Montreal Metro Station | |
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Borough | Le Sud-Ouest |
City | Montreal |
Opened | 28 April 1980 |
Line | Orange Line |
Architect | Pierre-W. Major |
Artist | Michel Dernuet, Claude Théberge, & Antoine D. Lamarche |
Platform Depth | 17.7 metres |
Rank | 20th deepest |
Traffic | 736,976 entrances in 2006 |
Rank | 64th busiest |
Interstation Distance |
758.60 metres to Lionel-Groulx 530.60 metres to Lucien-L'Allier |
Address of Entrances |
2040, rue Saint-Antoine ouest |
Nearby Main Intersections |
rue Saint-Antoine ouest / boul. Georges-Vanier [1] |
Georges-Vanier is a station on the Orange Line of the Montreal Metro rapid transit system, operated by the Société de transport de Montréal (STM). It is located in the Little Burgundy area of the borough of Le Sud-Ouest in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.[2]
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The metro station, designed by architect Pierre-W. Major, is a normal side platform station, and has one access. A sculpture, Un arbre dans le parc, by Michel Dernuet, is situated on the Côte-Vertu platform; it is a large concrete pillar with illuminated branches, representing a tree.
This station is one of the least used in the network; it was 65th of 65 in traffic in 2001, 64th in 2002 and held the same position in the 2006 count with 736 976 passengers embarking here.
This station is named for the boul. Georges-Vanier, named for the Rt. Hon. Georges-Philias Vanier. Born a few steps from the street that now bears his name, Major-General Vanier was a distinguished soldier in World War I and Canada's ambassador to all Allied governments in World War II. He served as the 19th Governor General of Canada, the first French-Canadian to occupy that position, from 1959 until his death.
No bus routes serve this station. The closest bus route is line 36 Monk (Map, Schedule) on rue Notre-Dame corner boul. Georges-Vanier to the south.
On May 26, 2008 the STM announced the temporary closure of the Georges-Vanier station from June 2, 2008 to September 5, 2008 due to major repairs needed at the station.[3]
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