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Saint-Henri, Montreal

Saint-Henri is a neighbourhood in southwestern Montreal, Quebec, Canada, in the borough of Le Sud-Ouest.

Saint-Henri
Art deco 23 fire hall, Saint-Henri
Saint-Henri
Location of Saint-Henri in Montreal
Coordinates: 45°28′38″N 73°35′11″W / 45.47716°N 73.58651°W / 45.47716; -73.58651Coordinates: 45°28′38″N 73°35′11″W / 45.47716°N 73.58651°W / 45.47716; -73.58651
CountryCanada
ProvinceQuebec
CityMontreal
BoroughLe Sud-Ouest
Established1685
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Total15,800
Postal Code
Area code(s)514, 438

Saint-Henri is usually[when?] considered to be bounded to the east by Atwater Avenue, to the west by the town of Montreal West, to the north by Autoroute Ville-Marie (Route 136), and to the south by the Lachine Canal.[2]

Description

Saint-Henri is well known as a historically French-Canadian, Irish and black working class neighbourhood. Often contrasted with wealthy Westmount or NDG looking down over the Falaise Saint-Jacques, in recent years it has been strongly affected by gentrification.

The area—historically known as Les Tanneries because of the artisans' shops where leather tanning took place—was named for St. Henry via the Église Saint-Henri, which at one time formed Place Saint-Henri along with the community's fire and police station. The bustle of a nearby passenger rail station was immortalized in the song "Place St. Henri" (1964) by Oscar Peterson.[3]

Saint-Henri is part of the municipal district of Saint-Henri–Petite-Bourgogne–Pointe-Saint-Charles. The borough hall for Le Sud-Ouest is located in a converted factory in Saint-Henri, bearing witness to the borough's industrial heritage.

Also located in the neighbourhood is Solin Hall, a student residence of McGill University. The former chocolate factory is home to nearly 300 students,[4] and is the University's only off-campus residence.

There are two metro stations in Saint-Henri; Lionel-Groulx and Place-Saint-Henri.

History

 
Saint-Henri's Les Tanneries, 1859.

Église Saint-Henri was so named to commemorate Fr. Henri-Auguste Roux (1798–1831), the superior of Saint-Sulpice Seminary. The municipality of Saint-Henri was formed in 1875, joining the village of Saint-Henri and the surrounding settlements of Turcot, Brodie, Saint-Agustin and Sainte-Marguerite into one administrative unit.[5] The municipality was incorporated into the City of Montreal in 1905.[5]

Well-known people from Saint-Henri include strongman Louis Cyr, who served as a police officer there; the Place des Hommes-Forts and the Parc Louis-Cyr are named for him. Celebrated jazz pianist Oscar Peterson grew up in Little Burgundy which is the neighborhood adjacent to Saint-Henri. Stand-up comedian Yvon Deschamps has described the daily struggle of Saint-Henri's citizens with humorous melancholy.

Saint-Henri and Little Burgundy are considered to have a fairly common social makeup. Historically, Saint-Henri was occupied predominantly by French-Canadian blue-collar workers while Little Burgundy was occupied primarily by African-Canadians who worked on the railroads. Today both neighbourhoods have a population of varied ethnicity and social class, especially in the recent housing developments that have sprouted along the Lachine Canal. A great number of teenagers from neighboring districts attend Polyvalente Saint-Henri and James Lyng High School (English Montreal School Board).

St-Henri housed the Victor Talking Machine Company's first factory space located in Canada where they produced flat discs, gramophones, radios, and military equipment for the Second World War. [6] Though the space has changed much over the years and the building is no longer in use as a factory of RCA Victor, there is a museum located in the old RCA building called le Musée des Ondes Emile Berliner.[7] The museum covers the life of Emile Berliner, inventor of the gramophone, as well as details the history of his inventions, as well as his company even after his family was no longer affiliated with it. The museum is a technology museum and explores the nature and science behind sound waves.

Many of the district's notable Art deco buildings, including Atwater Market and the historic No. 23 fire hall, were designed by Ludger Lemieux.[8][9][10]

The neighbourhood is served by the Lionel-Groulx and Place-Saint-Henri Metro stations.

