The Main

Répertoire culturel de Montréal

Aidez-nous à nous améliorer ! Partagez vos idées sur la façon dont nous pouvons améliorer votre expérience.

Laisser un commentaire

Pour les partenariats et collaborations :

partnerships@themain.com

Contenu

  • Articles
  • Gastronomie
  • Arts et culture
  • Leçon d'histoire
  • Bulletin
  • Événements

Guides

  • Tous les guides
  • Meilleurs restaurants
  • Meilleurs cafés
  • Meilleurs bars
  • Meilleurs brunchs
  • Meilleures boulangeries

Explorer Montréal

  • Parcourir le répertoire
  • Restaurants
  • Bars
  • Cafés
  • Librairies

À propos

  • À propos de nous
  • S'abonner
  • Boutique
  • Publicité
  • Proposer un sujet
  • Flux RSS

Légal

  • Conditions d'utilisation
  • Conditions d'adhésion
  • Politique de confidentialité
Suivez-nous
InstagramTwitterTiktokLinkedin

The Main Media Inc. 2026

✦ Built By Field Office
    The Main

    Répertoire culturel de Montréal

    Aidez-nous à nous améliorer ! Partagez vos idées sur la façon dont nous pouvons améliorer votre expérience.

    Laisser un commentaire

    Pour les partenariats et collaborations :

    partnerships@themain.com

    Contenu

    • Articles
    • Gastronomie
    • Arts et culture
    • Leçon d'histoire
    • Bulletin
    • Événements

    Guides

    • Tous les guides
    • Meilleurs restaurants
    • Meilleurs cafés
    • Meilleurs bars
    • Meilleurs brunchs
    • Meilleures boulangeries

    Explorer Montréal

    • Parcourir le répertoire
    • Restaurants
    • Bars
    • Cafés
    • Librairies

    À propos

    • À propos de nous
    • S'abonner
    • Boutique
    • Publicité
    • Proposer un sujet
    • Flux RSS

    Légal

    • Conditions d'utilisation
    • Conditions d'adhésion
    • Politique de confidentialité
    Suivez-nous
    InstagramTwitterTiktokLinkedin

    The Main Media Inc. 2026

    ✦ Built By Field Office
      --°C|jeudi 9 avril 2026|
      Abonnez-vous aujourd'hui pour obtenir 3 articles gratuits par mois.ROYALMOUNT Veut Être Votre Destination Culinaire Pendant Un Mois Entier50 % de réduction sur vos 5 premières courses avec Lyft
      InstagramTwitterTiktokLinkedin
      |
      Publicité
      Le logo de The Main
      Arts et cultureManger & boireHistoireGuides
      Explorez
      Guides populaires
      • Les meilleurs restaurants à Montréal
      • Meilleurs nouveaux restaurants
      • Meilleurs cafés
      • Boutiques uniques
      • Restaurants romantiques
      • Meilleures librairies
      • Voir tous les guides
      Quartier
      • Downtown
      • Le Plateau-Mont-Royal
      • Mile End
      • Mile-Ex
      • Saint-Henri
      • Voir tout
      Type d'entreprise
      • Restaurant
      • Café
      • Boutique / Store
      • Bar
      • Bakery
      • Voir tout
      Près du métro
      • Peel
      • Mont-Royal
      • Place-Saint-Henri
      • Place-d'Armes
      • Jarry
      • Voir tout
      Plus
      Catégories
      • Au-delà de Montréal

        Voyages, aventures et regards sur le monde.

      • Design

        Le meilleur du design montréalais.

      • Histoire

        Histoires, leçons et contexte.

      • Infolettre

        Notre infolettre hebdomadaire.

      • Météo
      • Voir toutes les articles originales
      Boutique
      Inscription
      Inscription
      --°C|jeudi 9 avril 2026|
      Abonnez-vous aujourd'hui pour obtenir 3 articles gratuits par mois.ROYALMOUNT Veut Être Votre Destination Culinaire Pendant Un Mois Entier50 % de réduction sur vos 5 premières courses avec Lyft
      InstagramTwitterTiktokLinkedin
      |
      Publicité
      Le logo de The Main
      Arts et cultureManger & boireHistoireGuides
      Explorez
      Guides populaires
      • Les meilleurs restaurants à Montréal
      • Meilleurs nouveaux restaurants
      • Meilleurs cafés
      • Boutiques uniques
      • Restaurants romantiques
      • Meilleures librairies
      • Voir tous les guides
      Quartier
      • Downtown
      • Le Plateau-Mont-Royal
      • Mile End
      • Mile-Ex
      • Saint-Henri
      • Voir tout
      Type d'entreprise
      • Restaurant
      • Café
      • Boutique / Store
      • Bar
      • Bakery
      • Voir tout
      Près du métro
      • Peel
      • Mont-Royal
      • Place-Saint-Henri
      • Place-d'Armes
      • Jarry
      • Voir tout
      Plus
      Catégories
      • Au-delà de Montréal

        Voyages, aventures et regards sur le monde.

