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  #541  
Old Posted Jul 28, 2010, 2:31 PM
mr.John mr.John is offline
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OH OH Dinu and his gang are upset again, someone please explain why the media takes this clown seriously


They've heard enough
Molson Stadium expansion blocks mountain view, is too loud, neighbours say.
By LINDA GYULAI, The Gazette July 28, 2010 7:20 AM Comments (3)
Two heritage groups say the expansion blocks the view of Mount Royal, but the Alouettes say the addition was done exactly according to the approved plans.Photograph by: Pierre Obendrauf, THE GAZETTEMONTREAL - Heritage activists and some Plateau Mont Royal residents are seeing and hearing more of the Montreal Alouettes than they can stand.

The football team's newly enlarged venue at McGill University's Molson Stadium has drawn complaints about noise pollution after an announcer's voice boomed for blocks around the stadium's perch on Mount Royal during last Thursday's regular-season home opener, thanks to a new sound system.

As well, Heritage Montreal and Les Amis de la Montagne are filing complaints with the caretakers of the mountain -the city and the Quebec Culture Department -that a new deck of seats added above a stand on the south side of the stadium obstructs the view of Mount Royal from Park Ave.

"It's exactly what they (the team) promised wouldn't happen," Heritage Montreal policy director Dinu Bumbaru said yesterday.

The team agreed in 2007 to preserve views of the mountain as a condition to obtain the province and the city's approval of a renovation plan that included adding 5,000 seats and a giant screen. The federal and provincial governments footed $19.3 million of the $29.3-million renovation tab, while the city kicked in $4 million. The club spent $6 million.

Heritage Montreal passed a resolution at its annual general meeting last month calling on the province and the city to explain "the

permanent damage caused to the historical landscape of Mount Royal with their authorization and their financial contributions, as well as the corrective measures they envision."

However, the team says the addition was built exactly as indicated in the architects' and engineers' plans, which were approved by the Culture Department, so it doesn't understand the preservation groups' complaint.

civic affairs reporter

"I don't know what plans they're talking about," said Claude Rochon, vice-president of marketing and communications for the Alouettes.

"We did high-tech simulations with the government showing exactly the views from all around the stadium and we did it exactly according to plan."

The Culture Department monitored the construction,

he added.

The Heritage Montreal resolution also demands that any simulations submitted by developers for future projects that will affect the mountain be independently verified.

The department will examine the complaints about the obstructed view with the city and meet with all sides in the dispute, department spokesperson Annie LeGruiec said.

McGill offered no comment on the matter yesterday.

Meanwhile, residents are giving the Alouettes an earful after getting an earful from a new stadium sound system during last week's home opener.

"It was a loud, booming male speaker voice," said Park Ave. resident Virginia Nixon, who lives more than three blocks from the stadium.

"It's like being at a carnival. It's so loud."

The Milton Park Citizens' Committee says it's aware of at least six letters to the team about the new sound system since last week.

The Alouettes' Rochon said the team has experts working on the problem and will adjust the sound. It's surprising, he said, because the new system is designed to direct sound within the stadium more efficiently than the old system and at the same time reduce the sound travelling outside.

Nixon warned she won't be satisfied with "adjusting" the sound in the streets. "It's 'eliminating' that should happen."

lgyulai@thegazette.canwest.com

© Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette

Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/techn...#ixzz0uzH0dRUB
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  #542  
Old Posted Jul 28, 2010, 3:22 PM
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Rico Rommheim Rico Rommheim is offline
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Jesus. The stadium was there before they were. If they can't stand a handful of games during the summer then they should move.

Quote:
"It was a loud, booming male speaker voice," said Park Ave. resident Virginia Nixon, who lives more than three blocks from the stadium.

I like how she just put the word "male" in there giving it some kind of unwarranted negative connotation.
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  #543  
Old Posted Jul 28, 2010, 3:49 PM
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I can't believe someone would be complaining about this!!!

