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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Montreal Aquadome (19671991)  





1.2  Animal abuse incidents  





1.3  Nintendo Mégadôme (19952006)  







2 References  





3 External links  














Montreal Aquarium






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Coordinates: 45°3119.02N 73°3214.56W / 45.5219500°N 73.5373778°W / 45.5219500; -73.5373778
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The Montreal Aquarium in 1967
(Alcan Pavillion buildings: Marine Circus & Main Aquarium)

The Montreal Aquarium, also known as the Alcan Aquarium, was a public aquariumonSt. Helen's Island, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Built for the 1967 World's Fair (Expo 67), the two-building site operated for nearly a quarter of a century in La Ronde before shutting down in 1991. The main aquarium building was demolished in 1997, but the pool building still remains. Apart from a brief re-purposing as a video game center, it has been vacant ever since.


History

[edit]

Montreal Aquadome (1967–1991)

[edit]

The Expo pavilion was originally sponsoredbyAlcan Aluminum Ltd., who built the site as a joint venture with the City of Montreal and the Zoological Society of Montreal. The two buildings that made up the site were known as the Alcan Pavilion. The main aquarium building featured penguin pools, exhibits space and a gift shop. The separate dolphin pool building, the Alcan Marine Circus, had a 900-seat auditorium, show pool and holding tanks.

The city planned in 1988 to move the aquarium to a more popular location at the Old Port, but the plan did not come through when the city was mired in recession in the early 1990s.

On September 15, 1991, the aquarium officially closed. Most of its exhibits were transferred to the Biodome.

The main aquarium building was demolished, leaving just the former dolphin pool building.

Animal abuse incidents

[edit]

In February 1980, blue-collar workers enacted a 41-day workers' strike, refusing to enter the aquarium to feed or care for its dolphins. Abandoned by their trainers, and left to starve in isolation, 3 dolphins died as a result of the neglect.[1] The surviving dolphins were sold to Flipper's Sea School, a roadside dolphin attraction in Florida. The already failing aquarium received even more negative publicity, and Montreal lost its right to care for any dolphins in captivity going forward, an international embarrassment for the city.

After its closure in 1991, even further negativity came about for the city and in larger part the province of Quebec, when the media discovered the aquarium, unable to sell its sharks, made a decision to kill them off (in one failed kill attempt, a sledgehammer was used to finish off the shark).[2]

Nintendo Mégadôme (1995–2006)

[edit]

The Nintendo Mégadôme opened inside the former aquarium pool space in 1995.[3] Operating for over a decade, it was a Nintendo-sponsored video game center with the then-latest Nintendo video games and attractions. It closed in 2006. The former dolphin pool building it occupied now belongs to La Ronde, and today remains vacant and closed off from the public. The very small segment corner that remains of the main aquarium building (formerly used as a food concessions stand) is now used as a Pass Building: "Zone Groupes - Route 67".

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Dr François Lubrina. "La fin pitoyable et tragique des dauphins de Montréal" (in French). Vetérinet. Archived from the original on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 2009-12-27.
  • ^ https://www.worldfairs.info/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2846-aquarium-alcan
  • ^ spacemtfan (June 10, 2016). "The Vampire of Montreal: Part 18 of the Inverted Coaster Serie". ParkVault. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
  • [edit]

    45°31′19.02″N 73°32′14.56″W / 45.5219500°N 73.5373778°W / 45.5219500; -73.5373778


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Montreal_Aquarium&oldid=1223029605"

    Categories: 
    1966 establishments in Quebec
    1991 disestablishments in Quebec
    Aquaria in Canada
    Defunct museums in Canada
    Demolished buildings and structures in Montreal
    Expo 67
    History of Montreal
    La Ronde (amusement park)
    Museums established in 1966
    Museums in Montreal
    World's fair architecture in Montreal
    Defunct aquaria
    Former education in Quebec
    Hidden categories: 
    CS1 French-language sources (fr)
    Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Coordinates on Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 9 May 2024, at 12:56 (UTC).

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