Griffintown housing co-op partially demolished after being declared unsafe - Action News
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Griffintown housing co-op partially demolished after being declared unsafe

Some residents in Griffintown are feeling frustrated and hopeless after part of a housing co-operative was demolished Sunday night, just days after being evacuated.

Resident Nicole Bagnato was not allowed in to retrieve her husband's ashes prior to demolition

One Griffintown resident who lost all her belongings after her home was demolished Sundaynight islooking for the city employee who saved her husband's ashes.

"I don't know his name. I only know he works for the City of Montreal," Nicole Bagnatotold CBC News. "Before they started the demolition process, he told me, 'I will do my very best to retrieve the urn,' and he did, so I want to thank him very much."

The urn is almost the only thing Bagnato has leftfrom her housing co-operative, which wasone of the19th-centurybuildings that form theCoopratived'HabitationSte-Anneat 181 and 185 de laMontagneStreet.

The demolition was orderedlast week after fire departmentofficials declared that thebuildings were at risk of collapsing.

Residentswere not allowed inside to get their belongings because entering the building was considered a safety risk.

"I couldn't believe it... We weren't allowed to go pick up [anything,] not even clothes,and never mind the furniture. We lost all our furniture," saidBagnato.

Nicole Bagnato had to leave her home when her housing co-op on de la Montagne Street in Griffintown was was evacuated April 1. (CBC)
Bagnato's home was evacuated on April 1. She had been living with her sister and was under the impression the housing co-op could be fixed.

The evacuation put18 people out of their homes. At least 10 were taken in by the Red Cross, while others found shelter with friends and family.

A structural engineer hired by the co-op said residents of the building that was not demolished would likelynotbe able to return to their homes at least untilthe end of the day.

"It's not quite safe yet," said Yvonick Houde ofRHR Expert.

Shifting soil forces demolition

Residents of the Cooprative Ste-Anne said they only started having trouble with their building when construction began on a new condominium next door.

The Brickfields condo construction site is being developed by Matre Carr and has been praised for its plans to incorporate Keegan House Griffintown's oldest house into the design.

The Cooperative dHabitation Ste-Anne sits next door to where the tiny Keegan House once stood before it was temporarily moved to make way for the new Brickfields condominium development. (Google Streetview)
Houdesaidsoil shifted underneath thefoundation of 181 de la MontagneStreet as a result ofexcavation work on the condo project.

"Everything was fine until they dug a hole next to us," Bagnato said, adding thatshe wants someone to take accountability.

I wantsomebody to say, "I'm sorry,"- NicoleBagnato, Griffintown resident whose home was demolished

"Where will we live next? We have to find clothes and figure out when we will go back to work. Life must go on but we can't go back to work in that state," she said.

"I've never seen one person from the construction [company]. Nobody contacted us to see how we're doing.... I want somebody to say, 'I'm sorry, it's our fault.'"

Residents and the organization Heritage Montreal questioned the decision to raze the building rather than secure it.

"We must find a way to ensure that accidents do not automatically translate into a loss for heritage," Heritage Montreal policy director DinuBumbaru said.

With files from CBC journalist Raffy Boudjikanian