I just had my million dollars idea, I'm going to open up a kleenex shop near every new developpment in Montreal..I'm bound to make a fortune since there are so many whiners around.
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  #544  
Old Posted Aug 1, 2010, 1:27 AM
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Does Dinu have this post for life? for fuxsaches, the guy has been there forfukinever.
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  #545  
Old Posted Aug 11, 2010, 12:08 AM
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Quartier des Spectacles

[img]dsc03124.jpg[/img]
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  #546  
Old Posted Aug 12, 2010, 3:07 AM
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Quartier des Spectacles

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  #547  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2010, 4:20 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Darkoshvilli View Post
I wouldn't say we're losing importance day by day (what the idiots at the globe and mail think doesn't matter) but we're definately moving at a very slow pace in terms of projects.
globe and mail ... haha

idiots... haha
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  #548  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2010, 1:24 PM
mr.John mr.John is offline
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Dinu and his gang are at it again



The redpath mansion is crumbling, but residents and protectors of the city's heritage buildings balk at allowing a developer to raze the house and build anew
By LINDA GYULAI, The Gazette August 19, 2010 7:54 AM Comments (1)
StoryPhotos ( 1 )
Tres surround the abandoned Redpath Masion on du Musée Ave. in downtown MontrealPhotograph by: Dario Ayala, The GazetteThe remains of the Redpath Mansion on downtown du Musee Ave. have stood for 24 years as a vestige of what preservationists hoped was a bygone era of battles to save heritage in Montreal's Square Mile.

However, a developer's renewed request to demolish what is left of the deteriorating structure at 3455-3457 du Musee to replace it with a 14-unit condo project is again sparking debate.

The Ville Marie borough will hold a public hearing Tuesday on the project by Amos and Michael Sochaczevski, who are father and son, as well as on five other rezoning projects around the borough.

The Queen Anne-style mansion was built in 1886 by architect Sir Andrew Taylor for the Redpath family, which founded the sugar-refining company of the same name, on a slope of Mount Royal overlooking Sherbrooke St. W.

Demolition was started in 1986 when members of the Sochaczevski family bought it, but Heritage Montreal sought a court injunction to halt it.

That left the facade and about 10 metres of the side walls standing.

A city appeal board blocked a second request by the Sochaczevskis to demolish the remaining structure in February 2002.

Now, the latest project calls for demolition and construction of a seven-storey building with 28 underground parking spaces.

The top three floors would be of glass and recessed on all sides so it's not noticeable from the street, the owners say.

The project, which passed first reading at a borough council meeting in July,

would stand 25 metres high, while the zoning allows for 16 metres.

However, Heritage Montreal says the plan violates an agreement it signed with the city and the Sochaczevskis in 1986 after the initial demolition was halted.

The agreement called for any future project to preserve and integrate the remains of the original building. It also called for the project to respect the scale and design of the original building.

"The Redpath project involves 24 years of trying to have discussions and it's being treated in a very shallow fashion," Heritage Montreal

policy director Dinu Bumbaru said.

However, the Sochaczevskis say the project is greatly reduced from an initial plan to build 11 storeys, and will breathe life into a derelict site.

"Finally, after 20 years, we have a project that will put a development worthy of the Golden Square Mile on the site," Michael Sochaczevski said.

"There is no building, there is only a ruined front."

The plan is to use the foundation of the original building and reuse some elements, such as the stone, in the new project, he said.

" We took a lot of things into account and we tried to please everybody and still have a reasonable project that makes common sense," Amos Sochaczevski said.

Moreover, the site is surrounded by 11-, 17-and 20-storey towers on neighbouring streets, the Sochaczevskis say.

However, Bumbaru countered that most of the towers date back to the 1970s when Montreal was a "frontier town" that lacked zoning rules.

"Nobody here says: 'Don't develop,' " said Jean-Francois Sauve, who lives behind the mansion on de la Montagne St. "Just respect the agreements that were made and the (zoning) rules that are in place.

Sauve says he's also concerned the project will block sunlight on his property and allow residents to peer into his garden and home.

"It's quite surprising that we're right downtown and the city can't enforce simple zoning," he said. "It's actually quite alarming."

lgyulai@thegazette.canwest.com

© Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette

Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/Mansi...#ixzz0x3djGFzI
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  #549  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2010, 5:55 PM
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is it too much to ask to preserve and renovate the mansion? They can build their crummy 7 storey condo of they want but i have to agree with Dino here, the house is worth preserving.
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  #550  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2010, 6:55 PM
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I would agree if there's something left to preserve..anyhow whatever lord Dinu wants he gets, this city is turning into a fucking joke
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  #551  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2010, 7:15 PM
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Dinu is the King of Montreal... Heil Dinu.
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  #552  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2010, 7:26 PM
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More madness Montreal style

City of Montreal taking back the Empress
Heritage building; Failed as cultural centre, needs many repairs

Decorative elements from the Empress building on Sherbrooke St. W. are crumbling, the roof needs repairs and there are other problems the city will tend to when it takes possession in November.Photograph by: John Kenney, The GazetteMONTREAL - Ownership of the crumbling remains of the Empress Theatre (Cinema V) on Sherbrooke St. W. will revert to the city of Montreal in November.