Gentrification

Introduction

St-Henri is located in Le Sud-Ouest Borough, and became a part of the City of Montreal in 1905. Its proximity to the Lachine Canal shaped the neighborhood with a large industrial working class. Industry lasted from the canal's opening in 1825, until its closure in 1970.[11] Its closure meant the predominantly working-class neighborhood began to lose their jobs, creating thousands of unemployed laborers.[12] This deindustrialization rendered the neighborhood the site for gentrification. Sitting on valuable land bordered by the Lachine Canal and both the downtown and Old Montreal, St Henri is primed for redevelopment of old industrial buildings into parks, mixed use developments, condos, shops and restaurants.[13] This transformation began taking form when the Canal was reopened in 2002 with the presence of pedestrian and cyclist paths, bringing more residents and tourists to the area.[14] St Henri is seen as a victim of gentrification, characterized by the arrival of younger wealthy residents and the revitalization of the neighborhood with parks and commercial spaces. Once described as a working-class neighborhood with factories, its contemporary form is a “lively and surprising borough” ranked as Montreal's second best neighborhood for its livability and atmosphere.[15]

Evidence of gentrification in St. Henri

Changes to the demographic composition of a neighbourhood are an indicator of gentrification. Particularly, increased proportions of college educated residents and residents aged 25 to 34 years old have been found to signal gentrification.[16] This cohort's role in gentrification has been in part attributed to amenities in downtown areas which draw this "creative class" to neighbourhoods perceived as undervalued.[17]

In St. Henri, between 2001 and 2011, the proportion of residents aged 25–34 rose by seven percentage points : from 20.1% to 27.1%.[18][19] By comparison, Montreal's share of residents aged 25–34 only increased from 16.3% [18] to 17.0%.[19] This overrepresentation of the 25-34-year-old age group reflects the gentrification of St. Henri. The progression of neighbourhood residents that are college graduates is less indicative of gentrification than the previous measure. However, during this period, the St. Henri neighbourhood goes from being below the city's average to above it with its share of residents having graduated from college increasing from 25.9% in 2001 (26.4% in Montreal)[18] to 43.1% in 2011 (41.5% in Montreal).[19]

Gentrification is most often associated with an increase in average neighbourhood income [20]. Contrasting the average household income of St. Henri residents with that of Montreal residents shows that the neighbourhood's revenues has comparatively increased. In 2001 the average household income in St.Henri was 29% lower than in Montreal.[18] In 2011, the average income in the neighbourhood decreased to about 17% lower than that of Montreal.[19]

The changes in availability of services is also telling of gentrification. From 1996 to 2011 rue Notre-Dame, a street which runs through the whole neighbourhood, has seen a considerable increase in the number of entrepreneurial services such as coffee shops and boutiques accompanied by a smaller increase in the number of corporate chains.[11] Conversely street-level vacant lots on this rue Notre-Dame decreased from 26.2% to 13.5%.[11] 

Everyday Politics and Resistance in St. Henri

In St. Henri, up-scale condominiums, boutique shops and other signs of gentrification have displaced, marginalized and stressed those of lower socio-economic status (SES). In response to gentrifying practices, inhabitants within the historically low-income neighborhood have taken up various forms of everyday politics. The power on display in St. Henri can be understood as the increasingly prevalent neo-liberal order, resulting in a free market focus for urban planning initiatives (Rose, 2017). In St. Henri, everyday politics is a mode of resistance to the aforementioned powers by opposing oppressive and unjust treatment from powerful actors and broad social forces.[21] How subordinate inhabitants of St. Henri engage in this resistance can vary from informal behavior to formally organized and confrontational acts, the former being everyday resistance.[21] Through the gentrification of St. Henri, everyday resistance must precede overt forms of resistance, suggesting that the neighborhood has harbored this resistance, leading to more consistent resistance. Gentrification as a physical and social force, allows for everyday resistance to manifest into organized resistance,[21] garnering the attention of media outlets.

