William Zeckendorf, Place Ville-Marie, and the making of modern Montreal.
Nerbas, Don
The Place Ville-Marie development was central to the renovation of
Montreal during the 1990s and 1960s. Its cruciform office tower
transformed the city's skyline and marked the removal of the
city's financial district from St. James Street to the new alley of
skyscrapers on Dorchester Boulevard (now Boulevard Rene Levesque).
Earlier studies have emphasized the role of modern planning in the
making of Place Ville-Marie and other post-Second World War urban
redevelopment projects. This article advances an interpretation of Place
Ville-Marie as a capital investment in the "production of
space." The project was a highly speculative effort by its
developer, William Zeckendorf to utilize monumental architecture to sell
prestige to corporate tenants. This took place in specific, historically
contingent, and politically contested circumstances. In a period when
modernization was a powerful and popular idea, Zeckendorf cultivated a
myth about Place Ville-Marie that accommodated and absorbed nationalist
aspirations within Montreal and Canada that were fixed upon the panacea
of modernization. While Zeckendorf's financial woes and the
overcapacity of office space that Place Ville-Marie helped create
contradicted the project's mythic image, Place Ville-Marie also
embodied new capitalist values and the rise of new capitalist forces in
the city.
Le developpement de la Place Ville-Marie etait au centre du
renouvelement de la ville de Montreal pendant les annees 1990 et i960.
Sa tour a bureaux cruciformes a transforme le paysage urbain et a marque
le deplacement du quartierfinancier de la rue St-Jacques vers le
quartier des gratte-ciel du boulevard Dorchester (actuel boulevard
Rene-Levesque). De precedentes etudes ont souligne le role de
l'urbanisme moderne dans la realisation de la Place Ville-Marie et
d'autres projets de developpement urbain de l'apres-guerre.
Cet article propose d'interpreter la Place Ville-Marie comme un
investissement important pour la production d'un espace specifique.
Pour le concepteur William Zeckendorf, le projet representait un
deploiement significatif et risque d'energie dans le but
d'utiliser l'architecture monumentale pour vendre du prestige
aux entreprises qui l'occuperaient. Ce projet s'est deroule
dans des circonstances specifiques marquees par le contexte historique
et la contestation politique. A une epoque ou la modernisation est une
idee puissante et populaire, Zeckendorf a construit un mythe de la Place
Ville-Marie en phase avec les aspirations nationalistes de Montreal et
du Canada s'appuyant sur la modernisation percue comme une panacee.
Bien que les difficultes financieres de Zeckendorf et le surplus
d'espace entraine par le projet allaient a l'encontre de
l'image mythique de la Place Ville-Marie, cette derniere a
egalement incarne les nouvelles valeurs capitalistes et l'emergence
de nouvelles forces capitalistes a Montreal.
**********
American real estate developer William (Bill) Zeckendorf stood atop
a broad platform, joined by political, religious, and business
dignitaries. The media presence was considerable and the crowd of
onlookers large and eager with anticipation. On this day, 13 September
1962, they gathered in a new plaza in Montreal abutted by a commanding
forty-two-storey cruciform tower and connected by stairways to a vast
underground shopping promenade: this modern real estate development was
Place Ville-Marie, and the event its official inauguration. (1) Before
the large audience, Zeckendorf, Place Ville-Marie's developer,
declared it "a lasting achievement that will be known as a
milestone and marker of progress in our time." Next, Quebec Premier
Jean Lesage took the podium. He described the development as an
important phase in Montreal's passage into modernity: "With
the erection of Place Ville-Marie the whole aspect of the centre of
Montreal has changed. One of America's oldest cities is gradually
becoming one of the most modern." Mayor Jean Drapeau followed to
tell the crowd that the development "is not only a spectacular
achievement in its own right, but was and is an impetus for other
developers to choose Montreal as the site of their projects." And
Canadian National Railways (CNR) President Donald Gordon declared,
"In my twelve business years in Montreal, nothing has given me
greater pleasure than the opening of this, the boldest, most imaginative
and biggest real estate development in the Commonwealth, built on
Canadian National property that for many years was jokingly referred to
as C.N.R.'s hole in the ground." (2) The day's ceremonies
powerfully revealed a diverse group of people--with different
backgrounds, interests, and aims--united by the modernizing ethos
articulated through Place Ville-Marie. "It has been open only for
about 10 days and it is not quite finished," later wrote Pierre
Berton, "yet already it has started to transform the town. There is
no longer any sense talking about the 'race' between Montreal
and Toronto. For the moment the race is over; Montreal has won."