      • Design

        Le meilleur du design montréalais.

      • Histoire

        Histoires, leçons et contexte.

      • Infolettre

        Notre infolettre hebdomadaire.

      • Météo
      • Voir toutes les articles originales
      Boutique
      Inscription
      Inscription
      Design

      Who Will the Entrepôt Van Horne Belong To?

      Plans are in motion for the century-old warehouse, but whether it becomes what the neighbourhood needs is another question entirely.

      ParJ.P. Karwacki

      9 avril 2026 · 5 min de lecture

      Who Will the Entrepôt Van Horne Belong To?
      Photograph: Eva Blue / @evablue

      The Entrepôt Van Horne's seven storeys of exposed concrete and brick along Van Horne Avenue, a nearly windowless façades rising out of the wedge of land between Saint-Laurent Boulevard and the CP rail corridor, has become a icon of the city's northside skyline over the years. Even its rusted water tower punching up above the roofline.

      Over its century of existence it's been a grain warehouse, document storage depot, and canvas for artists, and now a source of neighbourhood debate over what its future should be. After years of back-and-forth between developer, borough, and the public, that future is finally taking shape.

      Entrepôt Van Horne, 1982. | Photograph: Gabor Szilasi

      A quick backstory

      The warehouse was built in 1924 by Wilfrid Duquette, a flour, grain and coal merchant who had been operating along Saint-Laurent since the early 1900s. The site was ideal: it sat directly adjacent to the Canadian Pacific transcontinental rail line, making it a natural hub for moving goods between the rail network and the city's streets. Three freight elevators handled cargo inside, while thick masonry walls kept merchandise temperature-stable and a sophisticated dry-sprinkler system guarded against fire. The water tower atop the building, installed as part of that fire-suppression infrastructure, stopped being used in 1992 and remains the last surviving industrial water tower in the neighbourhood.

      Free account required

      Pour ceux qui ont Montréal à cœur

      Créez un compte gratuit pour lire cet article et accéder à 3 articles par mois, ainsi qu'à notre Bulletin hebdomadaire.

      Indépendant. Local. Soutenu par ses lecteurs.

      ou

      Déjà membre? Se connecter

      The Main

      Advertisement

      Follow on Google
      Estudio Niksen Defines Itself—and Finds Success—in the Art of Doing Nothing
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Elle Magni

      Estudio Niksen Defines Itself—and Finds Success—in the Art of Doing Nothing

      The Saint-Henri brand built itself on the Dutch philosophy of doing nothing. The result is some of the most intentional fashion coming out of Montreal.

      Stop Building Sad Cities
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Philippe Demers

      Stop Building Sad Cities

      Dull architecture has a real cost, and Montreal is paying it.

      The Story Behind the Biergarten Table That Became a Terrasse Staple
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Christopher DeWolf

      The Story Behind the Biergarten Table That Became a Terrasse Staple

      Lea Berger missed the folding biergarten tables of her German childhood. A decade later, they're at every great bar in Montreal, shipped in from Stuttgart.

      Montreal Finally Has a Design Week to Call Its Own
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      Montreal Finally Has a Design Week to Call Its Own

      Twenty years after earning its UNESCO City of Design designation, Montreal is consolidating its scattered design events under one banner for the first time.

      Montreal Has a Winter Identity. But Who Does It Belong To?
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Philippe Demers

      Montreal Has a Winter Identity. But Who Does It Belong To?

      Our city has made winter an art form, so the next step is making sure everyone's invited to enjoy it.

      Montreal’s public spaces are good, but are they good enough?
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Philippe Demers

      Montreal’s Public Spaces Are Good, but Are They Good Enough?

      Other cities are rethinking how everyday spaces support connection, comfort, and community. Here are five trends Montreal should be paying attention to in 2026.

      Design

      Who Will the Entrepôt Van Horne Belong To?

      Plans are in motion for the century-old warehouse, but whether it becomes what the neighbourhood needs is another question entirely.

