LIONEL-GROULX (MONTREAL METRO)


'Lionel-Groulx' is a station of the Montreal Metro in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is in the Saint-Henri area of the borough of Le Sud-Ouest. It is a transfer station between the Green Line and Orange Line.
It serves 3.8 million passengers a year without including transfers. If they were included, it would be ranked among the top five busiest in the network with about 10 million passengers.
It was inaugurated on September 3, 1978 as part of the extension of the Green Line to Angrignon, with service on the Green Line only, though the Orange Line platforms were built at the same time. They did not enter service until the extension to Place-Saint-Henri was opened on April 28, 1980. It was therefore the first transfer station to be opened after Berri-UQAM, in the original network.
The station, built in open cut, features stacked platforms with central platforms between the lines; the orange line is to the south and the green line to the north. The platforms are arranged in a cross-platform interchange, with the two inbound lines (Montmorency and Honoré-Beaugrand) on the upper level, and the two outbound lines (Côte-Vertu and Angrignon) on the lower level. This allows the majority of passengers to transfer by simply walking across the platform, without having to go up or down stairs. The station's mezzanine, suspended on beams, is located above the upper platform, and gives access to the single entrance.
''The Tree of Life'' by Joseph Rifesser stands in the Lionel-Groulx Metro Station

Arrangement of the platforms at Lionel-Groulx Metro Station

The station was designed by Yves Roy. It contains two artworks: a pair of stainless steel mural sculptures by the architect over the mezzanine, and in the mezzanine itself, a sculpture called ''The Tree of Life'' by Italian artist Joseph Rifesser. Representing the races of humanity growing from a common root, it was carved from the entire trunk of a walnut tree, it was originally located at Man and His World and was given to the Montreal metro by the United Nations.

Contents
Origin of the name
Connecting bus routes
STM Night routes
Address of entrances
Nearby points of interest
Trivia
External links

Origin of the name


This station is named for rue Lionel-Groulx, which had its name changed to allow the station to commemorate Lionel Groulx. Groulx, one of the most influential of Quebec historians, founded the Franco-American History Institute in 1946 and edited the ''Révue d'histoire de l'Amérique française'' from 1947 to 1967.
In November 1996, the League for Human Rights of B'nai Brith Canada officially requested that the Executive Committee of the Montreal Urban Community (M.U.C.) recommend a name change to the Lionel Groulx metro station in Montreal.

Connecting bus routes


===Regular STM routes===
Route Name Route Map Schedule
78 LaurendeauMapSchedule
108 BannantyneMapSchedule
173 Métrobus VictoriaMapSchedule
190 Métrobus LachineMapSchedule
191 Broadway/ProvostMapSchedule
211 Bord-du-LacMapSchedule
221 Métrobus Lionel-GroulxMapSchedule

STM Night routes

Route Name Route Map Schedule
350 Verdun/LaSalleMapSchedule
371 DécarieMapSchedule

Address of entrances



★ 620, av. Atwater, between rue Saint-Jacques and rue Delisle; opposite rue Lionel-Groulx

Nearby points of interest



Atwater Market

★ Église Saint-Irénée

★ Union United Church

★ Parc du Canal de Lachine

★ CÉDA (Comité d'éducation aux adultes)

★ Solin Hall (Off-Campus Residence of McGill University)

★ With bus #211 or #221, with transfer to bus #204: Montréal/Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport

Trivia


Scenes of the Bruce Willis-Richard Gere film ''The Jackal'' were shot in this station, redressed to stand in for the Metro Center station on the Washington Metro.

External links



Société de transport de Montréal — station official web page

Lionel-Groulx metro station geo location

Montreal by Metro, metrodemontreal.com — Photos, information, and trivia

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