Eleven years after the site was purchased by the city and ownership given to a group that hoped to create some sort of community centre for the performing arts, the key will go back to the city centre -and with it the bills.

"Essentially, the work cannot be done by the community. The roof needs repairs, there are electrical issues, and there are other problems with this old heritage building," said Arnold Bennett, board member of the Empress Cultural Centre Inc., the not-for-profit group that is trying to resurrect what was once a thriving theatre and cabaret venue.

A decade of frustration and bad luck has dogged the folks who have been trying to turn the former movie complex into a performance venue for local troupes, and so before the building becomes a sorry wreck like the privately owned Seville, it will go back to the city.

When the provincial government's culture and communications ministry turned down a funding request in December 2009, and a similar request was also refused by Ottawa, the board members realized that they could not raise the estimated $10 million to $11 million needed to refurbish the place.

"We were certainly demoralized when Quebec said no," Bennett said.

The board also couldn't allow the building to deteriorate further.

"Temporarily, it's game over, but all kinds of discussions are going on looking for a solution," Bennett said.

"No. 1, the city is taking the building back to do the necessary repairs, No. 2, the borough will continue to work with the community," Bennett said.

While plans are up in the air, what will not happen is a conversion of the property to condos, Bennett said most emphatically.

"Even if the building is owned by the city, conversion to condos will not be tolerated by the borough," he said.


"There has been no decision made about the building. We are waiting to hear from the board," said city of Montreal spokesperson Darren Becker.

"The city has also been paying some of the costs on the upkeep of this building," Becker added.

Said Bennett: "Unless a solution is found to put money into this place, the building will sit empty, which is not in anybody's interest."

asutherland@thegazette.canwest.com

© Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette


Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/City+...#ixzz0x55dV400

You got to love that pompus ass Arnold Bennett after reducing the building to rubble over the past decade (under his leadership) he now declares conversion to condos will not be tolerated
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  #553  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2010, 7:37 PM
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Dinu the dinosaur. Reflects his thinking.
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  #554  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2010, 7:37 PM
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BE AFRAID BE VERY AFRAID





a quickr pickr post
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  #555  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2010, 7:43 PM
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Tremblay on the left, Madame English-hater on the right...who the hell is Goofy in the middle?
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The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts. (Bertrand Russell)
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  #556  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2010, 7:49 PM
mr.John mr.John is offline
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Tremblay's new boyfriend he just came out of the closet
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  #557  
Old Posted Aug 26, 2010, 1:07 AM
mr.John mr.John is offline
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No more baseball in Montreal, thank god is all I have to say, get a load of the scam artists involved in this sport


Marlins’ profits came at taxpayer expense

By Jeff Passan, Yahoo! Sports
Aug 24, 9:17 pm EDT

The swindlers who run the Florida Marlins got exposed Monday. They are as bad as anyone on Wall Street, scheming, misleading and ultimately sticking taxpayers with a multibillion-dollar tab. Corporate fraud is alive and well in Major League Baseball.

A look at the leak of the Marlins’ financial information to Deadspin confirmed the long-held belief that the team takes a healthy chunk of MLB-distributed money for profit. Owner Jeffrey Loria and president David Samson for years have contended the Marlins break even financially, the centerpiece fiscal argument that resulted in local governments gifting them a new stadium that will cost generations of taxpayers an estimated $2.4 billion. They said they had no money to do it alone and intimated they would have to move the team without public assistance.

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Documents revealed Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria misled the public to get a new stadium deal.

(Doug Benc/Getty Images)
In fact, documents show, the Marlins could have paid for a significant amount of the new stadium’s construction themselves and still turned an annual operating profit. Instead, they cried poor to con feckless politicians that sold out their constituents.

The ugliness of the Marlins’ ballpark situation is already apparent, and the building doesn’t open for another 18 months. Somehow a team that listed its operating income as a healthy $37.8 million in 2008 alone swung a deal in which it would pay only $155 million of the $634 million stadium complex. Meanwhile, Miami-Dade County agreed – without the consent of taxpayers – to take $409 million in loans loaded with balloon payments and long grace periods. By 2049, when the debt is due, the county will have paid billions.

Most harrowing is the takeaway that baseball’s biggest welfare case could have funded a much greater portion of the ballpark. In 2009, when the Marlins started spending some of their profits on their portion of the stadium, they still had an operating income of $11.1 million. The team fought to conceal the $48.9 million in profits over the last two years because the revelation would have prompted county commissioners to insist the team provide more funding. Loria, an art dealer with a net worth of hundreds of millions, wouldn’t stand for that. He wanted as much public funding as possible – money that could’ve gone toward education or to save some of the 1,200 jobs the county is cutting this year.

