Laval, Quebec
From Freepedia
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| Motto: Unité, progrès, grandeur (Unity, Progress, Greatness) | |||
| Area: | 247.07 sq. km. | ||
| Population
- City (2004)
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| Time zone | Eastern: UTC-5 | ||
| Latitude Longitude | 45°32' N 73°49' W | ||
| MPs | |||
| Robert Carrier, Nicole Demers, Raymonde Folco, Serge Ménard | |||
| MNAs | |||
| Vincent Auclair, Maurice Clermont, Michelle Courchesne, Thomas J. Mulclair, Alain Paquet | |||
| Mayor | Gilles Vaillancourt(since 1989) | ||
| Governing body | Laval City Council | ||
| City of Laval | |||
Laval (pronounced [læˈvæl]) is a city, a regional county municipality and a region in southwestern Quebec, Canada in the Greater Montreal Area. It is located on Île Jésus, across the Rivière des Prairies from Montreal. It also includes the Îles Laval in the Rivière des Prairies. The city has a population of 364,756 (Statistics Canada, 2004). Laval also constitutes one of the 17 regions of Quebec.
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Geography
The island is still rural in nature, with most of the urban area in the central region and along the south and west coasts.
Laval is served by highways (aka "autoroutes"):
- 25 [Boucherville to Saint-Esprit]
- 19 - Papineau Highway [Montreal to Bois-des-Filions]
- 13 - Chomedey Highway [Montreal to Boisbriand]
- 15 - Laurentian Highway [NY border (I-87) to Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts]
- 440 - Laval Freeway (provincial) [Laval]
There is commuter rail service provided by AMT on two lines (Deux Montagnes and Blainville), and the STM's Montreal Metro is presently being extended north of Henri-Bourassa (Montreal Metro), with completion expected in 2007. Société de transport de Laval (STL), is a partner with AMT, and connects with STM at both Henri-Bourassa (Montreal Metro) and Côte-Vertu (Montreal Metro) terminal.
There are six road bridges to Montreal Island, and seven bridges to the north shore region, comprising of the communities of Deux-Montagnes, Saint-Eustache, Boisbriand, Rosemère, Lorraine, Bois-des-Filion, and Terrebonne.
Laval is bounded on the south and east by Montreal, on the north by MRC des Moulins and on the west by MRC de Thérèse-De Blainville and MRC de Deux-Montagnes.
Politics
Politically, Laval is a battleground area between the Quebec nationalist parties (The Bloc Québécois federally and the Parti Québécois provincially) and the federalist parties (The Liberal Party of Canada and the Parti libéral du Québec). The only exception is Chomedey in the south, which voted overwhelmingly to not separate in the 1995 Quebec referendum and which was in the center of the spoiled ballot controversy as it had 11.7 % of its total ballots spoiled. The other parts of Laval were narrowly split. See also: Canadian federal election results in Northern Montreal and Laval
Demographics
The city is about 6% Anglophone, 73% Francophone and 20% Allophone. The city is 91% white, but is also home to sizable Greek, Italian, black and Arab minorities. The city is 81% Roman Catholic. The median income is $23,965.
History
Laval was first settled by Jesuits in 1636 when they were granted a seigneury there. Agriculture first appeared in Laval in 1670. In 1675, François de Montmorency-Laval gained control of the seigneury. In 1702 a parish was founded, and dedicated to Saint-François de Sales. The first municipalities on the island were created in 1845, after nearly 200 years of a rural nature. The only built up area on the island, Sainte-Rose was incorporated as a village in 1850, and remained as the main community for the remainder of the century. With the dawn of the 20th century came urbanization. Laval-des-Rapides became Laval's first city in 1912 and was followed by L'Abord-à-Plouffe being granted village states three years later. Laval-sur-le-Lac was founded in the same year based on its tourist-based economy from Montrealers. Laval began to grow throughout the following years, due to its proximity to Montreal which made it an ideal suburb.
