This entire apartment building in Montreal's Rosemont borough is Airbnbs - Action News
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Montreal

This entire apartment building in Montreal's Rosemont borough is Airbnbs

The building, comprised of four three-bedroom units on Alma St. in RosemontLa Petite-Patrie, is in an area where short-term rentals like AirBnB are supposed to be banned.

Owner says short-term rentals are temporary, building set to become condos

Every unit in this building on Alma St. in Montreal's RosemontLa Petite-Patrie borough is listed on AirBnB, in an area where short-term rentals are supposed to be banned. (Radio-Canada)

A Montreal apartment building is being used entirely to host Airbnbs, Radio-Canada has learned.

The building, comprised of four three-bedroom units on Alma Streetin RosemontLa Petite-Patrie, is in an area where short-term rentals like Airbnb are supposed to be banned.

The online listing boasts that each apartment can fit up to 16 people: four per bedroom, and four in the living room.

"There are parties that never stop, there are raves that last until 11 a.m. the next morning," said one neighbour, who asked to remain anonymous. "I've seen police come by at least twice, but there were others I didn't see myself. It's back and forth."

By repeatedly renting the apartments, the owner of the building is in violation of both provincial and municipal regulations. However, elected officials in the borough say they have little power to enforce the rules.

What the rules say

"What you're describing, which is your nightmare, is ours too," said RosemontLa Petite-Patrie Mayor Franois Limoges.

Since May 2020, anyone wishing to rent out their main or secondary residence must obtain a registration number with the Quebec tourism group, the Corporation de l'industrie touristique du Qubec. Neglecting to do so can lead to fines range from $2,500 to $25,000.

In addition, the borough of RosemontLa Petite-Patrie has banned short-term rentals everywhereexcept a stretch of St-Hubert Streetknown as the Plaza Saint-Hubert.

But to enforce it, someone would need to bring the offender to Superior Court. If they are found to be in violation, the expected fine would only be $300 less than one night's stay at the Alma Streetbuilding.

Limoges said there is very little support from the province, which dictates what they can and can't do to enforce the law.

"To go to court, it takes direct evidence," Limoges said. "You can't have circumstantial evidence, meaning an inspector can't go to Airbnb, take a screenshot of the page and then go to court with that. It is not considered sufficient."

Building to be condos

The owner of the building on Alma Streetadmitted to Radio-Canada that he didn't obtain registration numbers for his units.

He said that the short-term rentals were temporary, while he tried to sort out the permits required to turn the building's rental apartments into condos. His goal is to have them converted by the end of the year.

Airbnb said in a statement that it takes "all necessary measures" to ensure that hosts comply with Quebec's rules and regulations. It did not explain why the platform allows listings that do not respect the laws.

"There really is work to be done with online platforms, to force them to comply with the regulations," said Dominique Ollivier, the president of Montreal's executive committee and the city councillor for Vieux-Rosemont.

To avoid compromising its investigations, Revenu Qubec did not disclose how many inspectors it has or how it investigates short-term rental units.

However, the statements of offence issued under the rules have increased more thantenfold in the past two years, from 135 in 2019-2020 to 1,747 in 2021-2022 (as of February).

With files from Radio-Canada's Ren Saint-Louis