In 2016, a boutique grocery store known as ‘3734’ was vandalized by masked individuals, displaying anti-capitalist rhetoric and displeasure for the arrival of condos in St. Henri.[22] During a Halloween demonstration, the ‘Collective for an Autonomous Space’ rallied and marched for housing rights and alternatives to commercializing vacant properties.[23] With a surge of expensive condos being built in recent years replacing low-income options, dozens marched on Tenant's Day in 2016 organized by a coalition of actors, ending in front of the Quebec Minister of Economic Development office.[24] These organized forms of resistance, ranging from violent to peaceful, proceed with gentrification in St. Henri. In St. Henri, as gentrification proliferates, the inhabitants of the neighborhood look toward more organized and targeted political activism to resist the powers of neo-liberal urban planning agendas. Resistance in St.Henri can be seen as collective action and people-led solutions to neighborhood challenges. These solutions call upon formal authorities, resulting in programs affordable housing development initiatives and requirements by the Quebec government.[25]

Indirect displacements by gentrification

Concerning Twigge-Molecey[11] and the St Henri neighbourhood, inhabitants form social ties to others within their same neighbourhood. However, this is particularly true amongst low-income groups, as these people often do not have the opportunity to build a social network outside their living area. In a situation where their houses are repossessed, such people struggle to find new houses within the same neighbourhood and fail to remain socially integrated. As a result, they are forced to live elsewhere, where there is distance between them and their social circle in the previous neighbourhood. This particular scenario embodies a form of social displacement.

Moreover, the notion of “sense of place” is threatened by newcomers whose presence would change the character and cultural shape of the place.[26] Regarding gentrification in St Henri, conflicts emerged between lifelong low-income residents and incoming condominium dwellers, the latter denying their belonging to St Henri neighbourhood. Newcomers also display forms of condescension and snobbery that create social separation between inhabitants of the same neighbourhood. Those behaviors underline the shifting of senses of place and highlight a cultural displacement. This type of displacement results “when the tastes, norms and desires of newcomers supplant and replace those of incumbent residents”.[27]

Finally, the cultural displacement is another indirect consequence caused by gentrification. In 2006 a new IGA supermarket opened in St Henri. As prices are higher to familial small-scale grocery stores located in St Henri, the buying-power of low-income residents has been reduced. Thus, low-income renters feel rejected from the neighbourhood. This feeling is also seen in the new renovated Louis Cyr park in St Henri. Since it has been rebuilt, it became attractive for dog-sitters who could now leave their dogs off leashes. As a result, it discouraged parents from letting their children play in those areas by fear of the aggressive dogs.[11] Overall, it appears that low-income residents suffer more from changes associated with gentrification through socioeconomic and cultural displacements.  

Depictions in literature and film

 
Gabrielle Roy in 1945 with boys from Saint-Henri, the working-class neighbourhood of Montreal where The Tin Flute takes place.
 
Place Saint-Henri

The district's working-class character was most memorably recorded by Gabrielle Roy in her novel The Tin Flute (Bonheur d'occasion).

Saint-Henri has been the subject of two National Film Board of Canada (NFB) documentaries, each capturing one day in the life of the district. In 1962 Hubert Aquin directed À St-Henri le cinq septembre (September Five at Saint-Henri). In 2010, director Shannon Walsh and producer Sarah Spring oversaw a crew of sixteen videographers as they followed area residents during one summer's day to make À St-Henri le 26 août, an NFB/Parabola Films co-production inspired by Aquin's cinéma-vérité classic.[28]

