regnad said:
I've just bought a second home in the Plateau, an area bounded by Park Mont-Royal on the West, Sherbrooke on the South, the railroad tracks on the North, not quite sure of the east.

Wallpaper Magazine (http://www.wallpaper.com) calls the Plateau "the coolest neighborhood in North America." Utne Reader has called it "one of the 15 hippest."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Plateau

Next party at Regnad's house!
 

Romantic1

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Aug 11, 2005
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Thanks to all who posted in the thread. I'll keep looking.

Funny thing is that Montreal's real estate prices are so incredibly low compared to Toronto that even a sweet loft in Old Montreal seems like a an absolute steal to me.

Big Daddy Cool your reference to Cabbagetown in Toronto said it all. LOL. My mother lived there briefly some years back, and I moved her out of there as soon as I could. Gangs, drugs--the area had it all. :D
 

Just-ass-weet

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Jan 9, 2006
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I lived in Pte-Ste-Charles and it is NOT a high crime neighbourhood, nor is it a welfare district. PSC is a low-income working class area, and when you hit Coleraine street, you are in a primarily Irish area. My grandfather had 2 large buildings there, and I loved it there, and am hoping to move back to the area this July. Is it up and coming... not now, not after the loss of the Casino.

It is VERY close to an up and coming area, it has potential to become a great area because of its closeness to downtown (put it this way... by bus, 5-10 minutes maximum to Concordia U), which is another reason I want to move back - Laval is lovely, but travel is a pain in the rear!

Depending on the price, the fix up needs, I think PSC has plenty of potential, especially now that the government has its eyes on the area.

xoxox
Anik

Romantic1 said:
Thanks to all who posted in the thread. I'll keep looking.

Funny thing is that Montreal's real estate prices are so incredibly low compared to Toronto that even a sweet loft in Old Montreal seems like a an absolute steal to me.

Big Daddy Cool your reference to Cabbagetown in Toronto said it all. LOL. My mother lived there briefly some years back, and I moved her out of there as soon as I could. Gangs, drugs--the area had it all. :D
 

mrten

Psychiatric help, 5 cents
Mar 22, 2005
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No thanks

I'd have to agree with big daddy cool & Dahlia . Not such a great move:eek:
 

Avery

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Jun 10, 2003
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femaleluver2 said:
...Although the area in question sounds more like ''Mile End''.

regnad said:
I believe that Mile End is just north of the Plateau and centered more on the Main.

Unless things have changed since I left my hometown in 1983, regnad is pretty well correct. Mile End is bounded by Avenue du Parc on the west, Jean Talon on the north, Rue St. Denis on the east and Bernard/Bellechasse on the south. It includes Jean Talon Market and Little Italy.

Note those are Montreal directions - they are rotated about 60 degrees counterclockwise from true geographic directions. :D

I grew up in Park Extension, which was (and still is) a working class neighbourhood. Snobs that we were, we considered Point St. Charles/Griffintown, St. Henri and parts of Verdun to be slums, even in the 1950s. They still are, as far as I can tell.
 
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ExoticSpirit

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Nov 22, 2005
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Old Mtl Condo

Romantic1 said:
Funny thing is that Montreal's real estate prices are so incredibly low compared to Toronto that even a sweet loft in Old Montreal seems like a an absolute steal to me.

If you are still in the market, PM me as I have a condo in Old Montreal for sale (or rent)
 
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