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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

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    The Main Media Inc. 2026

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      Arts & Culture

      Ruelles Vertes: On Montreal’s Green Alleyway Labyrinth of Culture, Nature, and History

      How Montreal’s maze of alleyways creates behind-the-scenes space for locals' daily life in everything from culture and gardening to democratized public space.

      ParThe Main

      17 juillet 2024 · 6 min de lecture

      Ruelles vertes: On Montreal’s green alleyway labyrinth of culture, nature, and history
      McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley, inspired by Montreal's rich history of ruelles vertes. | Photograph: Roger Aziz

      Spiraling staircases, a skyline penetrated by steeples, grandfathered neon signs, and relics from Expo 67—the iconography of Montreal is often recognized in the built forms the city amassed throughout history.

      Then there’s where Montrealers live, and how they live there. No matter the neighbourhood, between streets and plex apartments, there’s a rich maze of overgrown pathways to explore in the green alleyways—also referred to as ruelles vertes—the proverbial local backstage to where Montreal’s daily life plays out.

      Shows de ruelle in 2019. | Photograph: Camille Gladu-Drouin

      More than where trash builds up, laundry hangs to dry, or neighbours holler at one another, Montreal’s ruelles vertes represent places where locals have come together to regreen, create, and animate public spaces.

      Photograph: @harrisonfred / Instagram

      They’re often dioramas depicting the character of the neighbourhood they’re in, cabinets of curiosity where their pace of life is collected and on display. They’ll be the site of everything from gardens both wild and communally cultivated to children’s games, block parties, informal music, impromptu dining rooms, and wedding receptions.

      Photograph: Tourisme Montréal (left) & Daph & Nico - Tourisme Montréal (right)

      If backdoors can symbolize mysterious entrances into the unknown, ruelles vertes are where they’ll lead to in Montreal, and there are over 450 officially designated ones of them to explore.

      A long history of green alleyways has inspired seasonal spaces like McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley. | Photograph: Laura Dumitriu

      Unique to the city, they’re not a model to be replicated, but “a source of inspiration for the realization of an ideal,” where it’s less about Montrealers occupying space and more about their caretaking of where they call home.

      The origins of Montreal’s ruelles vertes

      Rear of Joseph Bastien Grocery, Barré St. corner of Gareau Lane, Montreal, QC, 1903. | Wm. Notman & Son / McCord Stewart Museum

      Today, the Ruelles Vertes project is a community-led initiative that dates back to the late 1990s, but its history stretches back to the 1800s.

      Le Regroupement des éco-quartiers explains it aptly. As Montreal changed hands from French to British regimes, that included the city’s planners: Before 1850, alleyways were simply small streets that provided access to homes via porte-cochères, or carriage entrances. British urban planning made room for wide, open alleyways with street access.

      Backyard with people, Montreal, 1934-35. | Wm. Notman & Son / McCord Stewart Museum

      That’s when Montreal’s back alleys were born.

      First acting as either lanes for workers to transport goods like ice and coal or for servants to access homes, which eventually led to them being treated as garbage collection points up until the domination of the car in the 1950s. Alleys were then paved with concrete and asphalt.

      Lane behind Prince of Wales Terrace, Montreal, Quebec, 1968. | Photograph: Edith H. Mather / McCord Stewart Museum
      Lane behind Dorchester, east of Des Seigneurs, Montreal, Quebec, 1968. | Photograph: Edith H. Mather / McCord Stewart Museum

      It was only during Mayor Jean Drapeau’s administration in the 1980s that alleyways began to see the development of parks. Two projects, Operation Tournesol and Place au Soleil, allowed the demolition of backyard sheds and the transformation of the alleys. Until the program was abandoned in 1988, 58 alleys were developed.

      Street hockey team in an alley, Montreal, QC, about 1984. | Photograph: John Taylor / McCord Stewart Museum

      That laid the groundwork for Montreal’s first true ruelle verte in 1995, found between Napoleon, Roy, and Mentana Streets and Parc-La Fontaine Avenue in the Plateau-Mont-Royal borough. It’s still there to this day.

      Photograph: Daph & Nico - Tourisme Montréal
      Montreal’s ruelles vertes serve as a case study of the benefits of equitable and sustainable green infrastructure in cities, whether it’s how they revive access to nature, create perennially pedestrian space, or enhance a sense of interconnection and belonging among locals.