Notable people from Saint-Henri

See also

Gallery

References

  1. ^ 2011 Canadian census tracts 4620079 - 4620084
  2. ^ http://ville.montreal.qc.ca/pls/portal/docs/page/lib_arr_fr/media/documents/carte_arr_sou.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ Place St. Henri. Retrieved 2015-08-23.
  4. ^ "Solin Hall - Student Housing". McGill University. 12 February 2018.
  5. ^ a b Industrial Architecture of Montreal: Saint-Henri
  6. ^ "RCA Victor building". Héritage Montréal. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
  7. ^ "Information". Musée des ondes Emile Berliner. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
  8. ^ "Saint-Henri Fire Station". Images Montreal. Retrieved 2009-11-16.
  9. ^ "Montreal Insites". Heritage Montreal. Retrieved 2009-11-15.
  10. ^ "Trois architectes, trois quartiers : Ludger Lemieux (St. Henri), Ernest Cormier (Cité universitaire), Ernest Isbell Barott (St. Antoine)". Montreal: Canadian Centre for Architecture. Retrieved 2020-05-29.
  11. ^ a b c d e Twigge-Molecey, A (2014). "Exploring Resident Experiences of Indirect Displacement in a Neighbourhood Undergoing Gentrification: The Case of Saint-Henri in Montréal". Canadian Journal of Urban Research. 23 (1): 1–22.
  12. ^ Conrad; et al. (2015). History of the Canadian Peoples. Vol. 1, Beginnings to 1867. Pearson Canada Inc. pp. 275–300.
  13. ^ Amerique Française (2007). 341/Canal_de_Lachine_et_son_corridor_industriel.html#.XrllVJNKhTY "Canal de Lachine et son corridor industriel". {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  14. ^ Parks Canada (2018). [pc.gc.ca/en/ihn- nhs/qc/canallachine/culture/ingenierie-engeneering/reouverture-reopening "Lachine Canal Reopening"]. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  15. ^ "Saint-Henri". Les Quartiers du Canal. Retrieved 2020-07-26.
  16. ^ Glaeser, Edward L.; Kim, Hyunjin; Luca, Michael (2018-05-01). "Nowcasting Gentrification: Using Yelp Data to Quantify Neighborhood Change". AEA Papers and Proceedings. 108: 77–82. doi:10.1257/pandp.20181034. ISSN 2574-0768.
  17. ^ Glaeser, Edward L.; Shapiro, Jesse M. (2003). "Urban Growth in the 1990s: Is City Living Back?". Journal of Regional Science. 43 (1): 139–165. doi:10.1111/1467-9787.00293. ISSN 1467-9787. S2CID 154814351.
  18. ^ a b c d Ville de Montreal (2010). "Montréal en statistiques, Division des Affaires économiques et institutionnelles, Direction du développement économique et urbain. Profile de quartier: Saint-Henri, arrondissement du Sud-Ouest".
  19. ^ a b c d Ville de Montréal. (2014). Montréal en statistiques, Division de la planification urbaine, Direction de l’urbanisme . Profile de quartier : Saint-Henri, arrondissement du Sud-Ouest.
  20. ^ Kayzar, Brenda; Derickson, Kate (2017-03-06), "Gentrification", in Richardson, Douglas; Castree, Noel; Goodchild, Michael F.; Kobayashi, Audrey (eds.), International Encyclopedia of Geography: People, the Earth, Environment and Technology, Oxford, UK: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 1–5, doi:10.1002/9781118786352.wbieg0317, ISBN 978-0-470-65963-2
  21. ^ a b c Kerkvliet, Benedict J. Tria (2005-01-01). The Power of Everyday Politics. Cornell University Press. doi:10.7591/9781501722011. ISBN 978-1-5017-2201-1.
  22. ^ Shingler. (2016). St-Henri looting puts spotlight on Montreal neighbourhood's  gentrification, CBC New. Retrieved from https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/st-henri-montreal-looting-gentrification-1.3606859
  23. ^ Parrillo. (2016). Saint-Henri demonstration denounces gentrification, Global News. Retrieved from https://globalnews.ca/news/3033689/saint-henri-demonstration-denounces-gentrification/
  24. ^ CTV Montreal. (2016). Dozens protest in St. Henri in support of affordable apartments. Retrieved from https://montreal.ctvnews.ca/dozens-protest-in-st-henri-in-support-of-affordable-apartments-1.2872692
  25. ^ Bemma, Adam. (2012). Montréal, tales of gentrification in a bohemian city. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=va0JCg0j3fY
  26. ^ Lippai, C. (2016). Space, Place and Politics. In Weberman D. & Moroni S. (Eds.), Space and Pluralism: Can Contemporary Cities Be Places of Tolerance? Budapest; New York: Central European University Press, 15-34. Retrieved from www.jstor.org/stable/10.7829/j.ctt1d4txn3.5
  27. ^ Richardson, J. Mitchell, B. and Franco, J. (2019). Shifting Neighborhoods: Gentrification And Cultural Displacement In American Cities » NCRC. NCRC. Retrieved from https://ncrc.org/gentrification/
  28. ^ Fraser, Malcolm (19 May 2011). . Montreal Mirror. Archived from the original on 22 May 2011. Retrieved 21 May 2011.
  29. ^ CBC Digital Archives. Retrieved 2019-12-28.

