“Yesterday, I went to see the Andrea Bocelli concert at the Bell Center without bringing a coat with me,” explains Lara Zidine. “We are close to everything and that’s what’s nice,” adds Lyly Lefort.
The two women live in the new Solar Uniquartier in Brossard in the Nobel project tower, annexed directly to the Réseau express métropolitain (REM) station. The first is a tenant while the second lives in the condo that her daughter bought off plan for investment purposes.
“It’s happening with restaurants, terraces and the market during the summer. I feel like I’m on vacation,” says Lyly. “We feel that it’s a new neighborhood and a new experience for everyone,” Lara also enthuses.
all new, all beautiful
We met the two women at Starbucks, where a customer was in… flip flops!
Connected to the REM, Solar Uniquartier is an extension of underground Montreal. We can go to the Eaton Center or the Palais des congrès without setting foot outside and we can do the same to the Montreal-Trudeau airport or even to the northern crown when the entire network is in service.
In addition to all the restaurants, shops and the DIX30 cinema – to which a footbridge provides access over Highway 10 –, in Solar Uniquartier we find the French brasserie Chez Lionel, a Cage – Brasserie sportive, a Mexican restaurant ( Escondite), a bakery, a branch of Enfants Terribles, and so on. That’s without counting businesses, a Courtyard hotel and a campus of the University of Montreal.
There are several phases and residential projects within Solar Uniquartier, namely Nobel, Magellan, Lumeo, Oria and Eolia. Underground tunnels connect the different towers (except one closed due to litigation), while in the center, we find a park and the Place de la Gare – where two men were throwing a baseball at each other during our visit!
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For Lyly Lefort, it was quite a change to live in a three and a half apartment at 15e floor after living in a single-family house in Saint-Lambert. She had given herself a year to try the Solar Uniquartier experience. When she throws her garbage into the trash chute in her hallway, she regrets nothing. “Everything is simple. »
Lyly loves how she and her neighbors see each other unexpectedly. How easy it is with the REM to get to the city center or to visit your friend in L’Île-des-Sœurs. She appreciates the offer to go out and have fun… and the Nobel swimming pools!
There is always something to do: I feel like I’m in a resort.
Lyly Lefort
It also highlights the proximity to the Grand Urban Park of Brossard.
Living with or without a car
“There is now a way on the South Shore to no longer have a car,” says Jeremy Bouvier, who has lived in the building of the third phase of the Magellan project since August 2021.
We ate a bibimbap with the man who is an analyst in an office on Boulevard Lapinière, where he goes on foot.
“You had to believe it,” he says.
And you had to be patient, since the young man bought his condo in 2018, almost four years before living there.
When Jeremy was finally able to take up residence there, there was practically nothing around his building, but he had confidence in the future of Solar Uniquartier. “What I saw was an extension of Montreal. The wait was worth it. »
Certainly, Solar Uniquartier is less welcoming than neighborhoods with mature trees, he concedes. “But the vision of the project is good. »
What is missing ? A grocery store and a pharmacy. Fortunately, a Couche-Tard convenience store opened.
” The best of both worlds “
The developer Devimco says he thought of and designed the Solar Uniquartier according to the principles of public transport-oriented development (TOD, from its English acronym transit-oriented development). There is a Communauto car-sharing car park, but also a huge underground parking lot for those who own a car.
“The best of both worlds,” says Jean-Eric Hénault, who does not have a car and takes the REM to get to his office in Old Montreal.
It’s also the “best of both worlds” when he entertains friends in the Nobel’s common living areas rather than in his condo where he hasn’t had time to clean!
Jean-Eric Hénault, who holds happy hours with Lyly Lefort and Lara Zidine, brought together around a hundred neighbors for the passage of the Moon in front of the Sun on April 8. “The Nobel terrace is at 5060, rue de l’Éclipse in Solar: we had to see the eclipse together! »
According to him, Solar Uniquartier “has a lot of future” and fulfills its mission. “It’s like a little village,” he said.
From the future, one might add.