La Tulipe has been dark since 2024. The Plateau concert hall was forced to shut down after a court ruling tied to a noise complaint from an adjacent building, one that might never have existed had the city not authorized the conversion of a neighbouring commercial space into residential units in the first place. A settlement was reached in February 2026, but the venue still needs significant soundproofing, equipment upgrades, and facade work before it can reopen. La Tribu, the company that owns it, has made clear it can't do that alone.
It's a useful lens through which to read today's announcement from Plateau-Mont-Royal borough mayor Cathy Wong. For the first time since 1977, the borough is replacing its noise bylaw, the SPVM is out of complaint enforcement for music venues, and mediation is replacing sanctions as the default response. A one-year pilot project will test new sound thresholds based on spectral emergence, a more precise measurement than the subjective standards that have been on the books for nearly five decades.
Pour ceux qui ont Montréal à cœur
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