(3)
Writers of Montreal's urban history have likewise emphasized
the transformative impact of Place Ville-Marie upon the city. It
decisively moved the city's financial district from St. James
Street to the emerging alley of skyscrapers on Dorchester Boulevard (now
Boulevard Rene-Levesque), its underground shopping promenade contributed
to the material and conceptual framework for the elaboration of
Montreal's "underground city," and it heralded a building
boom--including major investments in infrastructure from the Metro to
Expo--that not only transformed the downtown but linked it to a more
car-friendly, suburbanizing environment. (4) Like contemporary observers
present at its inauguration, scholars have also explained Place
Ville-Marie as a story of modern, planned progress. Jean-Claude Marsan
has asserted that, had it not been for Place Ville-Marie, "one can
assume that the renovation of the downtown area would have taken an
entirely different and probably less satisfactory turn, if it ever took
place at all." The downtown renovation that Place Ville-Marie
spurred demonstrated to Marsan that "capitalism is apparently not
incompatible with good renovation," and it broke from the
traditionally venal behaviour of capitalists to serve as a lesson to
developers that "if their investments were to be profitable in the
long-run, planning and management should be such as to ensure the future
social and economic viability of their projects." (5) It is much
the same in the new book released to mark Place Ville-Marie's
fiftieth anniversary. Place Ville Marie: Montreal's Shining
Landmark, by France Vanlaethem, Sarah Marchand, Paul-Andre Linteau, and
Jacques-Andre Chartrand, offers a detailed account of the urban setting,
planning, construction, and the private and public uses of Place
Ville-Marie. An important contribution sensitive to complexity, its
overall effect is nonetheless to depict Place Ville-Marie in terms of
heroic endeavour towards inviolable progress. It was the
"culmination of a half-century of development projects"; its
project team "rose brilliantly to the challenge": it "was
an exceptional accomplishment that not only helped change downtown
Montreal, it also changed the perceptions that Montrealers had of their
city. For them, the complex became a source of pride and admiration. It
symbolized the spirit of modernism that characterized Quebec during the
Quiet Revolution. The cross-shaped tower became a powerful visual emblem
of the metropolis." (6) Scholarship thus shares in the basic view
of commentators and participants from the 1960s: Place Ville-Marie
signified the culmination of a longer-term process of urban development
that was emblematic of the modernization of Quebec and Canada. This
image of Place Ville-Marie originated in a particular historical moment
in the 1950s and early 1960s, when modernization was a powerful and
popular idea. It was sufficiently plastic and powerful to unite those
prominent individuals--Zeckendorf, Gordon, Drapeau, and Lesage--on that
day in September for Place Ville-Marie's inauguration.
Though depicted principally as a product and vehicle of planning
and progress in both the scholarly literature and contemporary
imaginings, the making of Place Ville-Marie looks rather different when
considered as a capital investment. Approaching the subject from this
perspective, Place Ville-Marie appears as a highly speculative
development built to sell prestige to corporations, and made from very
specific, historically contingent, and politically contested
circumstances. It was, indeed, both the product and source of a
"creative destruction" that would contribute to the financial
woes of its developer and introduce new volatility to the real estate
market. Put another way, the project's mythic image--as a beacon of
modernity, rational planning, and progress that transcended old social
and political barriers and achieved collective empowerment--shrouds the
business and economic realities that structured its making. (7) Its
mythic image accommodated and absorbed diverse nationalist aspirations
fixed upon the panacea of modernization within Montreal and Canada,
including an emergent Quebec neo-nationalism. Yet Place Ville-Marie also
reified consumer capitalism, broadcast corporate prestige, and thus
expressed new forms of capitalist hegemony.
By re-examining Place Ville-Marie's making as a capital
investment in the "production of space," this article develops
a different explanation for its creation and historical significance. It
argues that the architectural and planning possibilities at play in
mid-century Montreal were shaped decisively by the speculative world of
commercial real estate, the availability of financing, and the quest for
corporate prestige. High-modernist ideas and state planners were
critical to the transformation of post-Second World War Canadian
cities--as the existing historiography suggests--but there were other,
more powerful forces involved too. (8) The making of Place
Ville-Marie--and Zeckendorf's role in it--therefore provides an
example not only of how elites construct urban forms that display their
power and ideals but also how business interests actively participate in
the making of the realty market. (9) Put simply, the business and
financial story associated with Place Ville-Marie has yet to be told and
analyzed.
