Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Frontenac (Montreal Metro)

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Connections
  
STM buses

Depth
  
23 m

Opened
  
19 December 1966

Province
  
Québec

Frontenac (Montreal Metro)

Location
  
2570, Ontario Street East, Montreal Quebec, Canada

Operated by
  
Société de transport de Montréal

Architect
  
Robillard, Jette, et Beaudoin Christian Bisson (kiosk built in 1999)

Passengers
  
2,149,285 entrances in 2006, 42nd of 68

Address
  
Montréal, QC H2K 1W7, Canada

Similar
  
Préfontaine, Papineau, Jean‑Talon, Joliette, Crémazie

Frontenac is a station on the Green Line of the Montreal Metro rapid transit system operated by the Société de transport de Montréal (STM). It is located in the borough of Ville-Marie in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Contents

Overview

Although part of the original network of the Metro, it opened two months after the rest of the system, on December 19, 1966. It served as the eastern terminus of the Green Line until the extension to Honoré-Beaugrand was completed in 1976. It is also the only station on the original Green Line not located under boul. De Maisonneuve.

Designed by Robillard, Jetté et Beaudoin, it is a normal side platform station built in tunnel. A transept provides access, via several long escalators, to the entrance, recently rebuilt according to a design by Christian Bisson.

Renovations occurred in November–December 2005, during which time the station was closed during weekends.

Origin of the name

Frontenac station takes its name from nearby Rue Frontenac, which in turn is named for Louis de Buade, sieur de Frontenac et de Palluau. The godson of King Louis XIII of France, he was governor-general of New France between 1672 and his death in 1698. Frontenac is famous for repelling the attack of Sir William Phips, saying, "I will not respond to your general but through the mouths of my cannons and with gunfire."

Nearby points of interest

  • Place Frontenac
  • Maison de la culture et bibliothèque Frontenac
  • Éco-quartier de Sainte-Marie
  • Parc Médéric-Martin
  • Centre Jean-Claude Malépard
  • Bain Mathieu - Société pour promouvoir les arts gigantesques (SPAG)
  • Maison Norman Bethune
  • References

    Frontenac (Montreal Metro) Wikipedia


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