Jump to content

Snowdon station

Coordinates: 45°29′08″N 73°37′41″W / 45.48556°N 73.62806°W / 45.48556; -73.62806
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Snowdon
General information
Location5111 Chemin Queen Mary, Montréal, QC H3W 1X4
Canada
Coordinates45°29′08″N 73°37′41″W / 45.48556°N 73.62806°W / 45.48556; -73.62806
Operated bySociété de transport de Montréal
Line(s) Orange Line
Blue Line
Platforms4 split platforms (2 on each level)
Tracks4
Connections
Construction
Depth19.5 metres (64 feet) (upper platform)
24.6 metres (80 feet 9 inches) (lower platform), 6th deepest
AccessibleYes
ArchitectJean-Louis Beaulieu
Other information
Fare zoneARTM: A[1]
History
Opened7 September 1981 (Orange Line)
4 January 1988 (Blue Line)
Passengers
2023[2][3]3,594,433 Increase 23.13%
Rank23 of 68
Services
Preceding station Montreal Metro Following station
Côte-Sainte-Catherine Orange Line Villa-Maria
Terminus Blue Line Côte-des-Neiges

Snowdon station is a Montreal Metro station in the borough of Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.[4] It is operated by the Société de transport de Montréal (STM) and is a transfer station between the Orange Line and Blue Line; it is the western terminus of the Blue Line. It is located in the Snowdon neighbourhood. The town of Hampstead is located nearby to the west, across Macdonald Avenue; one emergency exit from the station extends into Hampstead.

The station opened on September 7, 1981 with service on the Orange Line only, though the Blue Line platforms were built at the same time. At the time it was the western terminus of the Orange Line, taking over from Place-Saint-Henri station; it is thus the only station to have been the terminus of two different lines. Service on the Blue Line began on January 4, 1988.

Overview

[edit]
Platform arrangement at Snowdon

The station was constructed as an anti-directional cross-platform interchange, with three lateral tunnels containing two storeys each, joined by four cross-tunnels; both lines therefore have stacked platforms. This layout was intended to allow rapid transfer between a future extension into Notre-Dame-de-Grâce and service to downtown; this service never opened, and the station's layout means that most people who transfer between the Blue and Orange Lines must go down stairs.

The station's central access tunnel is connected at its western end to the station's single entrance, which is integrated into an STM control centre and contains a small sunken garden.

Accessibility

[edit]

In October 2013, work began to make the station accessible. Construction involved building two elevators to connect both platform levels of the station, with a third elevator constructed to connect the upper platform level with the surface entrance. The only vestibule of the station underwent reconstruction.[5] After completion, the surface elevator features its longest shaft in Montreal Metro, with the pit depth of about 25 meters. Works was completed by June 2016.[6] However, the Blue Line itself was not accessible until Jean-Talon station (which also interchanges with the Orange Line) gained elevators in 2019.[7]

Architecture and art

[edit]
Blue Line platform

The station was designed by Jean-Louis Beaulieu, who also provided sculptural grilles for the station's main staircase and the rear of the control building. The station's main artwork, a group of four murals by Claude Guité running the full length of the platform and entitled Les quatre saisons (the four seasons). The murals are painted on 500 panels of asbestos cement stretching the entire length of the platforms, they portray semi-abstract scenes of the foliage and weather associated with each of the four seasons. The seasons go in order, counterclockwise around the platforms, with winter on the Côte-Vertu platform, spring on Montmorency, summer on the Saint-Michel departure platform, and autumn on the Snowdon arrival platform.

Soon after the station opened the murals were victims of graffiti that badly damaged the artwork. Attempts of removing the graffiti destroyed large sections of the paintings. In 2004 the murals were all removed for a restoration plan by the STM to have the artist repaint the murals and slowly have them reinstalled in the station. As of June 2010 all the murals have been repainted, and are partially reinstalled on all four platforms of the station with a protective sheet of glass to prevent any future vandalism.

Origin of the name

[edit]

This station is named for the neighborhood in which it is located, named in turn for the owner of a farm on which it was built. The underground station platforms, located under Avenue Dornal, are approximately four blocks—about 250 m (270 yards)—east of the site of Snowdon Junction, a major transfer point during the streetcar era.

Connecting bus routes

[edit]
Société de transport de Montréal
Route
51 Boulevard Édouard-Montpetit
166 Queen Mary
711 Parc-du-Mont-Royal/Oratoire

Nearby points of interest

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Fare Zones". Metropolitan Regional Transportation Authority. 1 July 2022. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  2. ^ Société de transport de Montréal (2024-02-16). Entrants de toutes les stations de métro en 2023 (Report) – via Access to Information Act request, reference no. 0308.2024.021.
  3. ^ Société de transport de Montréal (2023-05-25). Entrants de toutes les stations de métro en 2022 (Report) – via Access to Information Act request, reference no. 0308.2023.134.
  4. ^ Snowdon Metro Station
  5. ^ "Snowdon - October 2013 to January 2016". STM. August 2014. Retrieved October 18, 2014. We have begun construction work on the elevator shafts that, once completed, will link the mezzanine on the upper level and the passenger platforms on the lower level
  6. ^ Henriquez, Gloria (3 June 2016). "Snowdon metro station more accessible thanks to 3 new elevators - Montreal". Global News. Retrieved 2022-09-20.
  7. ^ "Métro's Blue line now accessible". Société de transport de Montréal. 7 November 2019. Retrieved 2020-11-08.
[edit]