The "Dorchester Street Hole"
The history of Place Ville-Marie begins, in many ways, with the
Canadian Northern Railway, and its plan to install itself in downtown
Montreal during the early twentieth century. Since the Canadian
Northern's transcontinental competitors occupied the western
approach to the city centre, the company's adventurous executives
William Mackenzie and Donald Mann devised a plan to "tunnel
straight through Mount Royal" to access it. (10) The company also
planned a model town north of Mount Royal, which would be linked with
its central station by the approach route running under the mountain.
(11) By working through agents, "the Canadian Northern was able to
complete one of the biggest land assemblies in the heart of the city
without appreciable change in real estate values," encompassing the
area extending north from De La Gauchetiere to Cathcart, bounded on the
west by Mansfield, and Ste. Monique on the east side. (12) That such a
large bloc of land could be assembled by one company near the centre of
Canada's largest city was indicative of the vast financial scale of
railway enterprise; numerous private homes and the factory of the United
Shoe Machine Company were razed to make way for the company's
plans. (13)
Though the tunnel was completed in 1913, during the First World War
the railway's financing dried up. The company quickly fell into
financial disrepair, and only nationalization saved it from bankruptcy.
Between 1917 and 1923, the federal government established the Canadian
National Railways, into which the Canadian Northern was absorbed. Under
CNR ownership, plans were revived for the development of the property.
An ambitious terminal station and office buildings were proposed. But
work on the new terminal station was halted in 1931 as a result of the
Great Depression. With four million cubic yards of material removed from
the area, the site became known as "the big hole," or the
"Dorchester Street hole." (14)
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
By the 1950s, the property remained largely undeveloped, though a
terminal station had been initiated as a make-work project in 1938 and
completed during the Second World War, and the International Civil
Aviation Organization headquarters was opened in 1950. The value of the
property, however, was being greatly enhanced by the postwar economic
boom and its attendant urbanization, along with the particular spatial
evolution of the downtown business district, which was expanding from
its St. James Street core in a northwesterly direction towards Mount
Royal. (15) Moreover, the twenty-two-acre CNR property was bisected by
Dorchester Street, which had been selected by Montreal's City
Planning Department in 1946 for development as a primary road to
facilitate access to the city centre. Appropriations and expropriations
were executed, and demolitions began in 1953. In 1955, the principal
segment of this new thoroughfare opened, a four-kilometre stretch
running through the city centre from Guy Street to De Lorimier Avenue.
(16) The Montreal Gazette marvelled that the widening "is one of
the most heartening things that has happened to Montreal for many
years." (17) The "big hole" on the northern side of
Dorchester Street--the 4.4-acre site that would become Place
Ville-Marie--was thus made into an even more valuable piece of property.
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
By May 1956, the Financial Post reported that property values on
Dorchester had "jumped in five years from $10 a sq. ft. to
today's nearly $50." (18) The appreciation of the site's
value meant that Donald Gordon, CNR president since 1950, could find
eager investors in the private sector.
In July 1953 Gordon turned to Lazarus Phillips--a leading figure
within Montreal's Jewish community, senior partner in the law firm
of Phillips, Bloomfield, Vineberg & Goodman, and a well-connected
Liberal--"with a view of reaching some agreement about the
development of [the CNR's] aerial rights North of Dorchester."
Phillips's proposal to assemble a Montreal group, including
business luminaries such as Hartland Molson and J.W. McConnell, pleased
Gordon, who "wanted to see the development in Canadian hands."
(19) They and others expressed Interest. A year later, Phillips reported
that the prospective syndicate wanted the initial construction to
consist of "one building only, the site to be chosen to be most
likely on land on Dorchester Street and running along Mansfield
Street"; local developers Howard Webster and Maxwell Cummings
agreed each to put up $250,000 for the project, and Phillips reported an
initial investment of no less than $1 million could be expected. (20)
But Gordon-following the Initial intent of CNR president Sir Henry
Thornton from the 1920s for an overarching development
scheme--considered these plans inadequate, given the "value of the
site." (21)
By the fall of 1954, Phillips conceded that matters had stalled.
