November 19th, 2009
Québec’s Église Saint-Vincent-de-Paul
Posted by Alanah Heffez
The facade of Église Saint-Vincent-de-Paul seduced me during a recent visit to Quebec city. It floats disembodied on the edge of a precipice, in the elbow of a highway, like a gateway into a foreign land.
Trying to track down the name of the church, I stumbled upon a news story which hit the press just yesterday. The property is currently owned by a hotelier who, last summer, was granted a permit to dismantle and rebuild the facade. The owner had proposed a 300-room hotel on the site, but the mayor threatened to expropriate him if the project did not include housing. Nothing has budged since.
But now, with the ruined church about to face another winter exposed, the culture minister has conceded that the facade need not be conserved. Mayor Lebaume seems to be pressing for demolition, stressing that it is not a heritage building.
“Alors, qu’est-ce qui est mieux? Un projet pas de façade. Pas de projet et une façade.”
What is better, asks the Voir, A project with no façade. Or a façade with no project?
A question Montrealers have been asking ourselves about the Quadrilatère Saint-Laurent, the Seville Theatre, the Maison Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine and others…
By the way, my little foray into Quebec City urbanism also led me to the Québec Urbain blog that reminds me a bit of Spacing (en français, évidemment). Worth checking out, especially for Francis Vachon’s pro aerial photography.
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Comments
8 comments | Leave a comment
This is sad. The developer acted in bad faith from day one, has consistently refused to speak to the press, and presented a sub-par project better suited for the outer rings of suburbia. Now the city gives in when it should be expropriating him. This facade is the only tangible reminder of the charitable work of Saint Vincent de Paul in Quebec City, and could be skillfully integrated by a good architect.
See: http://www.urbanphoto.net/blog/2006/10/21/facadectomy-in-the-making/
Comment by Patrick
November 20, 2009 @ 1:28 am
Thanks for that info … I love the pics and the story about it made it more interesting
Comment by marie
November 20, 2009 @ 2:07 am
Yes, this is a very sad case. There was something very impressive about that church façade when walking up or down the Côte. Definitely warrants expropriation.
Comment by Maria Gatti
November 20, 2009 @ 9:43 am
The facade is attractive and to say it’s not heritage is purely political and not grounded in reality.
Comment by A.R.
November 22, 2009 @ 2:34 pm
UPDATE Dec 9th: Mayor Regis Lebaume asks that the facade be demolished ASAP and replaced with a hotel. According to the mayor, the developer’s architectural plans are “spectacular” although they are not yet public. The building will include some kind of arch that recalls the presence of a church. The mayor assured the public that other lots in the area will “probably be dedicated to residential development”
http://www.cyberpresse.ca/le-soleil/actualites/la-capitale/200912/07/01-928878-st-vincent-de-paul-pour-en-finir-avec-la-facade.php
Comment by Alanah Heffez
December 9, 2009 @ 10:40 am
This news makes me spectacularly glad I shot it when I was there this summer. If I’d missed this I would have hated myself, it’s such an astonishingly beautiful facade.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/nightimages/3883432342/in/set-72157622097460945/
Comment by Jeff
December 10, 2009 @ 1:42 am
What exactly put the church in this condition? I saw it on a recent trip to the city and cannot find any information about it.
Comment by Sean
January 3, 2010 @ 4:40 pm
Sean, the link posted by Patrick in the first comment above should answer your question. Basically, the church was sold to a private developer who neglected it until it wasn’t fit to be recycled and had to be torn down.
Comment by Alanah Heffez
January 3, 2010 @ 7:34 pm
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