      ParJ.P. Karwacki

      9 avril 2026 · 5 min de lecture

      Who Will the Entrepôt Van Horne Belong To?
      Photograph: Eva Blue / @evablue

      The Entrepôt Van Horne's seven storeys of exposed concrete and brick along Van Horne Avenue, a nearly windowless façades rising out of the wedge of land between Saint-Laurent Boulevard and the CP rail corridor, has become a icon of the city's northside skyline over the years. Even its rusted water tower punching up above the roofline.

      Over its century of existence it's been a grain warehouse, document storage depot, and canvas for artists, and now a source of neighbourhood debate over what its future should be. After years of back-and-forth between developer, borough, and the public, that future is finally taking shape.

      Entrepôt Van Horne, 1982. | Photograph: Gabor Szilasi

      A quick backstory

      The warehouse was built in 1924 by Wilfrid Duquette, a flour, grain and coal merchant who had been operating along Saint-Laurent since the early 1900s. The site was ideal: it sat directly adjacent to the Canadian Pacific transcontinental rail line, making it a natural hub for moving goods between the rail network and the city's streets. Three freight elevators handled cargo inside, while thick masonry walls kept merchandise temperature-stable and a sophisticated dry-sprinkler system guarded against fire. The water tower atop the building, installed as part of that fire-suppression infrastructure, stopped being used in 1992 and remains the last surviving industrial water tower in the neighbourhood.

      Free account required

      Pour ceux qui ont Montréal à cœur

      Créez un compte gratuit pour lire cet article et accéder à 3 articles par mois, ainsi qu'à notre Bulletin hebdomadaire.

      Indépendant. Local. Soutenu par ses lecteurs.

      ou

      Déjà membre? Se connecter

      The Main

      Advertisement

      Follow on Google
      Estudio Niksen Defines Itself—and Finds Success—in the Art of Doing Nothing
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Elle Magni

      Estudio Niksen Defines Itself—and Finds Success—in the Art of Doing Nothing

      The Saint-Henri brand built itself on the Dutch philosophy of doing nothing. The result is some of the most intentional fashion coming out of Montreal.

      Stop Building Sad Cities
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Philippe Demers

      Stop Building Sad Cities

      Dull architecture has a real cost, and Montreal is paying it.

      The Story Behind the Biergarten Table That Became a Terrasse Staple
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Christopher DeWolf

      The Story Behind the Biergarten Table That Became a Terrasse Staple

      Lea Berger missed the folding biergarten tables of her German childhood. A decade later, they're at every great bar in Montreal, shipped in from Stuttgart.

      Montreal Finally Has a Design Week to Call Its Own
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      Montreal Finally Has a Design Week to Call Its Own

      Twenty years after earning its UNESCO City of Design designation, Montreal is consolidating its scattered design events under one banner for the first time.

      Montreal Has a Winter Identity. But Who Does It Belong To?
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Philippe Demers

      Montreal Has a Winter Identity. But Who Does It Belong To?

      Our city has made winter an art form, so the next step is making sure everyone's invited to enjoy it.

      Montreal’s public spaces are good, but are they good enough?
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Philippe Demers

      Montreal’s Public Spaces Are Good, but Are They Good Enough?

      Other cities are rethinking how everyday spaces support connection, comfort, and community. Here are five trends Montreal should be paying attention to in 2026.

      Plus de Design

      Related Classics

      From our archive.

      "Creatives dictate this city": Inside 20 years of the Montreal designer fair SOUK
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      "Creatives Dictate This City": Inside 20 Years of the Montreal Designer Fair SOUK

      The roaming showcase of Montreal designers' work—both recognized and not—and the exceptional modern lifestyle objects they create for the everyday.

      The hidden world bustling beneath Montreal’s Olympic Pyramids
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Jean Bourbeau @ URBANIA

      The Hidden World Bustling Beneath Montreal’s Olympic Pyramids

      Echoes of elegance: Inside a faded “Grand Hotel” that's lost its splendour over time.

      Ivy Studio is shaping Montreal's visual identity from the inside out
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Lili Monette-Crépô

      Ivy Studio is Shaping Montreal's Visual Identity from the Inside Out

      Always in collaboration with local craftspeople, this nimble design firm creates immersive commercial spaces designed for that ineffable 'wow' factor.

      A new city gateway and memorial with the Montreal Irish Monument Park
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      A New City Gateway and Memorial with the Montreal Irish Monument Park

      An incoming commemorative park design makes the Black Rock accessible for the first time with public space honouring 6,000 Irish famine victims and the Montrealers who tried to save them.

