hands down Montreal is the best city in Canada if not the world ... i live in Ottawa and every single week end i m in MTL ... its just a cool ass city with great vibes people are awesome the city sooo artsy and walkable.
Montréal une ville en perpétuelle mouvement !! Montréal une ville à découvrir Montréal une ville à redécouvrir Montréal dans les moindres recoin de la ville une surprise !! Montréal ouah ! Montréal la belle Montréal le magnifique Montréal y love Magnifique reportage très belles fêtes de fin d'année et joyeux noël à tous !!
@@linaburon5672 you know nothing! 1608 was Quebec City not Montreal that was founded by Maisonneuve google it you'll see you're wrong it's easy and it take 2 sec! and if you really studied history of Quebec i can say that about everything you say in this video is false or wrong!
@@darthreun3851 In 1611, Champlain established a fur trading post on the Island of Montreal on a site initially named La Place Royale. At the confluence of Petite Riviere and St. Lawrence River, it is where present-day Pointe-à-Callière stands. On his 1616 map, Champlain named the island Lille de Villemenon in honour of the sieur de Villemenon, a French dignitary who was seeking the viceroyship of New France.
Wow, superbe recherche 18m52s, ça fait juste 3 fois de suite que je l’écoute, merde comme on est fière de notre ville, encore une fois c’est de l’excellent travail, prend soin de toi et de très Joyeuses Fêtes.
Cant wait for this virus to die so we can enjoy this city as it was. I've never seen Montreal being so quiet, it's disturbing. Better days coming soon!
@@christopherfancy8155 Another beautiful French city. From Chateau Frontenac to the Dufferin Terrasse and Le Petit Champlain below to the Montmorency Falls, and the Saguenay Fjord, and more wonderful cuisine, it is a wonder, too. Be forewarned that English is not as widely spoken in QC as MontreL, so you need to brush up on French phrases, which is the respectful thing to do in the first place! Do not be a lazy, rude Anglophone.
Who ever produces these "Discover Montreal" videos, you are my hero! I've never felt more proud to be a native Montrealer, than after watching your videos of our beloved city!
Sorry to bother you but I have few questions. I have never been to Montreal but I really love this old part of the city. I know not all parts of Montreal have this old and european vibe but I wonder how much it looks like this. I mean, are the most parts of the city this old and european style or they are modern like other cities of Canada? And another question. These old parts must cost much more. Is that right?
@@shamimtavasoli4724 Especially in the neighborhoods surrounding the downtown core, the buildings all have an older European feel to them, very distinct from the modern suburbia typical in the rest of North America. They are dense packed townhouses, built abreast of one another, all three to four stories tall and with a style quite uniquely their own. Due to the density of the housing, at ground level shopping, restaurants, etc, are never more than a block away and virtually every corner has some sort of store. Public squares, parks, quaint seating nooks, etc., abound throughout. You really have to hunt far to find modern suburbia. There are typical modern style apartment buildings, but some serious effort has been made by architects to not despoil areas of their charms and their design usually melds well. There are a few sections of the city that were built in the mid twentieth century largely as factory/warehouse districts that are lacking in much charm, but they are very much the exceptions.
Being an architectural junkie is likely one reason I adore Montreal (and QC) so much. Add in the beautiful French language, the culture surrounding you everywhere, and the magnificent cuisine, and you have a world class European-style city sans the flight. If not for the long, cold winters, I might have settled here. I have been all over Europe,, and I am not even Catholic, but Basilique Notre Dame IS the most beautiful church in the world, and it's blue hues make you feel as if you landed in heaven! St Joseph Oratory on Mont Royal is impressive, too,, but this is the creme de la creme! J'aime beaucoups le ville du Montreal!
It's not hard to dress for the winter, and there is always the RÉSO, the largest underground network in the world. It is quite possible in the worst of winter to spend the day out and about and never wear a coat.
Sorry to bother you but I have few questions. I have never been to Montreal but I really love this old part of the city. I know not all parts of Montreal have this old and european vibe but I wonder how much it looks like this. I mean, are the most parts of the city this old and european style or they are modern like other cities of Canada? And another question. These old parts must cost much more. Is that right?
@@shamimtavasoli4724 Yes, the oldest parts do cost more. But Montreal tends to have very reasonable rents compared to most cities, largely because the zoning has long favored dense townhouse construction, which has also helped very much with community.
Imagine Boston’s historic North End,,, but on steroids! Old Montréal is beyond compare. It’s a place you have to visit to really understand just how cool it is. My favorite city in North America hands down.