Surely Samson was joking when he called the leak of the Marlins documents and those of five other teams “a crime.” No, the real misdeed occurred when the head of a professional sports franchise misled the public in order to secure money that wasn’t his. When Forbes in 2007 reported the Marlins had the highest operating income in baseball, Samson denied the team profited, saying: “Very often the mistake that’s made is they look at revenue sharing numbers and the team’s payroll and take the difference and see profit without looking at our expenses.”

Well, now we have a look, and it’s clear what happened: The Marlins loaded money into their coffers and held hostage a city afraid of losing a team, then leveraged it into a sweetheart deal like so many teams across baseball during the stadium boom of the last 20 years.

“It’s not that teams need new stadiums, either,” said Neil deMause, whose book “Field of Schemes” blew the lid off ballpark boondoggles. “They need new revenues. It’s really just a bailout. It would be cheaper to just give the teams the money. But then it would just look like a handout. The stadiums have become part of the business model for teams.”


File illustration released by the City of Miami on Jan. 27, 2009, shows the proposed new Florida Marlins baseball team's ballpark.

(AP Photo/City of Miami, HO, File)
Not nearly enough credit goes to the proliferation of new stadiums for turning the game into a $6 billion-plus business. In case after case, teams built stadiums with a majority of the funding from public sources and today keep nearly all of the profits generated from games. Commissioner Bud Selig traveled city to city, the pied piper of ballparks, urging voters or city councils or whoever held the checkbook to do the right thing. Always left unsaid was his implication: Or else. However idle the threat, it almost always worked.

And it’s still working. Even if Miami isn’t exactly a baseball town – the Marlins are behind the Dolphins and Heat in popularity – Samson believes the new stadium on the old Orange Bowl site will expand the team’s season-ticket base from around 5,000 to 15,000 or 20,000. If-you-build-it-they-will-come is nothing more than a myth, proven false by Pittsburgh and Washington and Cincinnati.

It matters not how sparkling the new stadium is, though the embellishments on the Marlins’ only add to the ridiculousness of the whole project. Guess which of the following is not true:

a. The Marlins procured $5.3 million in funding from the county’s Art in Public Places department and gave $2.5 million of it to pop artist Red Grooms, who will design a piece with pelicans and seagulls and bright colors and abstract shapes and, best of all, animatronic marlins that celebrate home runs.

b. Billy the Marlin will hold nightly karaoke sessions in left field.

c. Behind the catcher will be 58 feet worth of reef-fish-stuffed aquariums built into the backstop.


Marlins team president David Samson listens to closing arguments during a 2008 lawsuit challenging a $3 billion public works financing plan that includes money for a new ballpark.

(John Vanbeekum/AP Photo)
Sadly, $2.4 billion is not enough to buy mascot sing-alongs.

It is enough to stink. In the annals of bad stadium deals, it’s among the most odious, right alongside the Washington Nationals’ extraction of $611 million from the D.C. city council to get Nationals Park built. The team spent $20 million on a parking garage and pays $5.5 million a year in rent. So desperate was Washington to become the landing spot for the Montreal Expos, it ignored reality – there were no other legitimate options for MLB – and vastly overpaid.

Such sentiments are echoed when looking at the Marlins’ deal. One of the county’s loans is particularly egregious. According to the Miami Herald, J.P. Morgan gave a $91 million note – $80 million of which will go toward construction – that from 2041-47 will cost $118 million per year. In all, the county will spend $1.2 billion to pay off $91 million.

One of the county commissioners who voted against the funding, Katy Sorenson, told the Herald: “It is very expensive money.” The county is banking on inflation making $118 million a relative pittance by the 2040s, by which time Hanley Ramirez(notes) will be social security age.

It’s entirely possible – and quite probable – that the Marlins profited more than $91 million in the three years leading up to the county commissioners’ passing the stadium plan in ’08, even with their games at Sun Life Stadium, supposedly the only thing holding the team back from being able to spend on payroll. The inclination to keep salaries at pathetic levels – a dozen players around baseball each made more in 2006 than the entire Marlins team – went unchecked until last offseason, when MLB finally reprimanded the Marlins for purloining too much of the $75 million or so in revenue sharing and Central Fund monies they receive annually.

It was nothing more than a slap on the wrist. MLB knew the Marlins were saving their money to pay off their stadium debt, which, though prudent, does not support Samson’s contention Monday that “we could have had [Miguel] Cabrera but no ballpark.” That’s more propaganda, more truth-stretching. With the new revenue streams, the Marlins could have kept Cabrera. They essentially sandbagged half a decade worth of games by using their money to cover their $155 million on the stadium’s construction, $35 million of which will be rent payments and some of which likely will be subsidized by naming rights.