Though he had proposed a syndicate that encompassed Anglo-Celtic,
Jewish, and French-Canadian business Interests, Phillips suspected that
some of the individuals he hoped to interest lacked enthusiasm because
they did not want "to associate themselves in the group he
proposed." (22) Cliquishness and conservatism thus dissolved the
prospects of a development under the control of local capital. (23)
However, in the United States a new breed of real estate entrepreneur
was emerging by the 1950s, commanding vast--but heavily leveraged--real
estate projects through publicly traded companies. William Zeckendorf
was leading the pack, possessing considerable imagination and
entrepreneurial daring.
The Rise of William Zeckendorf
Born In Paris, Illinois, in 1905, William Zeckendorf grew up in
Long Island and Manhattan, the son of a shoe merchant-turned-shoe
manufacturer. At the age of twenty he dropped out of college and began
to work for his maternal uncle, who "had begun shifting his
energies and capital from the shoe industry into real estate." (24)
In 1938, having left his uncle's business years earlier, Zeckendorf
joined the firm of Webb & Knapp, "a conservative firm which
specialized in building management," whose prestige was sufficient
to win the management of the Astor family's properties. (25)
Zeckendorf's management of these properties during the war brought
in a fee of $1.5 million, which he used to rapidly expand the firm. He
gained sole ownership of the company in 1949, buying out his partners
for over $5 million, before offering its shares to the public in 1952.
(26) By 1954, Zeckendorf's real estate empire spanned the United
States, valued at roughly $250 million, and he had gained notoriety as a
major proponent of urban renewal and patron of modern architecture,
employing I.M. Pel as his in-house architect. (27)
[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]
Various insights and practices lay at the heart of
Zeckendorf's meteoric rise. He realized early that real estate
could be conceptualized as a financial services Industry, with the
realtor serving as Intermediary. Zeckendorf had, as he put it, become
"keenly aware that it paid to look at the real-estate business not
as an end in Itself but as a device for bridging gaps between the needs
of disparate groups. The greater the number of separate groups (or their
needs) that one could interconnect (or satisfy), the greater the profit
to the Innovator-entrepreneur." (28) In 1953, he elaborated the
practice of this concept with the discovery of what he called the
"Hawaiian method"--the idea had come to him while he was in
Hawaii. Rather than selling, leasing, and mortgaging in a simple
fashion, he recognized that by dividing up property into many different
component financial parts--the creation of "Inner" and
"outer" leases, for example, with first and second
mortgages--not only could larger amounts of capital be raised from a
property but profit could be extracted so long as "the sum of the
parts was greater than the former whole." (29) This financial
innovation, asserted Zeckendorf, introduced "a new liquidity and
flexibility to real-estate financing in general." (30) It also
provided the basis of Webb & Knapp's expansionary logic:
anticipated future profits were capitalized with borrowed money to pay
for expansion.
Through his experiences and activities in Manhattan, Zeckendorf was
also able to anticipate and shape the new forms and functions of major
downtown cores In postwar North America. Zeckendorf envisioned windfall
profits, during the early postwar period, through the conversion of an
old slaughterhouse district in midtown Manhattan into a modern multi-use
development, "X City," that would rival the Rockefeller
Center. He thus saw business opportunity In the de-industrialization of
the urban core. Although he succeeded In purchasing the slaughterhouses
and other lands In the area, in the end "X City" was never
built, but the property was purchased by the United Nations for its
headquarters. (31) "What a remarkable thing it is for New York to
be able to say that the more plants that go to Greensboro, the more that
go to Keokuk, the more that go to Fontana, the more that go down to
Louisiana," he declared in 1955, "the better we like it!"
"In short," Zeckendorf elaborated, "we have lost our
industrial activity at 50 cents a square foot and recaptured office
space at $5 a square foot!" (32) Championing the urban core as a
business, service, and cultural centre, he vigorously pursued the
commercialization of monumental spaces, profiting from his insight that
corporate tenants would pay higher rents for office space in prestigious
buildings. This became clear to him shortly after gaining sole ownership
of Webb & Knapp in 1949. In one of his properties, 112 West
Thirty-Fourth Street, in Manhattan, Zeckendorf took a large quantity of
ground-floor retail space off the market and even cut through to the
second floor in order to build a spacious and luxurious lobby, with
"a fine, flared ceiling" and walls lined with Siena marble.
While local realtors and retailers were confused by this apparent
squander of rents, it actually allowed Zeckendorf to enhance his profits
because although the luxurious lobby below took up rentable space, it
enabled him to command higher rents from the office space above.