@@TomHuston43 NOLA is a great city to visit, fun and wonderful people, but rough on the edges. The Garden District b is nice, the French Quarter fun, but lots of blight, qn oppressive humid climate and high crime rate. Montreal, Boston and Charleston are in one group, and New Orleans is quite different. Another beautiful city to consider in North America (without the great architecture) is Vancouver, BC, Canada.
@@jdhjimbo Nola is a very unique city, and worth visiting. Sadly they destroyed large parts of the city through urban renewal and freeway construction, and hurricane Katrina destroyed more.
@@jdhjimbo According to the most recent data by Statistics Canada and the FBI, Greater Montréal ranked No. 1 again for safest city among 20 of the largest metropolitan areas in Canada and the U.S. due to its low homicide rate (1.11 for very 100,000 inhabitants compared to the 4.72 average).
Well done vids. Great idea to mash up YT vids into a greatest hits package. Chapeau! As for the architecture...old school European architecture and urban design is clearly the most attractive and easthetically pleasing on the planet. Why modern Canadian architects and designers can't learn a lick from what obviously works so bloody well in old Montreal and Quebec City is maddening. If I were King Of Everything, every Canadian city and town would look like old Montreal.
@ 7:35 Jacques Cartier is actually credited for Discovering Canada. A few historians (Mostly English obviously) are of the opinion Canada was discovered by the Italian Giovanni Caboto, an Italian navigator and explorer, they have since renamed "John Cabot" and conveniently forget to mention he's Italian. Funny how some folks with small penis syndrome need to rewrite history.
Another gem! These vids make me nostalgic for the 70s, when I worked in a resto on Rue St. Paul, just off Place J-C. I've since moved out of the city for work, but return to visit every year.
2:02 Tourists : “it’s amazing! I feel we’re in Paris but we’re in Montreal.” (While there is tango music playing) Porteños : Buenos Aires IS the Paris of South America.
My sisters third home lol. is in this video often It’s I think lol 55 saint-Paul st w Same street that all the beautiful art galleries are. You showed her building in one of those shots. Right by the Ferris wheel and Dublin market. Not far Notre Dame. ( if the light show is on at the church stop by. It’s beautiful, just an interesting fact Celine Dion had her husband’s funeral at the church) I’ve spent lots of time here and It’s absolutely stunning ♥️♥️🇨🇦
Fortunately, the British lost the Hundred Years War, otherwise, they would have reduced half of France like that. I think for an American this city must be the best. As an Italian from Italy I find it a bit grey, like most English cities. Fortunately, the planners have not completely destroyed the grid of streets and squares of the historic center, so people can afford to walk and experience the (wrong) impression of being in Europe and sitting at a table in a café, watching the world go by.
It's not a competition. One is a French town completely rebuilt after being destroyed in 1759, the other features French, English, Irish and Scottish architecture spanning 400 years. Both are unique for different reasons!
@@DiscoverMontréal lol im living right between the two city and montreal is dead boring, few historic building tthere and there surrounded by gargabe dumb all around
old montreal is charming but it's only 5% of montreal, the touristic part of the city, the rest of the city isnt as beautiful, that's why no one talks about the east the west or the north of the island.
Very nice but no mention of the British, Scottish, Irish that funded all the first and best universities, banks, hospitals and all sorts of institutions. All the bridges and infrastructure that was built by the Irish and immigrant population. No mention of them.
You must not have watched the video, the efforts of the British, Scottish and Irish were all mentioned and it was explained that the architecture of the neighbourhood is mostly their contribution.
marynews1: This video was about Old Montreal, not the entire city of Montreal. And no, not all the bridges were built by Irish and immigrants. Many French and especially indigeneous people from local areas worked and died building those bridges. I guess you are not a Montrealaise.
As much as you love our French culture, we are losing ground at an alarming rate. Please I do encourage you to support our French culture in any way you can. At the end of the day, if we disappear, it will be a terrible loss to the North American continent.
By all calculable measurements, French culture is doing just fine and will remain strong for generations in North America. Repeating alarmist hysteria whipped up by politicians trying to gain political points is not productive and does more damage than good. Québécois culture isn’t going anywhere ⚜️
I've lived in Montreal for fifty years, and far from the French culture declining, I think it has thrived. It 'has' become much more cosmopolitan over time though.
Born and raised in Montreal; and French culture is in no danger of disappearing. Nicole needs to sit down and take some deep breaths. There have, in fact, been some pretty draconian laws put in place for quite a while now which have ensured French culture by forbidding English language and culture. Evolution of language and culture is normal, as is change. Calme-toi, Nicole.
@@nicolemarois5900 I actually smiled when I saw your response, Nicole. Seulement une Quebecoise could reply with such grace and with such a gentle rebuke. Touche, mon ami. C'est comme ca, chez nous. We will all carry the culture and language avec nous. Avec fierte. (Sorry for the English keyboard).