Chateau Aeroport-Mirabel Explained

Le Château de l'Aéroport is an abandoned resort themed hotel at the Mirabel International Airport in Mirabel, Quebec, Canada. It is located next to where the airport's former passenger terminal building once stood, and was connected via a skyway (still left standing after the demolition of the terminal). The hotel closed in 2002.

History

Early years

Construction on "Le Château de l'Aéroport" began in June 1975, and the hotel, operated by Canadian Pacific Hotels, opened on December 3, 1977,[1]

The property was developed along the same visual lines as other CP Hotels properties of the era, including the Chateau Airport Calgary and the Red Oak Inns of Thunder Bay and Peterborough. It had a large indoor atrium style foyer with fully grown palm trees, garden foliage, swimming pool and heated whirlpool; over which most rooms looked. It also had a glass elevator and terraced restaurant. High season was November to May.[2] It accommodated passengers arriving and departing from the adjoining Mirabel Airport, with the 344 room and 11 suite complex located directly adjacent to the airport terminal and its above ground parking area.[2]

Closure and abandonment

The hotel was a victim of the airport's decline. On August 26, 2002, facing high vacancies due to Mirabel Airport's dwindling usage, it closed after 25 years in service. Mirabel itself was eventually closed for passenger traffic in 2004.

A potential reopening was announced in February 2011, when Syscomax, a construction and management company, had signed a long term lease with Montreal Airport ADM to renovate and operate the long-vacant hotel. However, only renovations to the adjacent eight-storey administration building were completed[3] (it planned for it to be used by aerospace companies; today it's mostly vacant office space for lease).[4] Plans for a hotel reopening (first set for 2012, and then 2014) were repeatedly pushed back, until eventually canceled.[5] Consequently, no renovation work was ever done to the Chateau Mirabel.[6] By November 2014, Aeroports de Montreal announced a decision to demolish the adjacent airport terminal building and outdoor parking structure. Demolition work was completed in 2016, leaving just the hotel and its connecting skyway standing. The hotel has since been boarded up and left to deteriorate the past two decades.

External links

45.6841°N -74.0314°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Journal des débats de la Commission permanente de l'industrie et du commerce - Assemblée nationale du Québec. 2021-02-16. www.assnat.qc.ca. fr.
  2. Book: Scotland. Whyte, D.. 1998. Landmark Pub.. 9781901522181. 1–183. 2014-10-24.
  3. Web site: Le Château Mirabel réouvert - Actualité - Accès Laurentides - le journal indépendant des Laurentides. journalacces.ca. 2014-10-24.
  4. Web site: Le Château de l’Aéroport Mirabel va renaître - Argent, 7 février 2011. TVA Interactif. argent.canoe.ca. 2015-09-10. usurped. https://archive.today/20120707092921/http://argent.canoe.ca/lca/affaires/quebec/archives/2011/02/20110207-061648.html. 2012-07-07.
  5. Web site: Mirabel: le Château reprendra vie | Marie Tison | Québec. affaires.lapresse.ca. 2014-10-24.
  6. Web site: Aérogare Mirabel. https://archive.today/20140207214437/http://tva.canoe.ca/emissions/je/reportages/206001.html. usurped. February 7, 2014. tva.canoe.ca. 2014-10-24.