External links

saint, henri, montreal, former, electoral, district, henri, electoral, district, municipality, saint, henri, chaudière, appalaches, quebec, saint, henri, neighbourhood, southwestern, montreal, quebec, canada, borough, ouest, saint, henrineighbourhoodart, deco,. For the former electoral district see St Henri electoral district For the municipality see Saint Henri Chaudiere Appalaches Quebec Saint Henri is a neighbourhood in southwestern Montreal Quebec Canada in the borough of Le Sud Ouest Saint HenriNeighbourhoodArt deco 23 fire hall Saint HenriSaint HenriLocation of Saint Henri in MontrealCoordinates 45 28 38 N 73 35 11 W 45 47716 N 73 58651 W 45 47716 73 58651 Coordinates 45 28 38 N 73 35 11 W 45 47716 N 73 58651 W 45 47716 73 58651CountryCanadaProvinceQuebecCityMontrealBoroughLe Sud OuestEstablished1685Population 2011 1 Total15 800Postal CodeH4CArea code s 514 438Saint Henri is usually when considered to be bounded to the east by Atwater Avenue to the west by the town of Montreal West to the north by Autoroute Ville Marie Route 136 and to the south by the Lachine Canal 2 Contents 1 Description 2 History 3 Gentrification 3 1 Introduction 3 2 Evidence of gentrification in St Henri 3 3 Everyday Politics and Resistance in St Henri 3 4 Indirect displacements by gentrification 4 Depictions in literature and film 5 Notable people from Saint Henri 6 See also 7 Gallery 8 References 9 External linksDescription EditSaint Henri is well known as a historically French Canadian Irish and black working class neighbourhood Often contrasted with wealthy Westmount or NDG looking down over the Falaise Saint Jacques in recent years it has been strongly affected by gentrification The area historically known as Les Tanneries because of the artisans shops where leather tanning took place was named for St Henry via the Eglise Saint Henri which at one time formed Place Saint Henri along with the community s fire and police station The bustle of a nearby passenger rail station was immortalized in the song Place St Henri 1964 by Oscar Peterson 3 Saint Henri is part of the municipal district of Saint Henri Petite Bourgogne Pointe Saint Charles The borough hall for Le Sud Ouest is located in a converted factory in Saint Henri bearing witness to the borough s industrial heritage Also located in the neighbourhood is Solin Hall a student residence of McGill University The former chocolate factory is home to nearly 300 students 4 and is the University s only off campus residence There are two metro stations in Saint Henri Lionel Groulx and Place Saint Henri History Edit Saint Henri s Les Tanneries 1859 Eglise Saint Henri was so named to commemorate Fr Henri Auguste Roux 1798 1831 the superior of Saint Sulpice Seminary The municipality of Saint Henri was formed in 1875 joining the village of Saint Henri and the surrounding settlements of Turcot Brodie Saint Agustin and Sainte Marguerite into one administrative unit 5 The municipality was incorporated into the City of Montreal in 1905 5 Well known people from Saint Henri include strongman Louis Cyr who served as a police officer there the Place des Hommes Forts and the Parc Louis Cyr are named for him Celebrated jazz pianist Oscar Peterson grew up in Little Burgundy which is the neighborhood adjacent to Saint Henri Stand up comedian Yvon Deschamps has described the daily struggle of Saint Henri s citizens with humorous melancholy Saint Henri and Little Burgundy are considered to have a fairly common social makeup Historically Saint Henri was occupied predominantly by French Canadian blue collar workers while Little Burgundy was occupied primarily by African Canadians who worked on the railroads Today both neighbourhoods have a population of varied ethnicity and social class especially in the recent housing developments that have sprouted along the Lachine Canal A great number of teenagers from neighboring districts attend Polyvalente Saint Henri and James Lyng High School English Montreal School Board St Henri housed the Victor Talking Machine Company s first factory space located in Canada where they produced flat discs gramophones radios and military equipment for the Second World War 6 Though the space has changed much over the years and the building is no longer in use as a factory of RCA Victor there is a museum located in the old RCA building called le Musee des Ondes Emile Berliner 7 The museum covers the life of Emile Berliner inventor of the gramophone as well as details the history of his inventions as well as his company even after his family was no longer affiliated with it The museum is a technology museum and explores the nature and science behind sound waves Many of the district