      What makes a ruelle verte in Montreal

      Since those early developments, éco-quartiers now serve 80% of Montreal’s population, supporting residents across Montreal as they’ve mobilized to beautify alleys and establish ruelles vertes in nearly every single one of the city’s 19 boroughs. 

      Photograph: Laurène Tinel - Tourisme Montréal

      With community groups pushing for official designation, the city started funding the effort in 1997. Typically granting $10,000 to $20,000 per block, ruelles vertes follow an established design guide to meet specific criteria: Creating free and open areas that increase biodiversity with green and blue corridors full of nature, promoting social connections for safety and belonging and resource-sharing between residents—think anything from a cup of sugar to power tools—and slowing down traffic instead of more pedestrian space.

      Photograph: Daph & Nico - Tourisme Montréal

      Adapting to the socio-demographics and landscape architecture of backyards in their locations, alleys take on (but aren’t necessarily limited to) four different ‘colours’ and forms:

      • Green alleys for sustainable development projects on a human scale that are led by a citizens' committee, supervised and supported by a local program, and—in some cases—in collaboration with an eco-district.
      • White alleys for snow management and different components like four-season cabins, entertainment spaces, and equipment for winter games; essentially space for winter activities.
      • Blue-green alleys aimed at retaining rainwater collected by flat roofs in rain gardens and retention pits.
      • Active alleys promoting a mix of uses, from the promotion of socialization and healthy lifestyle habits to ecological elements.

      Photograph: Alexandre Choquette - Tourisme Montréal (left) & Paul Shio (right)

      A source of inspiration, the realization of an ideal

      Montreal’s ruelles vertes serve as a case study of the benefits of equitable and sustainable green infrastructure in cities, whether it’s how they revive access to nature, create perennially pedestrian space, or enhance a sense of interconnection and belonging among locals.

      McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley. | Photograph: Laura Dumitriu

      Unique to the city, they’re not a model to be replicated, but “a source of inspiration for the realization of an ideal,” where it’s less about Montrealers occupying space and more about their caretaking of where they call home. Though primarily used by their residents, they aren’t gated communities; they’re open theatres looking into the public lives of Montrealers.

      Revealing a rich and inspirational history in Montreal that stands out among any other city in North America, the city’s ruelles vertes are a phenomenon whose evolution has inspired new contemporary and artistic creations. 

      McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley. | Photograph: Laura Dumitriu

      The most notable of these is found in spaces like the McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley, a downtown core experience that transforms its adjacent Victoria Street into a space of abundant greenery and installations that shift annually that evolve with the season.

      The newest edition features everything from free weekly musical programming reflecting different facets of Montreal’s culture to alley games and a street mural created by Olivier Charland for MURAL.

      McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley. | Photograph: Laura Dumitriu

      Learn more about McCord Stewart Museum, its seasonal Museum Alley space, and discover its weekly Musical Wednesdays programming.

      Go further behind the scenes.

      Subscribe to our newsletter for a weekly dose of news and events.

      SUBSCRIBE

      Advertisement

      Follow on Google
      After 20 Years of Recording Montreal, Breakglass Has a Label to Call Its Own
      Arts & Culture
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      After 20 Years of Recording Montreal, Breakglass Has a Label to Call Its Own

      After decades of recording artists like Wolf Parade, Patrick Watson, and Kaytranada, Breakglass Studios launches its first imprint with a thirteen-artist roster.

      The Immigrant Family Who Inherited a Neighbourhood
      Arts & Culture
      Version Anglaise
      Léonie Poulin @ URBANIA

      The Immigrant Family Who Inherited a Neighbourhood

      When Richard and Shuping Guo bought Hochelaga's Dépanneur Populaire in 2001, they got more than a corner store. Their daughter Angelina's new book tells the rest of the story.

      Angine de Poitrine Is Exactly What the Internet Was Waiting For
      Arts & Culture
      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      Angine de Poitrine Is Exactly What the Internet Was Waiting For

      A masked duo from Saguenay that started out as a joke gig tells us a lot about what we actually want from music right now.

      Our Picks of the Best Shows for this year's Jazz Fest
      Arts & Culture
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      Our Picks of the Best Shows for This Year's Jazz Fest

      From three jazz centennials to J Dilla, Willow, and UZEB at 50, the 2026 festival's best bets across free stages and ticketed venues.

      The Action Comedy Hollywood Forgot How to Make
      Arts & Culture
      Version Anglaise
      Gianni Fiasche

      The Action Comedy Hollywood Forgot How to Make

      Vince Vaughn plays two versions of the same gangster, and that's barely the wildest thing about it.

