Ninth Floor Restaurant's dining hall and mural

The Eaton's Ninth Floor Restaurant (known as "The Ninth Floor" or "Le 9e") is an endangered Art deco landmark in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It ceased operation in 1999 after 68 years, and not been open to the public since. This restaurant is a registered historical site.

History

Lady Eaton, the wife of the multi-millionaire owner of the Eaton's department stores, gave her interpretation of "class and style" to the major Eaton's stores. In 1925 Eaton's purchased the three storey Goodwin building[1] located at 677 Saint Catherine Street West and commissioned architects Ross & MacDonald to build it up to six storeys in 1927. The top three floors were added in 1930–31.[2] On January 26, 1931, Lady Eaton opened a large art deco restaurant on the 9th floor of the building. The restaurant was designed by architect Jacques Carlu and[3] the floor to ceiling mural at the back of the restaurant was created by his wife Natacha Carlu.[4] It was patterned on dining hall of the transatlantic liner Ile de France. The 9th floor corridor between the elevators and restaurant is also in the art deco style.

The waitresses and loyal customers of the restaurant were the subject of a 1998 National Film Board of Canada documentary, Les Dames du 9e (The Ladies of the 9th).[5]

Closure

Shortly following Eaton's bankruptcy, the restaurant closed on October 14, 1999. A bagpiper played "Amazing Grace" to mark its end.[6] After remaining vacant, the 9th floor restaurant was given heritage status by the Québec government. Plans for bringing the restaurant up to modern safety standards were drawn up by Fournier, Gersovitz, Moss et associés but never implemented.

Bas-relief by Denis Gélin and Alfred-Alphonse Bottiau

Post-closure state

For nearly a quarter of a century, the former restaurant had sat behind locked doors and was slowly deteriorating. The dining room, lobby and bathroom area remained, but the kitchen had been demolished for office space. The current owners, Ivanhoé Cambridge, the real estate subsidiary of the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, had refused in the past to allow media or preservation groups to inspect the site. Urban explorers who trespassed the site in 2004, took photographs documenting its then poor condition. On February 12, 2014, Heritage Montreal announced the restaurant was "under observation" due to the building's uncertain future.[7] Adding to the uncertainty at the time, the former occupants of the site, Les Ailes de la Mode, went bankrupt and closed in 2014 (while later transformed into an extension of the Montreal Eaton Centre, there had been no plans for the ninth floor). Ivanhoé Cambridge last opened the floor to CTV News in 2015, though the future of the floor space remained uncertain.[8] In September 2019 preservation advocate Gérald McNichols Tétreault launched a petition to measure public interest in reviving the space.[9] The building's owner reported that an estimated CA$15 million would be required to bring the space up to standards suitable for public use.

Mural by Natasha Carlu

Planned reopening

In March 2023,[10] Ivanhoe Cambridge, the owner of the Eaton Centre, announced the reopening of the iconic ninth Floor restaurant by the end of the year. The heritage conservation firm, EVOQ Architecture, is carrying out the work to ensure preservation of its heritage, while bringing it up to current day standards. The re-imagined space will offer a restaurant, as well as a venue for shows and private events that can accommodate up to 500 people.[11]

In August 2023, it was announced the multi-purpose space (containing six different areas, including a small restaurant) will be officially known as "Le 9e", however the reopening will be delayed until the spring of 2024.[12]

See also

References

  1. "Civilization.ca - Before e-commerce - Company history - Montréal's St. Catherine Street Shopping District". Historymuseum.ca. Retrieved February 12, 2019.
  2. Ross & Macdonald Architects, "General Specifications for Extensions to Store for The T. Eaton Co. Limited of Montréal," February 19, 1930, Ross & Macdonald Fonds (Canadian Centre for Architecture – Archives) 5-10.
  3. Chung, Andrew (May 17, 2009). "Deprived of an art deco wonder". Toronto Star. Retrieved May 26, 2009.
  4. "A postcard with a photograph of the Eatons' Restaurant on the 9th floor, ca.1931". Art Deco and the decorative arts in the 1920s and 1930 digital exhibition. McGill University Library. Retrieved February 14, 2014.
  5. "Les dames du 9e (1998)". IMDb.com. Retrieved February 12, 2019.
  6. "Future uncertain for famed Montreal Art Deco restaurant". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved February 12, 2019.
  7. Peritz, Ingrid. "Future uncertain for famed Montreal Art Deco restaurant". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved February 14, 2014.
  8. "Exclusive tour: Inside Montreal building's long-empty 9th floor". YouTube. CTV News. Archived from the original on December 22, 2021.
  9. MacFarlane, John (September 26, 2019). "Heritage champion dreams of reopening L'Île-de-France — an art deco masterpiece hidden atop a Montreal mall". Toronto, Ontario: CBC Radio-Canada. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  10. "Ivanhoé Cambridge announces the reopening of the Eaton Centre's ninth floor, a jewel of Montréal's architectural and cultural heritage". Ivanhoé Cambridge. March 23, 2023.
  11. "Iconic restaurant atop Montreal's Eaton Centre set to open later this year". March 24, 2023.
  12. https://le9montreal.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Le-9e-press-release-2023-08-22.pdf

Other sources

  • Anderson, Carol and Mallinson, Katharine. Lunch with Lady Eaton: Inside the Dining Rooms of a Nation, Toronto: ECW Press, 2004. ISBN 978-1550226508
  • Cohen-Rose, Sandra. Northern Deco: Art Deco Architecture in Montreal. Montreal: Corona Publishers,1996 Sandra Cohen-Rose. ISBN 0-919631-06-1
  • Martin, Catherine. The Ladies of the 9th Floor. 60 minute film. Winner of the 1998 Telefilm Canada prize for short and medium length films.


45°30′12″N 73°34′16″W / 45.50336°N 73.5710°W / 45.50336; -73.5710

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