To deal with problems caused by urbanization, amalgamations occurred like when L'Abord-à-Plouffe amalgamated with Renaud and Saint-Martin creating the city of Chomedey in 1961. The amalgamation turned out to be successful for the municipalities involved, and the Quebec government decided to amalgamate the whole island into the city of Laval in 1965. Laval was named after the first owner of Île Jésus, François de Montmorency-Laval, the first Roman Catholic Bishop of Quebec. At the time, Laval had a population of 170,000. Laval became a Regional County Municipality in 1980. Prior to that, it was the County of Laval.
The 14 municipalities which existed prior to the incorporation of the amalgamated City of Laval on August 6, 1965 were:
- Auteuil
- Chomedey
- Duvernay
- Fabreville
- Îles-Laval
- Laval-des-Rapides
- Laval-Ouest
- Laval-sur-le-Lac
- Pont-Viau
- Sainte-Dorothée
- Sainte-Rose
- Saint-François (de-Sales)
- Saint-Vincent-de-Paul
- Vimont
The city is twinned at two cities: Laval, France (1984) and Petah-Tikva, Israel (1986). It also maintains ten economic and cultural cooperation agreements with cities such as Markam (Ontario), Ribeira Grande (The Azores), Nice et Grenoble (France), Mudanjiang (China) and Pedro Aguirre Cerda (Chile). Source: City of Laval website
Tourism
Laval's main attractions are:
- The Cosmodôme
- Mille-Îles River Park
- Mondial Choral Loto-Québec
- The Carrefour Laval
- The Recreatheque
- Maison des arts de Laval/Laval's art centre
- Armand-Frappier museum
- Rivière-des-Prairies' hydroelectric plant
- André-Benjamin Papineau's cultural complex
- National Canadian historic site of Manoir-Papineau
- Old Sainte-Dorothée
- Old Saint-Vincent-de-Paul
- Sainte-Rose-de-Lima church
- Saint-François-de-Sales church
- Laval's roadside crosses
- Laval Symphony Orchestra
- Salle André-Mathieu show hall
- La Grangerit's summer theatre
- La Maison des Jardins' show hall
- Centre de la Nature
- Auteuilloise farm
- Aventures 4-H park at the Bois de l'Équerre
- Marina Venise
- Delco Aviation
- The Cardinal Golf club
- Saint-François Golf club
- Sainte-Rose Golf club
- The Boisé Papineau's park
- Famous Player's Colossus movie theatre
- Escalade Action Directe climbing centre
- Centre Laval
- Skorpion Paintball
Source: http://www.tourismelaval.com/
Laval sports teams
<tr bgcolor="#ADADAD"><td width="190px">Club <td width="110px" align="left">Sport <td width="270px" align="left">League <td width="180px" align="left">Stadium/Arena <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"> <td width="190px">Chiefs <td width="110px" align="left">Hockey <td width="270px" align="left">Ligue Nord-Américaine de Hockey <td width="180px" align="left">Colisée de Laval <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"> <td width="190px">Regents <td width="110px" align="left">Hockey <td width="270px" align="left">Midget AAA <td width="180px" align="left">Colisée de Laval <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"> <td width="190px">Les Associés <td width="110px" align="left">Baseball <td width="270px" align="left">Ligue de Baseball Élite du Québec <td width="180px" align="left">Montmorency college </table> See also: Le réseau des sports for detailed coverage.
External links
- City of Laval (English and French)
- Chomedey news (English)
- Courrier Laval (French)
See also
| North: Bois-des-Filion, Terrebonne |
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| West: Rosemère, Boisbriand, Saint-Eustache |
Laval | East: Montreal |
| South: Montreal |
| Communities in Laval | |
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Auteuil | Chomedey | Duvernay | Fabreville | Îles-Laval | Laval-des-Rapides | Laval-Ouest | Laval-sur-le-Lac | Pont-Viau | Sainte-Dorothée | Sainte-Rose | Saint-François | Saint-Vincent-de-Paul | Vimont
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