Corporate tenants, in other words, would pay for prestige. (33)
Zeckendorf's strategies and insights were interwoven with the
structural forces In which he operated. Debt-financed highway
construction and infrastructure development, championed most
aggressively by the influential urban planner Robert Moses in New York
before spreading throughout the United States, drove suburbanization and
generated a new scale of thinking: the metropolitan region superseded
the city itself. (34) In this changing landscape, Zeckendorf mobilized
architectural modernism to restore the vitality of the city centre in
response to the centrifugal forces of suburban drift. (35) Zeckendorf
also commenced in 1953 the first (for him) of many urban renewal, Title
I, projects. By 1957, Robert Moses and Zeckendorf had forged a
partnership in New York City around Title I developments and would
produce results such as Kips Bay Plaza. Between 1956 and 1958,
Zeckendorf was engaged in large projects In a number of major American
cities, establishing a record of Title I work that "was
unparalleled and remains an untold chapter In the history of postwar
American urbanism." (36) Zeckendorf believed that his role--true to
the modernism of the International Style and not unlike the countless
urban planners, architects, developers, and politicians who subscribed
to it--was not only to build buildings; it was to remake cities. In an
era when the new and modern became associated with prestige, and capital
was easy to come by, the monumental aesthetic of the International Style
"became the house style of American capitalism and the default
design choice for skyscrapers, corporate campuses, hotels, and the
embassies and offices of an expanding American state." (37) The
skylines of major American and Canadian cities such as New York,
Chicago, Toronto, and Montreal were subject to dramatic modernist
renovations during the postwar boom when buoyant economic times could
turn modernist imaginings into built forms. Place Ville-Marie was a
product of this moment, with Zeckendorf the catalyst.
Zeckendorfs eventual plans for the project would be deeply informed
by his faith in the transformative capacity of modern architecture and
urban planning, and its capacity to bestow prestige to capital-rich
tenants.
Zeckendorf Comes to Canada
His interest in the CNR's property was "a
by-product" of the earlier talks between Gordon and Lazarus
Phillips. (38) Having failed to assemble a Montreal group to develop the
CNR's aerial rights north of Dorchester, Phillips, by early 1955,
had mentioned his discussions with the railway to Senator Thomas Vien, a
former Liberal MP for the riding of Outremont appointed to the Senate in
1942. (39) Vien soon reported to CNR Vice-President S.W. Fairweather
"that he was in contact with substantial people in New York,"
and, upon his return from New York in early March, explained that
"his contact is Mr. Zeckendorf." Vien was likely disappointed
when Fairweather, in response to his query, made clear that the
CNR's policy was to never pay a "finder's
commission." (40) Nonetheless, Zeckendorf travelled with I.M. Pei
to Montreal later in the month to meet with CNR officials. "Gordon
walked us around for a look at the site and a view of the city,"
reported Zeckendorf in his autobiography. "What I saw persuaded
me." (41) Riding the postwar boom, Webb & Knapp was entering
its most dramatic spate of growth In 1955, having reported profits of
$3.6 million the previous year. (42) As talks proceeded during the
spring and summer, a general understanding between Webb & Knapp and
the CNR emerged. On 19 August 1955, the board of directors of the CNR
approved acceptance of Webb & Knapp's plans to devise a master
plan for the "entire area surrounding [the] Montreal Central
Station terminal area." (43)
As president of a Crown corporation, however, Gordon was well aware
of the political risks of ceding the development to an American real
estate tycoon in an era of re-emerging economic nationalism, which was
reacting against the postwar expansion of U.S. investment in Canada. But
Zeckendorf was near the height of his powers in 1955 when discussions
began between Webb & Knapp and the CNR. David Rockefeller,
vice-president of Chase National Bank, wrote to the CNR on
Zeckendorf's recommendation: "I am glad to state that we have
a high opinion of his ability and creative genius." (44) Through
Royal Bank of Canada President James Muir, Gordon was provided the
opinions of other "important banking sources in New York."
(45) "Of course," one of these sources reported, "he is a
dreamer and thinks nothing of creating in his mind grandiose schemes
which involve outlays into the hundreds of millions of dollars."
