Â鶹AV

Participant·e·s de la série Montréalais·es et insulaires

Montréalers and Islanders

Â鶹AV

Are Montréalers islanders who are ignoring their geography? By travelling on paved roads from north to south and climbing the skyscrapers of downtown, it is easy for the inhabitants of the metropolis to forget that, by travelling only a few kilometres, they can enjoy the sights and smells of a majestic river. With a history that is as rich as its ecosystem, the river presents several issues that are as ramified and complex as its waterway

The Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Montréal (CIRM) is inviting the research community, actors from the maritime sector, and citizens to meet on the shores of the St. Lawrence during three conference-experiences. These thematic meetings combine field visits with interdisciplinary and multisectorial discussions to collectively reflect on the fluvial issues of the city.

This series of conference-experiences forms a part of the programming, which is organized by .

Season 1

For its first season, the series tackled issues related to biodiversity, maritime transport, and shoreline accessibility. Because of public health guidelines, it was held without an audience; it will be the subject of a digital publication and audio recording.

Poster for "The St. Lawrence River: A Meeting Place"01.01. The St. Lawrence River: A Meeting Place

June 5, 2021 | Verdun

Dominated by skyscrapers and concrete roads, Montréal is rarely construed by its citizen as a natural environment. However, the COVID-19 pandemic and its different confinements have increasingly made it possible for Montrealers to observe the presence of wildlife in the city – geese, wild turkey, coyotes, deer, birds of prey, etc. – and to recognize the fragility of Montréal’s ecosystem and of the relationships between humans and nature, both wild and otherwise. The environmental crises that our planet is confronted with require the development of better modes of interspecies communication and cohabitation. What better place to engage in an interdisciplinary discussion on biodiversity and ecological equilibrium with Montrealers than on the shores of the St. Lawrence? Meeting places and sites for intercultural exchanges – with their boardwalks, beaches, and park –, the shores of Montréal and the waters of its river also act as a site for interspecies exchanges. While humans use the St. Lawrence as a transit route for trade and, in some cases, to manage sewage, the river also acts as a source of food and refuge, a breeding ground and a place for migrations.

Panelists

Scientific Director
  • Natalie Doonan (Associate Professor, Communications Department, Université de Montréal / CIRM)
Guests
  • Eugénie Potvin (Coordinator, )
  • (Full Professor, Department of History, Université de Montréal)
  • Sabine Courcier (Planning Consultant, Service des grands parcs, du Mont-Royal et des sports, Ville de Montréal)
  • Geneviève D'Avignon (PhD student, Department of Biology, Â鶹AV U.)


CIRM is grateful to the for its collaboration in presenting this event. This organization manages the Éco-quartier program in Verdun. It offers a front-line service for citizens and ICIs to guide them towards better environmental practices.


Poster for "Hit the Waters, Montréalers!"01.02. Hit the Waters, Montréalers!

June 12, 2021 | Mercier-Hochelaga-Maisonneuve

The access to water in Montréal is often in the news due to citizen advocacy (), political projects and public events. Recent projects, like the access to the Bellerive shoreline, and achievements (Verdun beach, downtown/Pointe-aux-Trembles shuttle, East beach, etc.) punctually demonstrate the interest of citizens toward this issue. If the water surrounding Montréal sometimes intrudes into the public urban domain, through flooding or the surfacing of streams, there is no doubt that Montrealers are cut off, both symbolically and physically, from their shores for recreation. However, this issue always presents itself as unique and uniform to the entire island. The event Hit the Waters, Montrealers! highlights the multiplicity of possibilities for the island of Montréal and is an opportunity to reflect on access to water in the plural. On the one hand, the island of Montréal is comprised of urban grids, historical and contemporary water practices, and different needs in terms of access to water for its fauna and flora. From the island’s shores to the city center, East to West, and North to South, local cultures and environments have distinct constraints and assets that can be unequal. On the other hand, the water surrounding Montréal takes on diverse forms and offers experiences that are either unknown or already overexploited. Despite its variable characteristics, water remains an important connector between the West and the East, between Montréal and its greater region, and between the urban side of the archipelago and its nature.

Thinking not in terms of one access to water, but of several accesses to Montreal's waters can be put in these terms: Should we and can we diversify accesses to Montréal's waters? If so, how should these accesses be? How can we promote diversified accesses to water without neglecting its connectivity? How do recent and past projects compel us to do better? How can we take action and appropriate the waters around Montréal in diverse and specific manners?

Panelists

Scientific Director
  • Nathalie Boucher (Director, / CIRM)
Guests
  • Scott McKay (President, )
  • Gérald Domon (Director, Chair in Landscape and Environment, Université de Montréal)
  • Yves Plante (Director, )
  • Victor Balsis (President, )


CIRM is grateful to the for its collaboration in presenting this event. The mission of this organization is to maintain and develop a window on the river through the implementation of sports, outdoor, leisure, cultural and recreational-tourism activities.

Ìý


Poster for "Green Cargos: the Challenges of Maritime Transport in the St. Lawrence River"01.03. Green Cargos: The Challenges of Maritime Transport in the St. Lawrence River

June 19, 2021 |ÌýEast End of Montréal

The St. Lawrence River is one of the major facilitators of economic activity in Montréal.

