Montreal streetcar tracks still pop up from pavement decades after last tram retired
MONTREAL —
These days, the only place you’ll find a working Montreal streetcar is at the Canadian Railway Museum south of the city. But each year, the spring thaw that cracks up the asphalt on city streets unearths pieces of a public transit past that disappeared more than 65 years ago.
Near St-Laurent Boulevard, a metal rail shines dully from a pothole, a reminder of a long-gone streetcar network that once totalled hundreds of kilometres and ferried millions of passengers a year to their destinations.
The last batch of Montreal’s tramways were retired in 1959. City officials, however, quickly discovered that removing the tracks was costly and time-consuming, and decided to pave over them instead, according to Benoît Clairoux, a historian and communications adviser with Montreal’s public transit agency, Société de Transport de Montréal.

