Bens De Luxe Delicatessen and Restaurant was a renowned delicatessen in Montreal. The restaurant was famed for its smoked meat sandwich. During its heyday it was a popular late-night dining fixture in the downtown core and a favourite eatery of many celebrities. It was open for nearly a century, from 1908 to 2006. At 98 years it was the oldest deli in the city.
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The restaurant was at 990 De Maisonneuve Boulevard west on the southeast corner of the intersection with Metcalfe. A three-storey brown brick building, designed in 1950 by C. Davis Goodman, it had a rounded front corner facing, green awnings, large bay windows and a large illuminated wrap-around sign. The restaurant was on the ground floor and two upper floors were rented. This was Bens third location.
The interior was seemingly unchanged through the years. Its columns and walls were painted in bright greens and yellows with chrome siding, it had a stainless steel edged counter with rows of chrome counter stools, and terrazzo floors. The chairs were bright yellow, orange and green. Walls were covered in photographs of celebrities who had dined at the restaurant; one spot was dubbed "Bens Wall of Fame." Bens employed only waiters, who wore a black bow tie and white buttoned shirt with black dress pants and shoes, along with an white waist apron. Melmac plates with 1950s styled cutlery were used.
Latvian immigrants Ben and Fanny Kravitz opened a small counter shop restaurant on Saint Lawrence Boulevard in Montreal in 1908. In 1929 they moved to de Maisonneuve (formerly Burnside) and Mansfield, and to their final location in 1950. The restaurant was open 23 hours daily, closed only for cleaning. The 1001 Burnside location, in the theatre district behind the Sheraton Mount Royal Hotel, was a popular late-night dining haunt for celebrities and movie stars.
Kravitz passed the business on to his son Irving, who would often be seen working at the deli. At the height of its popularity, from the 1950s to the early 1980s, the restaurant had 75 employees. Customers often formed lunchtime line-ups that stretched around the block.
Many well known and famous people frequented the restaurant,[1] including Canadian Prime Ministers Pierre Trudeau and Paul Martin, Quebec Premiers René Lévesque, Jacques Parizeau and Jean Charest, Free Trade negotiator Simon Reisman, artists Leonard Cohen and Irving Layton, entertainers Ed Sullivan, Burl Ives, Bette Midler, Jack Benny and Liberace, and sportsmen Bob Geary, Gordie Howe and Jean Béliveau (one of the many Montreal Canadiens that ate at the deli.)
Smoked meat fans debated whether Bens or Schwartz's (another local deli) had the best smoked meat sandwich. Bens thin sliced meat was piled high between rye bread, while Schwartz's offers plates of thickly cut smoked meat. Bens had a long standing and widely believed advertising slogan that claimed the restaurant had invented smoked meat, but this has been debunked by Jewish food and cultural historians.[2]
The 1990s were difficult for Bens, with the death of the owner followed by labour disputes and declining patronage. Irving Kravitz died in 1992, leaving the restaurant to wife Jean and son Elliot. Business began to decline, the staff was reduced (down to 25) and the quality of the food and service was lesser than previous years. The restaurant was open only 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. (2 a.m. on weekends.) In 1995 the employees unionized. Though the restaurant got a poor reputation, it remained popular with tourists, based on its history and the charm of its old-time decor. Reviews criticized the quality of smoked meat and other signature dishes, as well as skimpy portions and high prices.
The beginning of the end started on July 20, 2006 when employees voted to strike. The restaurant closed and would not reopen. On December 15, 2006, the owners agreed to sell to SIDEV Realty Corporation[3] and officially announced the closure, bringing the restaurant's long history to an end. SIDEV bought the restaurant for the property, and announced a new building project.
SIDEV planned to build a 15-storey hotel on the property, but faced opposition. For nearly two years Bens sat empty, with its contents and memorabilia stacked inside. The building was one of the top 10 endangered places in Canada, according to the Heritage Canada Foundation. Described as a "cultural icon", an editorial in the Montreal Gazette disagreed, calling it a "cheap, miserable example of art deco," "soulless" and a "charmless collection of drab tan bricks."[4] The Art Deco Society of Montreal[5] wanted it preserved, as a tourist attraction and movie set as it had a Streamline Moderne motif.[6] They wanted the city to stop the demolition and the building be declared a heritage site by the province.
On April 4, 2008, the city of Montreal stated it planned to allow demolition of the building and held a public hearing.[7] On June 3 the Ville-Marie council unanimously voted to demolish the building, a condition being the developer must commemorate the deli in the new building. Demolition started September 25. On October 1, the iconic Bens wrap-around sign was removed and October 29 the vertical red Bens sign, that was visible for several blocks, was taken down. Demolition was complete in November. The deli memorabilia, including autographed photos from Bens Wall of Fame, menus and signage, were donated to the McCord Museum.[8] The large red letters from above the main entrance are now on display in the Communication Studies and Journalism (CJ) building on the Loyola campus of Concordia University[9] as part of the Montreal Signs Project.
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