In view of the current challenges of redefining the economy, both globally and locally, in a context exacerbated by the health crisis, Quebec is launching a green economy plan for 2030. The transportation sector is particularly targeted by this policy, and we know the importance of the in maritime transportation for all Eastern Canada and the American Midwest. That being said, the transit of large tonnages of goods through Montréal also has a major environmental impact on our territory.

Thus, is maritime transport, usually described as green, as ecological and sustainable as it is made out to be when these environmental impacts are taken into account? What efforts have been made by the port, its logistics partners, and local institutions to minimize not only GHG emissions, but also damage to biodiversity in the wetlands and waterways of the St. Lawrence River in the Montréal region? How can we better assess the impacts of maritime transportation on local and regional river spaces? How can civil society, communities, and the inhabitants of the island of Montréal accompany, guide, enhance, and complete these projects and actions?

Panelists

Scientific Director
  • Jeanne-Hélène Jugie (Water Issues Facilitator, Comité ZIP Jacques-Cartier / Associate Member, CIRM)
Guests
  • Claude Comtois (Full Professor, Department of Geography, Université de Montréal)
  • Claude Deschambault (Director of Environmental Services, )
  • Jean Aubry-MorinÌý(Vice President, External Relations, )
  • Caroline Denis (Environmental Programmes Manager, )
  • Catherine Guillemette (Senior Environmental Advisor, Environmental Management Branch, )


CIRM would like to thank the for its collaboration in presenting this event. This non-profit organization's mission is to put into action its expertise as a facilitator, its knowledge and its network of partners to promote the harmonious cohabitation of human activities that affect the health of the aquatic and riparian ecosystems of the Montréal archipelago.


Season 2

Montréalers and Islanders. A series of conferences-experiences. Nordicité fluviale montréalaise02.01. Nordicité fluviale montréalaise

May 14, 2022 |ÌýLaSalle

How is the St. Lawrence River experienced, from Montréal, in the winter? What perceptions do Montréalers have of this large waterway during the coldest season? While there appears to be numerous obstacles to accessing and using the river for urban residents in the summer, how is it when the shores are covered in ice, snow, and frost?

Nordicité fluviale montréalaise,Ìýthe first event of the second season, addresses the river from the point of view of Montréal’s nordicity. While touring LaSalle, guests will discuss the openness of Montréal towards the river in the winter, the current or potential practices and knowledge, as well as resources and inspirations from near and far that can be exploited to (re)claim this large frozen body.

This event builds on reflections that began duringÌýHit the Waters, Montréalers!

Panelists

Scientific Director
Guests
  • Simon LebrunÌý(Captain / Member,Ìý)
  • Ìý()
  • Pierre DumontÌý(Biologist)
  • Rodolphe LasnesÌý(Author ofÌý, Leméac)
  • Sébastien ZappaÌý(Wim Hof Method Certified Instructor,Ìý)


CIRM would like to thank Ìýfor its collaboration in presenting this event.


Montréalers and Islanders. A series of conferences-experiences. Le fleuve qui nous traverse02.02. Le fleuve qui nous traverse

June 11, 2022 |ÌýVerdun

Located in the heart of an archipelago of more than 300 islands, Montréal is part of a vast hydrographic network of which the St. Lawrence River is one of the main waterways. However, Montréal is not only bordered by the St. Lawrence and its confluences, but also by its tributaries.

The activityÌýLe fleuve qui nous traverseÌýinvites us not to turn our gaze towards the fluvial horizon, but to consider the various waterways that used to run through the island’s underground passages and still do so, whether natural or constructed (think of the city’s aqueduct and interchange networks), and that feed the St. Lawrence.Ìý

Panelists

Scientific Director
  • Ìý(Associate Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Concordia University)
Guests
  • Louise LegaultÌý(Spokesperson,Ìý)
  • Pascale RouilléÌý(Urban Planner and President,Ìý)
  • Danielle PlamondonÌý(Urban Speleologist)
  • Yenny Vega Cárdenas (Lawyer and President,Ìý)


CIRM would like to thank Ìýfor its collaboration in presenting this event.


Montréalers and Islanders. A series of conferences-experiences. Berges culturelles02.03. Berges culturelles

June 18, 2022 |ÌýLachine

To promote the appropriation of riverbanks by locals and tourists, many urban planning projects have focused on arts and culture.

Amongst the many projects that have made use of public artworks, we can think ofÌý, which runs between Nantes and Saint-Nazaire or, closer to us, at the Samuel-De Champlain boardwalk in Québec City. Based on the case of Montréal and considering culture in a broad sense, this conference-experience will question in what ways arts and culture can or could be a driving force for (re)discovering the St. Lawrence River.

Panelists

Scientific Director
  • Laurent VernetÌý(Associate Member, CIRM; Director, Centre d’exposition de l’Université de Montréal)
Guests
  • Anouk BélangerÌý(Axis director, CIRM; Professor, Department of Social and Public Communication, UQAM)
  • Ìý(Museologist and Public Art Specialist)
  • Geneviève Dupéré (Researcher at CRITAC and Maritime Designer; PhD Student in Art Studies and Practices, UQAM;Ìý)
  • Lisette LemieuxÌý(Artist,Ìý)


CIRM would like to thank Ìýfor its collaboration in presenting this event.


Partners

ÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌý ÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌý ÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌý

Back to top