s notable Art deco buildings including Atwater Market and the historic No 23 fire hall were designed by Ludger Lemieux 8 9 10 The neighbourhood is served by the Lionel Groulx and Place Saint Henri Metro stations Gentrification EditIntroduction Edit St Henri is located in Le Sud Ouest Borough and became a part of the City of Montreal in 1905 Its proximity to the Lachine Canal shaped the neighborhood with a large industrial working class Industry lasted from the canal s opening in 1825 until its closure in 1970 11 Its closure meant the predominantly working class neighborhood began to lose their jobs creating thousands of unemployed laborers 12 This deindustrialization rendered the neighborhood the site for gentrification Sitting on valuable land bordered by the Lachine Canal and both the downtown and Old Montreal St Henri is primed for redevelopment of old industrial buildings into parks mixed use developments condos shops and restaurants 13 This transformation began taking form when the Canal was reopened in 2002 with the presence of pedestrian and cyclist paths bringing more residents and tourists to the area 14 St Henri is seen as a victim of gentrification characterized by the arrival of younger wealthy residents and the revitalization of the neighborhood with parks and commercial spaces Once described as a working class neighborhood with factories its contemporary form is a lively and surprising borough ranked as Montreal s second best neighborhood for its livability and atmosphere 15 Evidence of gentrification in St Henri Edit Changes to the demographic composition of a neighbourhood are an indicator of gentrification Particularly increased proportions of college educated residents and residents aged 25 to 34 years old have been found to signal gentrification 16 This cohort s role in gentrification has been in part attributed to amenities in downtown areas which draw this creative class to neighbourhoods perceived as undervalued 17 In St Henri between 2001 and 2011 the proportion of residents aged 25 34 rose by seven percentage points from 20 1 to 27 1 18 19 By comparison Montreal s share of residents aged 25 34 only increased from 16 3 18 to 17 0 19 This overrepresentation of the 25 34 year old age group reflects the gentrification of St Henri The progression of neighbourhood residents that are college graduates is less indicative of gentrification than the previous measure However during this period the St Henri neighbourhood goes from being below the city s average to above it with its share of residents having graduated from college increasing from 25 9 in 2001 26 4 in Montreal 18 to 43 1 in 2011 41 5 in Montreal 19 Gentrification is most often associated with an increase in average neighbourhood income 20 Contrasting the average household income of St Henri residents with that of Montreal residents shows that the neighbourhood s revenues has comparatively increased In 2001 the average household income in St Henri was 29 lower than in Montreal 18 In 2011 the average income in the neighbourhood decreased to about 17 lower than that of Montreal 19 The changes in availability of services is also telling of gentrification From 1996 to 2011 rue Notre Dame a street which runs through the whole neighbourhood has seen a considerable increase in the number of entrepreneurial services such as coffee shops and boutiques accompanied by a smaller increase in the number of corporate chains 11 Conversely street level vacant lots on this rue Notre Dame decreased from 26 2 to 13 5 11 Everyday Politics and Resistance in St Henri Edit In St Henri up scale condominiums boutique shops and other signs of gentrification have displaced marginalized and stressed those of lower socio economic status SES In response to gentrifying practices inhabitants within the historically low income neighborhood have taken up various forms of everyday politics The power on display in St Henri can be understood as the increasingly prevalent neo liberal order resulting in a free market focus for urban planning initiatives Rose 2017 In St Henri everyday politics is a mode of resistance to the aforementioned powers by opposing oppressive and unjust treatment from powerful actors and broad social forces 21 How subordinate inhabitants of St Henri engage in this resistance can vary from informal behavior to formally organized and confrontational acts the former being everyday resistance 21 Through the gentrification of St Henri everyday resistance must precede overt forms of resistance suggesting that the neighborhood has harbored this resistance leading to more consistent resistance Gentrification as a physical and social force allows for everyday resistance to