Mount Royal residents fight to save one of Quebec's largest curling club from potential demolition - Action News
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Montreal

Mount Royal residents fight to save one of Quebec's largest curling club from potential demolition

Curling fans worry one of province's largest curling club is in jeopardy as the Town of Mount Royal Council considers using the site for a new sports complex.

TMR Curling Club would celebrate its 70th anniversary in 2023

Sylvie Gravel is the executive secretary of the Town of Mount Royal Curling Club. ( Josh Grant/CBC)

Supporters of the Town of Mount Royal Curling Club are rallying behind an online petition to preserve the club's building, as the town council considers repurposing the site for a new sports complex.

Since the club's board of directors launched the petition on April 15, it has collected over1,500 signatures.

Sylvie Gravel, 63, a TMR resident who has been a member of the curling club for a decade, says the town shouldn't build the new facility at the expense of curling.

"From a historical perspective, it would be extremely sad to destroy this building," she said.

Founded in 1952, the Town of Mount-Royal Curling Club has organized several major competitions, including the provincial Mixed Championship, the Canadian Gay Curling Championship and the Canadian Mixed Championship.

With six rinks, it is one of the largest curling clubs in Quebec and one of eight curling clubs available to players in Montreal and the surrounding area.

A long-term investment

According to a news release from the club's board of directors, in 2019the Quebec government and the previous Town of Mount Royal (TMR) administrationinvested more than $700,000 in the club to install a new refrigeration system, which has a typical lifespan of 25 years.

Destroying the building three years later, Gravel said, may make getting "grants for other sports facilities that you're trying to build" more difficultand wouldbe a waste of taxpayermoney.

For Gravel,the sport often referred to as "chess on ice" also serves as an important social activity for elderly players.

"I know that I'm not in top shape, . but I saw in [curling] something I could do for a long time," she said. "Curling is more than just a physical activity. It's a cognitive activity."

Theboard has tried setting up meetings with TMR Mayor Peter Malouf for the past five months to discuss the club's future and even invited him to Quebec'sCurling Club Championship,which was held at the local rinkApril 1-3.

Gravel says Malouf initially suggested a couple of weekswhen he mightbe available to sit down with them but later replied thathewas too busy and has since been unresponsive.

The Town of Mount Royal Curling Club was founded in 1952. (Josh Grant/CBC)

Malouf told CBC News the re-examination of the curling club's headquarters is "a long time coming," as residents have been waiting for improvedsports facilities for years.

In 2020, TMR residents voted in favour of constructing a $48.7-million sports facility, which would include a pool. It would also be TMR's first municipal building to be constructed in a half century.

"I hear the curling clubs' concerns," he said. "I know they've written to me, but this is not against a curling club, this is for the population of TMR."

He said reserving the building for the curling club is difficult to justify given TMR residents' "limited" use of it relative to other sports clubs.

"We're talking 40 or less residents of TMR using the enormous building," he said.

"You want to make sure that you serve the greatest number of people with the installations that are owned by the Town of Mount Royal."

In comparison, he said, TMR's minor hockey program reaches 1,500 residents and the town's figure skating club draws 425 residents.

According to Gravel, 225 members, including those outside the town, make up the curling club, but she says that number was much higher before the pandemic. On top of curling, Gravel says the club also hosts fundraisers for two local children's hospitals, corporate outings and social events.

Malouf said nothing has been finalized and all options are still on the table. He says he'll bebringing his ideas to Council to try andbuildconsensus on the best way forward for a newsports complex before sharinghis final proposalwith the wider population.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story stated that the Town of Mount Royal Curling Club was the largest in Quebec with six curling rinks In fact, the Club de curling Noranda also has six rinks.
    Aug 26, 2022 1:29 PM ET

with files from Josh Grant