      The fairyland fashion brand sewn entirely in its founder's bedroom
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Anahi Pellathy

      The Fairyland Fashion Brand Sewn Entirely in Its Founder's Bedroom

      Avenir Vert's Olivia Donahue turned thrift store finds and teenage entrepreneurship into British Vogue features—all while refusing to compromise on a sustainable vision.

      Meet Dazy Chains, the tech-inspired knitwear brand combining fibre arts with digital culture
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Kaitlyn DiBartolo

      Meet Dazy Chains, the Tech-inspired Knitwear Brand Combining Fibre Arts with Digital Culture

      Hand-knit designs merge CAPTCHAS and AI imagery with fibre arts, while the publication Needlebound builds a tangible community for textile artists.

      Les derniers de The Main

      DesignEstudio Niksen Defines Itself—and Finds Success—in the Art of Doing NothingNewsletterThe Bulletin: Limited Edition Donuts, the Laotian & Cambodian New Year, and Axe Throwing With Syrup [Issue #176]Arts & CultureAfter 40 Years on Bernard, Dragon Flowers Has a New AddressArts & CultureCrime 101 Goes Back to Basics and Executes Them BeautifullyArts & CultureWhat to do this weekend (04.09–04.12)

      Plus de Design

      Related Classics

      From our archive.

      "Creatives dictate this city": Inside 20 years of the Montreal designer fair SOUK
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      "Creatives Dictate This City": Inside 20 Years of the Montreal Designer Fair SOUK

      The roaming showcase of Montreal designers' work—both recognized and not—and the exceptional modern lifestyle objects they create for the everyday.

      The hidden world bustling beneath Montreal’s Olympic Pyramids
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Jean Bourbeau @ URBANIA

      The Hidden World Bustling Beneath Montreal’s Olympic Pyramids

      Echoes of elegance: Inside a faded “Grand Hotel” that's lost its splendour over time.

      Ivy Studio is shaping Montreal's visual identity from the inside out
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Lili Monette-Crépô

      Ivy Studio is Shaping Montreal's Visual Identity from the Inside Out

      Always in collaboration with local craftspeople, this nimble design firm creates immersive commercial spaces designed for that ineffable 'wow' factor.

      A new city gateway and memorial with the Montreal Irish Monument Park
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      A New City Gateway and Memorial with the Montreal Irish Monument Park

      An incoming commemorative park design makes the Black Rock accessible for the first time with public space honouring 6,000 Irish famine victims and the Montrealers who tried to save them.

      The fairyland fashion brand sewn entirely in its founder's bedroom
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Anahi Pellathy

      The Fairyland Fashion Brand Sewn Entirely in Its Founder's Bedroom

      Avenir Vert's Olivia Donahue turned thrift store finds and teenage entrepreneurship into British Vogue features—all while refusing to compromise on a sustainable vision.

      Meet Dazy Chains, the tech-inspired knitwear brand combining fibre arts with digital culture
      Design
      Version Anglaise
      Kaitlyn DiBartolo

      Meet Dazy Chains, the Tech-inspired Knitwear Brand Combining Fibre Arts with Digital Culture

      Hand-knit designs merge CAPTCHAS and AI imagery with fibre arts, while the publication Needlebound builds a tangible community for textile artists.

      Les derniers de The Main

      DesignEstudio Niksen Defines Itself—and Finds Success—in the Art of Doing NothingNewsletterThe Bulletin: Limited Edition Donuts, the Laotian & Cambodian New Year, and Axe Throwing With Syrup [Issue #176]Arts & CultureAfter 40 Years on Bernard, Dragon Flowers Has a New AddressArts & CultureCrime 101 Goes Back to Basics and Executes Them BeautifullyArts & CultureWhat to do this weekend (04.09–04.12)
      The Bulletin: Limited Edition Donuts, the Laotian & Cambodian New Year, and Axe Throwing With Syrup [Issue #176]

      Previous

      The Bulletin: Limited Edition Donuts, the Laotian & Cambodian New Year, and Axe Throwing With Syrup [Issue #176]

      Next

      Estudio Niksen Defines Itself—and Finds Success—in the Art of Doing Nothing

      Estudio Niksen Defines Itself—and Finds Success—in the Art of Doing Nothing
      The Bulletin: Limited Edition Donuts, the Laotian & Cambodian New Year, and Axe Throwing With Syrup [Issue #176]

      Previous

      The Bulletin: Limited Edition Donuts, the Laotian & Cambodian New Year, and Axe Throwing With Syrup [Issue #176]

      Next

      Estudio Niksen Defines Itself—and Finds Success—in the Art of Doing Nothing

      Estudio Niksen Defines Itself—and Finds Success—in the Art of Doing Nothing