Every July, the post-industrial, open-air venue of Bassin Peel is dressed in string lights, thundering with drums, and smelling of smoke from grills working at full tilt.
Chợ Đêm MTL is back from July 16 to 19, 2026 for its fourth edition: 22 food stalls slinging Hanoi-style cà phê trứng (egg coffee) and bò lá lốt (grilled beef in betel leaves), handmade ceramics, V-Pop dance classes, cooking demos, and roundtables on hybrid identity collect on one Griffintown waterfront with 25,000 people expected in attendance.
To be clear, calling this a night market undersells the project (we only use the term to help readers picture the festivities in their mind). At its core, Chợ Đêm MTL is a sweeping Vietnamese cultural festival: What started four years ago as a grassroots gathering has become the place where Montreal's Vietnamese community, now three generations deep, explores where its culture comes from and what that culture is becoming. Elders and adoptees, first-gen kids and newcomers, artists and aunties all get a seat in kind while the rest of the city is invited to pull up a short plastic stool.
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