Every cent from inside the stadium will end up on the Marlins’ balance sheets. Come 2012, they’ll be free to reap their revenue-sharing, Central Fund and ballpark profits while the county prays enough tourism-tax dollars pour in to help pay off the loans.

“[Owners] simply don’t tell the truth about the finances,” deMause said. “Or if they do, it’s in such a narrow way.”

Take a January 2008 luncheon Tampa Bay Rays president Matt Silverman spoke at in St. Petersburg. According to the St. Petersburg Times, in front of a crowd of businesspeople, Silverman declared: “We’re cash-flow negative.”

The Deadspin documents show the Rays were anything but in the red. In fiscal 2007, which had ended exactly 26 days before Silverman spoke, the Rays’ operating income was $21.7 million. And, if Silverman cares to quibble, the Rays listed $37,626 on the line of “cash and cash equivalents.” While in 2008 the Rays’ earnings dropped to $14,202,206, they didn’t have any kind of a cash-flow problem: Their cash and cash equivalents were $32,521,742.

It brings to mind the famous quote from Paul Beeston, the former president of MLB who now runs the Toronto Blue Jays: “Under generally accepted accounting principles, I can turn a $4 million profit into a $2 million loss, and I can get every national accounting firm to agree with me.”

The truth of big business is ugly, and while a peek inside baseball’s sausage factory is fascinating, it’s also sobering. A 37,000-seat, baseball-only stadium is going up in Little Havana right now, and the team that procured it systematically hid the truth from the people whose money they’re using to build it.

During the county commissioners’ stadium tete-a-tetes with the Marlins, they asked time and again for the team to release its financial statements. It was only fair, right? The county was willing to pledge billions of dollars. It deserved to know who would reap the bounty.

The Marlins never budged. They kept everything a secret and set themselves up for a bountiful future and had the gall to grow angry when documents surfaced that should’ve been made public in the first place. They were shown for the swindlers they are.

Unfortunately, it was $2.4 billion too late.
http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slu...nancials082410
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  #558  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2010, 1:12 AM
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David Samsonofabitch ("thanks dad!") is a colossal pile of shit, only rivaled by his farter-in-law, Jeffuck Loriass.

I hate those fuckers. very badly. I wish ill upon them.

-'spos fan
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  #559  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2010, 4:48 AM
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I would much prefer a major league baseball team in this city over some C-grade soccer team.
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  #560  
Old Posted Aug 29, 2010, 2:08 AM
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5-hour lineup to secure condo at Montreal's old Seville site
By Megan Martin, Montreal Gazette August 28, 2010 7:19 PM •Story•Photos ( 1 )
Interested buyers surround the Seville condo project office at Ste. Catherine and Lamert-Closse Sts. in Montreal on Saturday, Aug. 28, 2010Photograph by: Bryanna Bradley, The GazetteMONTREAL - Over 300 people lined up on Ste. Catherine St. this weekend for the chance to reserve one of the new condo units being built in the Le Seville project at the site of the old theatre.

"We were not expecting a crowd like this," said Jacques Vincent, co-president of Prével, the developer handling the Le Seville project. "There's been a lot of interest, but a response like this is very encouraging; I'm sure we will be sold out of Phase One units by the end of the day."

The project, pegged at $112 million, includes three phases. Phase One consists of 99 units, the construction of which starts in the fall.

"We're very excited, very happy, it's our first place," said Karen Menegon and Gianni Panzera. The couple walked out of the project's office beaming after reserving their condo. "It took us about five hours, but it was well worth the wait."

The condos will be ready for delivery in the spring of 2012. The Phase One units go from 450 to 950 square feet and prices range from $144,000 to $350,000.


"It's a great location and they're really not expensive compared to everything else that's for sale," said Stephanie Potash, a native of Terrebonne who was waiting in line Saturday. "People know that they can probably sell this in a few years for more than they paid, it's a great investment."


Phase Two of the project consists of 120 units and will go on sale in the fall. The company plans to start construction on this phase in the spring of 2011. And Phase Three, 230 units, will follow after that.

"Montreal is densely populated, so there's a lot of interest in any new project," Vincent said. "There's an interest in the area specifically because it's downtown and very central."

Prével has been in business for 32 years and has done several well-known projects in Montreal including Lowney Urban Condos and Imperial Lofts.

mmartin@thegazette.canwest.com

© Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette

Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/Five+...#ixzz0xxNeC8pQ
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