manifest into organized resistance 21 garnering the attention of media outlets In 2016 a boutique grocery store known as 3734 was vandalized by masked individuals displaying anti capitalist rhetoric and displeasure for the arrival of condos in St Henri 22 During a Halloween demonstration the Collective for an Autonomous Space rallied and marched for housing rights and alternatives to commercializing vacant properties 23 With a surge of expensive condos being built in recent years replacing low income options dozens marched on Tenant s Day in 2016 organized by a coalition of actors ending in front of the Quebec Minister of Economic Development office 24 These organized forms of resistance ranging from violent to peaceful proceed with gentrification in St Henri In St Henri as gentrification proliferates the inhabitants of the neighborhood look toward more organized and targeted political activism to resist the powers of neo liberal urban planning agendas Resistance in St Henri can be seen as collective action and people led solutions to neighborhood challenges These solutions call upon formal authorities resulting in programs affordable housing development initiatives and requirements by the Quebec government 25 Indirect displacements by gentrification Edit Concerning Twigge Molecey 11 and the St Henri neighbourhood inhabitants form social ties to others within their same neighbourhood However this is particularly true amongst low income groups as these people often do not have the opportunity to build a social network outside their living area In a situation where their houses are repossessed such people struggle to find new houses within the same neighbourhood and fail to remain socially integrated As a result they are forced to live elsewhere where there is distance between them and their social circle in the previous neighbourhood This particular scenario embodies a form of social displacement Moreover the notion of sense of place is threatened by newcomers whose presence would change the character and cultural shape of the place 26 Regarding gentrification in St Henri conflicts emerged between lifelong low income residents and incoming condominium dwellers the latter denying their belonging to St Henri neighbourhood Newcomers also display forms of condescension and snobbery that create social separation between inhabitants of the same neighbourhood Those behaviors underline the shifting of senses of place and highlight a cultural displacement This type of displacement results when the tastes norms and desires of newcomers supplant and replace those of incumbent residents 27 Finally the cultural displacement is another indirect consequence caused by gentrification In 2006 a new IGA supermarket opened in St Henri As prices are higher to familial small scale grocery stores located in St Henri the buying power of low income residents has been reduced Thus low income renters feel rejected from the neighbourhood This feeling is also seen in the new renovated Louis Cyr park in St Henri Since it has been rebuilt it became attractive for dog sitters who could now leave their dogs off leashes As a result it discouraged parents from letting their children play in those areas by fear of the aggressive dogs 11 Overall it appears that low income residents suffer more from changes associated with gentrification through socioeconomic and cultural displacements Depictions in literature and film Edit Gabrielle Roy in 1945 with boys from Saint Henri the working class neighbourhood of Montreal where The Tin Flute takes place Place Saint Henri The district s working class character was most memorably recorded by Gabrielle Roy in her novel The Tin Flute Bonheur d occasion Saint Henri has been the subject of two National Film Board of Canada NFB documentaries each capturing one day in the life of the district In 1962 Hubert Aquin directed A St Henri le cinq septembre September Five at Saint Henri In 2010 director Shannon Walsh and producer Sarah Spring oversaw a crew of sixteen videographers as they followed area residents during one summer s day to make A St Henri le 26 aout an NFB Parabola Films co production inspired by Aquin s cinema verite classic 28 Notable people from Saint Henri EditOscar Peterson Canadian jazz pianist 29 Pat Burns former police officer NHL head coach and TV hockey broadcaster Yvon Deschamps author actor comedian and producer Louis Cyr strongman who served as a police officer in Saint Henri commemorated with a park a square and a statueSee also EditLittle Burgundy Pointe Saint Charles Saint Henri ChurchGallery Edit Corona Theatre on Notre Dame Street West Sir George Etienne Cartier Square Saint Henri Square Saint Henri Map