      What to do this weekend (04.02–04.05)
      Arts & Culture
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      What to Do This Weekend (04.02–04.05)

      From Roman sculpture after dark to electroclash, grunge tributes, and an Easter cabaret with a costume policy: April 2 to 5, 2026.

      Arts & Culture

      Ruelles Vertes: On Montreal’s Green Alleyway Labyrinth of Culture, Nature, and History

      How Montreal’s maze of alleyways creates behind-the-scenes space for locals' daily life in everything from culture and gardening to democratized public space.

      ParThe Main

      17 juillet 2024 · 6 min de lecture

      Ruelles vertes: On Montreal’s green alleyway labyrinth of culture, nature, and history
      McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley, inspired by Montreal's rich history of ruelles vertes. | Photograph: Roger Aziz

      Spiraling staircases, a skyline penetrated by steeples, grandfathered neon signs, and relics from Expo 67—the iconography of Montreal is often recognized in the built forms the city amassed throughout history.

      Then there’s where Montrealers live, and how they live there. No matter the neighbourhood, between streets and plex apartments, there’s a rich maze of overgrown pathways to explore in the green alleyways—also referred to as ruelles vertes—the proverbial local backstage to where Montreal’s daily life plays out.

      Shows de ruelle in 2019. | Photograph: Camille Gladu-Drouin

      More than where trash builds up, laundry hangs to dry, or neighbours holler at one another, Montreal’s ruelles vertes represent places where locals have come together to regreen, create, and animate public spaces.

      Photograph: @harrisonfred / Instagram

      They’re often dioramas depicting the character of the neighbourhood they’re in, cabinets of curiosity where their pace of life is collected and on display. They’ll be the site of everything from gardens both wild and communally cultivated to children’s games, block parties, informal music, impromptu dining rooms, and wedding receptions.

      Photograph: Tourisme Montréal (left) & Daph & Nico - Tourisme Montréal (right)

      If backdoors can symbolize mysterious entrances into the unknown, ruelles vertes are where they’ll lead to in Montreal, and there are over 450 officially designated ones of them to explore.

      A long history of green alleyways has inspired seasonal spaces like McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley. | Photograph: Laura Dumitriu

      Unique to the city, they’re not a model to be replicated, but “a source of inspiration for the realization of an ideal,” where it’s less about Montrealers occupying space and more about their caretaking of where they call home.

      The origins of Montreal’s ruelles vertes

      Rear of Joseph Bastien Grocery, Barré St. corner of Gareau Lane, Montreal, QC, 1903. | Wm. Notman & Son / McCord Stewart Museum

      Today, the Ruelles Vertes project is a community-led initiative that dates back to the late 1990s, but its history stretches back to the 1800s.

      Le Regroupement des éco-quartiers explains it aptly. As Montreal changed hands from French to British regimes, that included the city’s planners: Before 1850, alleyways were simply small streets that provided access to homes via porte-cochères, or carriage entrances. British urban planning made room for wide, open alleyways with street access.

      Backyard with people, Montreal, 1934-35. | Wm. Notman & Son / McCord Stewart Museum

      That’s when Montreal’s back alleys were born.

      First acting as either lanes for workers to transport goods like ice and coal or for servants to access homes, which eventually led to them being treated as garbage collection points up until the domination of the car in the 1950s. Alleys were then paved with concrete and asphalt.

      Lane behind Prince of Wales Terrace, Montreal, Quebec, 1968. | Photograph: Edith H. Mather / McCord Stewart Museum
      Lane behind Dorchester, east of Des Seigneurs, Montreal, Quebec, 1968. | Photograph: Edith H. Mather / McCord Stewart Museum

      It was only during Mayor Jean Drapeau’s administration in the 1980s that alleyways began to see the development of parks. Two projects, Operation Tournesol and Place au Soleil, allowed the demolition of backyard sheds and the transformation of the alleys. Until the program was abandoned in 1988, 58 alleys were developed.

      Street hockey team in an alley, Montreal, QC, about 1984. | Photograph: John Taylor / McCord Stewart Museum

      That laid the groundwork for Montreal’s first true ruelle verte in 1995, found between Napoleon, Roy, and Mentana Streets and Parc-La Fontaine Avenue in the Plateau-Mont-Royal borough. It’s still there to this day.

      Photograph: Daph & Nico - Tourisme Montréal
      Montreal’s ruelles vertes serve as a case study of the benefits of equitable and sustainable green infrastructure in cities, whether it’s how they revive access to nature, create perennially pedestrian space, or enhance a sense of interconnection and belonging among locals.

