La Tulipe

Executive committee member says city’s noise bylaws need reform

By Dan Laxer
The Suburban

La Tulipe, Le Divan Orange, Diving Bell Social Club, and Champs Sports Bar are just a few Montreal venues that have had to close, either permanently or temporarily, due to noise complaints. Le Divan Orange, in fact, closed in 2017. That was the same year that Mayor Valérie Plante had made a campaign promise to table a policy on the issue.

Now the city of Montreal says its noise regulations are due for an upgrade.

The Projet Montréal administration did put out a nightlife policy at the beginning of this year, as reported in The Suburban. The goal was to fund the work necessary for venues with less than 3,000 spaces to comply with noise regulations.

But Ericka Alneus, a Plateau Mont Royal borough councillor, and Executive Committee member responsible for culture, says the city’s noise regulations, which date back to 1977, are old and in need of an update.

The venues mentioned all happen to be in the Plateau Mont Royal borough. At last week’s borough council meeting a draft bylaw was tabled specifically dealing with noise regulations and how they affect venues in the area, as well as people who live in the borough. The bylaw is actually based on a pilot project conducted in the city last year, along with consultations with sound engineers, various departments of the borough, and business and residents who would be impacted by proposed changes.

The borough would be using a measurement protocol, recognized internationally for some time, called “spectral emergence,” which measures the ambient and residual noise levels of a particular venue as compared with the normal sound levels of an urban environment. The comparison takes into account the noise levels during a venue’s operating hours – 11 p.m. to 7 a.m., and non-operating hours – 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. It is a more accurate way to measure the actual impact of noise in a neighbourhood.

The regulations don’t only apply to show bars. They will also apply to other establishments, including reception rooms and dance halls, recreational gaming establishments, and community or socio-cultural activities. The rules prohibit noise of specific decibel levels in residential areas where it might affect bedrooms and other interior spaces, and even balconies and courtyards.

The borough is working with the SPVM on the best way to enforce compliance. But the police do indeed retain the power to intervene in the event of complaints of excessive noise. The city has said that it will provide funding “to support institutions in this transition” for things like soundproofing work. Non-compliance, however, could lead to the imposition of fines of up to $20,000.

LET US KNOW WHAT YOU THINK: A municipal election is just months away. If you were the mayor, either of the city or of a borough, and had to make a decision that would please all concerned, would you: 1 – Extend venues’ operating hours, the hours during which they can present live music, to midnight? 2 – Cut their operating hours to 10:00 p.m.? 3 – Have the venues and nearby residential buildings install noise-cancelling insulation in the walls of clubs and adjacent buildings at their expense? 4 – Compensate both for installing noise cancelling insulation? 5 – mandate maximum decibel levels? n

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Nouvel Établissement announces its permanent closure

The bar is closing after three years of operation. Photo Alice Martin

Anya Tchernikov,
Local Journalism Initiative

Due to residential renovations and noise regulations the bar is unplugging the turn tables

Nouvel Établissement, a bar in Montreal’s Mile End, will permanently close on Nov. 2 due to noise regulation policy as its upper floors will be repurposed into residential spaces by the building’s owner.

This changes the noise regulations for the bar below, known for its lineup of sets every weekend. 

The closure comes after legendary music venue La Tulipe announced it was temporarily closing as section 9 of Plateau-Mont-Royal’s noise regulation prohibits any amplified noise from being heard outside an establishment.

Ariane Roy Geromin has co-managed Nouvel Établissement with partner Charles Étienne Pilon since its inception. 

“That’s something that I feel saddened me a bit, is that the people that were coming to a safe space—and there’s a lot of people that were really coming often,” Geromin said. “I know it’s really bad now that they won’t have this space anymore.” 

The venue welcomed visitors in September 2021, before it officially opened December of that year.

Before Nouvel Établissement was formally opened, there was a regular “Drink and Draw,” where visitors could come to the bar and partake in exactly what the name entails: illustrating at the establishment with a drink in hand if desired. It quickly grew to foster a community and regulars. 

“I think we were lucky with that, [with] creating a place where people could really come be themselves,” Geromin reflected. “It was really nice to see that happen at Nouvel.” 

DJ sets and artists played every weekend, with new talent constantly on the mixer. For many, this venue came to be familiar.

“I had never seen other clubs that had this sort of decor and also had very cheap cover. I went to some of their Drink and Draw events,” Nouvel attendee Micha Paradis reminisced. “[It was] a great place where I knew I could go out and see people that I know and hear music that I loved.”

As the lease approaches its end, the rent is set to increase, already too high for the co-owners, with profits from the business low. Having known about the incoming closure since June, Geromin has accepted it. 

“It was good timing,” Geromin said.

For many, Nouvel Établissement shutting its doors means losing a space that was dear to them.

Walid El Majidi, aka WALIDord, is a vinyl DJ from Morocco who immigrated to Montreal eight years ago as a student. Venues such as Nouvel Établissement allowed him to meet friends and cultivate a community. 

“I couldn’t go back home and see my family for six years,” Majidi said. “Great relationships get built inside these communities and these events. It is actually how I made myself my own family in Montreal.” 

Beyond Nouvel Établissement, nightlife in Montreal has been a lifeline for Majidi. 

“I feel stronger because I am not alone in it. We built a community where what harms me, harms everyone around me,” Majidi said. “It is not only about partying and going crazy. It is also about this feeling that it creates. […] If I’m sad, then I have this community around me, which brings up this ray of hope that makes me stand up again.”

As Nouvel is pushed out, what is next is unclear. The creators intend to keep in touch with the community they have connected with.

“We are Montrealers. You shut one place down, we are gonna open 10 others,” Majidi said. “If there is any way we can help, we will. That is the power of the community.”

This article originally appeared in Volume 45, Issue 4, published October 22, 2024.

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