Saint Henri in February Atwater MarketReferences Edit 2011 Canadian census tracts 4620079 4620084 http ville montreal qc ca pls portal docs page lib arr fr media documents carte arr sou pdf bare URL PDF Place St Henri Retrieved 2015 08 23 Solin Hall Student Housing McGill University 12 February 2018 a b Industrial Architecture of Montreal Saint Henri RCA Victor building Heritage Montreal Retrieved 2022 08 25 Information Musee des ondes Emile Berliner Retrieved 2022 08 25 Saint Henri Fire Station Images Montreal Retrieved 2009 11 16 Montreal Insites Heritage Montreal Retrieved 2009 11 15 Trois architectes trois quartiers Ludger Lemieux St Henri Ernest Cormier Cite universitaire Ernest Isbell Barott St Antoine Montreal Canadian Centre for Architecture Retrieved 2020 05 29 a b c d e Twigge Molecey A 2014 Exploring Resident Experiences of Indirect Displacement in a Neighbourhood Undergoing Gentrification The Case of Saint Henri in Montreal Canadian Journal of Urban Research 23 1 1 22 Conrad et al 2015 History of the Canadian Peoples Vol 1 Beginnings to 1867 Pearson Canada Inc pp 275 300 Amerique Francaise 2007 341 Canal de Lachine et son corridor industriel html XrllVJNKhTY Canal de Lachine et son corridor industriel a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help Parks Canada 2018 pc gc ca en ihn nhs qc canallachine culture ingenierie engeneering reouverture reopening Lachine Canal Reopening a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help Saint Henri Les Quartiers du Canal Retrieved 2020 07 26 Glaeser Edward L Kim Hyunjin Luca Michael 2018 05 01 Nowcasting Gentrification Using Yelp Data to Quantify Neighborhood Change AEA Papers and Proceedings 108 77 82 doi 10 1257 pandp 20181034 ISSN 2574 0768 Glaeser Edward L Shapiro Jesse M 2003 Urban Growth in the 1990s Is City Living Back Journal of Regional Science 43 1 139 165 doi 10 1111 1467 9787 00293 ISSN 1467 9787 S2CID 154814351 a b c d Ville de Montreal 2010 Montreal en statistiques Division des Affaires economiques et institutionnelles Direction du developpement economique et urbain Profile de quartier Saint Henri arrondissement du Sud Ouest a b c d Ville de Montreal 2014 Montreal en statistiques Division de la planification urbaine Direction de l urbanisme Profile de quartier Saint Henri arrondissement du Sud Ouest Kayzar Brenda Derickson Kate 2017 03 06 Gentrification in Richardson Douglas Castree Noel Goodchild Michael F Kobayashi Audrey eds International Encyclopedia of Geography People the Earth Environment and Technology Oxford UK John Wiley amp Sons pp 1 5 doi 10 1002 9781118786352 wbieg0317 ISBN 978 0 470 65963 2 a b c Kerkvliet Benedict J Tria 2005 01 01 The Power of Everyday Politics Cornell University Press doi 10 7591 9781501722011 ISBN 978 1 5017 2201 1 Shingler 2016 St Henri looting puts spotlight on Montreal neighbourhood s gentrification CBC New Retrieved from https www cbc ca news canada montreal st henri montreal looting gentrification 1 3606859 Parrillo 2016 Saint Henri demonstration denounces gentrification Global News Retrieved from https globalnews ca news 3033689 saint henri demonstration denounces gentrification CTV Montreal 2016 Dozens protest in St Henri in support of affordable apartments Retrieved from https montreal ctvnews ca dozens protest in st henri in support of affordable apartments 1 2872692 Bemma Adam 2012 Montreal tales of gentrification in a bohemian city Retrieved from https www youtube com watch v va0JCg0j3fY Lippai C 2016 Space Place and Politics In Weberman D amp Moroni S Eds Space and Pluralism Can Contemporary Cities Be Places of Tolerance Budapest New York Central European University Press 15 34 Retrieved from www jstor org stable 10 7829 j ctt1d4txn3 5 Richardson J Mitchell B and Franco J 2019 Shifting Neighborhoods Gentrification And Cultural Displacement In American Cities NCRC NCRC Retrieved from https ncrc org gentrification Fraser Malcolm 19 May 2011 St Henri revisited Montreal Mirror Archived from the original on 22 May 2011 Retrieved 21 May 2011 CBC Digital Archives Retrieved 2019 12 28 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Henri Documentary film about the neighbourhood released in 2011 St Henri the 26th of August Parish oral history of part of Saint Henri with a number of historical photographs Aquin Hubert September Five at Saint Henri Requires Adobe Flash Documentary film National Film Board of Canada Retrieved 8 June 2011 Saint Henri Historical Society website https moeb ca en about the museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saint Henri Montreal amp oldid 1126296832, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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