      What makes a ruelle verte in Montreal

      Since those early developments, éco-quartiers now serve 80% of Montreal’s population, supporting residents across Montreal as they’ve mobilized to beautify alleys and establish ruelles vertes in nearly every single one of the city’s 19 boroughs. 

      Photograph: Laurène Tinel - Tourisme Montréal

      With community groups pushing for official designation, the city started funding the effort in 1997. Typically granting $10,000 to $20,000 per block, ruelles vertes follow an established design guide to meet specific criteria: Creating free and open areas that increase biodiversity with green and blue corridors full of nature, promoting social connections for safety and belonging and resource-sharing between residents—think anything from a cup of sugar to power tools—and slowing down traffic instead of more pedestrian space.

      Photograph: Daph & Nico - Tourisme Montréal

      Adapting to the socio-demographics and landscape architecture of backyards in their locations, alleys take on (but aren’t necessarily limited to) four different ‘colours’ and forms:

      • Green alleys for sustainable development projects on a human scale that are led by a citizens' committee, supervised and supported by a local program, and—in some cases—in collaboration with an eco-district.
      • White alleys for snow management and different components like four-season cabins, entertainment spaces, and equipment for winter games; essentially space for winter activities.
      • Blue-green alleys aimed at retaining rainwater collected by flat roofs in rain gardens and retention pits.
      • Active alleys promoting a mix of uses, from the promotion of socialization and healthy lifestyle habits to ecological elements.

      Photograph: Alexandre Choquette - Tourisme Montréal (left) & Paul Shio (right)

      A source of inspiration, the realization of an ideal

      Montreal’s ruelles vertes serve as a case study of the benefits of equitable and sustainable green infrastructure in cities, whether it’s how they revive access to nature, create perennially pedestrian space, or enhance a sense of interconnection and belonging among locals.

      McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley. | Photograph: Laura Dumitriu

      Unique to the city, they’re not a model to be replicated, but “a source of inspiration for the realization of an ideal,” where it’s less about Montrealers occupying space and more about their caretaking of where they call home. Though primarily used by their residents, they aren’t gated communities; they’re open theatres looking into the public lives of Montrealers.

      Revealing a rich and inspirational history in Montreal that stands out among any other city in North America, the city’s ruelles vertes are a phenomenon whose evolution has inspired new contemporary and artistic creations. 

      McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley. | Photograph: Laura Dumitriu

      The most notable of these is found in spaces like the McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley, a downtown core experience that transforms its adjacent Victoria Street into a space of abundant greenery and installations that shift annually that evolve with the season.

      The newest edition features everything from free weekly musical programming reflecting different facets of Montreal’s culture to alley games and a street mural created by Olivier Charland for MURAL.

      McCord Stewart Museum’s Museum Alley. | Photograph: Laura Dumitriu

      Learn more about McCord Stewart Museum, its seasonal Museum Alley space, and discover its weekly Musical Wednesdays programming.

      Go further behind the scenes.

      Subscribe to our newsletter for a weekly dose of news and events.

      SUBSCRIBE

      Advertisement

      Follow on Google
      After 20 Years of Recording Montreal, Breakglass Has a Label to Call Its Own
      Arts & Culture
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      After 20 Years of Recording Montreal, Breakglass Has a Label to Call Its Own

      After decades of recording artists like Wolf Parade, Patrick Watson, and Kaytranada, Breakglass Studios launches its first imprint with a thirteen-artist roster.

      The Immigrant Family Who Inherited a Neighbourhood
      Arts & Culture
      Version Anglaise
      Léonie Poulin @ URBANIA

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      When Richard and Shuping Guo bought Hochelaga's Dépanneur Populaire in 2001, they got more than a corner store. Their daughter Angelina's new book tells the rest of the story.

      Angine de Poitrine Is Exactly What the Internet Was Waiting For
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      Version Anglaise
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      A masked duo from Saguenay that started out as a joke gig tells us a lot about what we actually want from music right now.

      Our Picks of the Best Shows for this year's Jazz Fest
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      Version Anglaise
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      Arts & Culture
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      The Main

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      The Best of Montreal's Festivals, July 2024

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      The Best of Montreal's Festivals, July 2024

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      The Best of Montreal's Festivals, July 2024

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      Romies: Creating a Contemporary American Bistro with Midcentury Charm

      Romies: Creating a contemporary American bistro with midcentury charm