Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Henri Bourassa Boulevard

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Location
  
Montreal

Length
  
29,000 m

Inaugurated
  
1954

Inauguration
  
1954

Province
  
Québec

Henri Bourassa Boulevard

Former name(s)
  
rue Kelly, boulevard Paradis

West end
  
Autoroute 40 in Saint-Laurent

East end
  
Sherbrooke Street East in Riviere-des-Prairies–Pointe-aux-Trembles

Henri Bourassa Boulevard (officially in French: Boulevard Henri-Bourassa) is a major east–west street located in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Located in the north of the island of Montreal, it runs parallel to Gouin Boulevard. Spanning 29 kilometres in length, it links the borough of Rivière-des-Prairies–Pointe-aux-Trembles in the east to Autoroute 13 in the West Island. It was enlarged in steps beginning in 1954, following expropriations, but also has a new segment.

Contents

Map of Henri-Bourassa Blvd W, Montreal, QC, Canada

History

The street is renamed after Henri Bourassa (1868–1952), a Quebec nationalist politician, and founder of the Montreal newspaper Le Devoir.

Part of what became the boulevard — two segments between Meilleur Street and Lajeunesse — was originally named Kelly Street by the Irish farmers who lived alongside it.

Further east, the boulevard was built on what was a private right-of-way owned and operated as a tramway line by the Montreal Park and Island Railway Company, a predecessor of today's Montreal Transit Corporation. Further west, the boulevard was built from Bois Franc Road.

Henri-Bourassa metro station is located on Henri Bourassa Boulevard.

References

Henri Bourassa Boulevard Wikipedia