(46) "I would say that if the project you have under consideration
seems logical and requires promotion," wrote J.M. Symes, president
of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, "it is doubtful that you
could find anyone better equipped than Zeckendorf for such an
assignment." (47)
It was precisely Zeckendorf's grandiose vision and ability as
a promoter that distinguished Webb & Knapp from prospective Canadian
developers. Moreover, Zeckendorf agreed with Vien and CNR officials
about the need to involve Canadian interests in the project and was
already planning the formation of a Canadian company in the spring of
1955.48 Gordon recommended announcing the formation of a Canadian
company several months before the release of any public statement
regarding Zeckendorf's involvement with the CNR development, in an
apparent effort to Canadianize Webb & Knapp's activities. (49)
On 26 October 1955 Zeckendorf met with Montreal's new mayor, Jean
Drapeau, and announced the creation of a Canadian company that would
"create an association of Canadian and American real estate and
financial know-how for developments in Canada beyond the scope of the
conventional type of real estate operation." Within a month, the
Montreal press reported that Webb & Knapp officials had met with
Montreal's City Planning Department director, C.-E. Campeau, to
discuss the project, which was likened to New York's Rockefeller
Center. (50)
But efforts to Canadianize Webb & Knapp met with very limited
success. It was, for example, more difficult to sell Webb & Knapp
(Canada) Limited securities to Canadians than anticipated. Announcement
of the company's board of directors in March 1956 suggested
significant Canadian participation, with leading Canadian business
figures such as J.D. Johnson, chairman of Canada Cement; Dominion Steel
and Coal president Lionel Forsyth; as well as Lazarus Phillips serving
as company directors. (51) By March, too, the Financial Post learned and
reported that Zeckendorf had purchased the Dominion Square Building at
the corner of Ste. Catherine and Peel streets. (52) Despite these
efforts to give Webb & Knapp (Canada) "a distinctively Canadian
flavour" (as Gordon reassured Minister of Transport George Marler),
by April the Investment bank Wood Gundy "reached the conclusion
that the Canadian public could not digest the offering
contemplated" by Webb & Knapp (Canada). (53) In response to
this setback, Graham Mattison, senior partner of the financial firm
Dominick & Dominick of New York, travelled to Britain and
continental Europe to test the waters, and discovered surprising success
with "several Scottish and British Trusts" and "some
conventional sources of funding." After learning of Mattison's
success, Dominion Securities expressed its willingness to perform the
Canadian underwriting to the extent of $5 million. (54) This proposed
offering was only a small portion of the capital to be raised, most of
which was to come from Europe. (55) And when the securities were finally
made available to the public, the outcome was a disappointment. CNR
Vice-President N.J. MacMillan reported in February 1957, "Stan
Nixon of Dominion Securities tells me that they had the devil's own
time trying to get rid of the Webb & Knapp issue, and the total
Canadian purchases of the issue was $2.8 Million. Bill Zeckendorf
apparently took them off the hook by arranging for some U.S. purchases
... Dominion Securities, for the time being at least, have no desire to
become involved in another real estate proposition of this kind."
(56) Canadian investment was insignificant.
Moreover, the federal Cabinet rejected the original proposal
between Webb & Knapp (Canada) and the CNR in July 1956. (57) On the
heels of the Pipeline Debate In May and June, the St. Laurent government
had been left politically exposed. After being accused by opposition
parties of selling out to U.S. interests by relying upon American
capital for the construction of a proposed trans-Canada pipeline, how
would a deal that potentially ceded an option to develop the CNR's
entire terminal property in Montreal appear? Cabinet's decision was
conditioned by this political climate. (58) Zeckendorf, nonetheless, had
an important political ally In Gordon as well as Lazarus Phillips, who
had taken over from Vien as Zeckendorf's legal counsel. (59) On 9
August, Phillips and Zeckendorf met with Prime Minister St. Laurent and
Marler to discuss the Montreal development. They proposed that the
agreement be limited to the site north of Dorchester, rather than the
entire CNR property. Marler reported that "the Prime
Minister's reaction to the new proposal seemed to me to be quite
favourable." (60) Indeed, it was. An agreement between the CNR and
Webb & Knapp was finally announced in October 1956: Webb & Knapp
would formulate a master plan--at a cost of no less than $250,000--for
the entire twenty-two-acre CNR property within six months. Upon CNR
acceptance of the plan, Webb & Knapp (Canada) would develop and
lease 4.4 acres north of Dorchester for a period of up to ninety-nine
years. (61) Canadian economic nationalism thus limited the nature of
Zeckendorf's option.
[FIGURE 5 OMITTED]
Zeckendorf also had to address the emerging neo-nationalist
sentiment in Quebec. And, indeed, the environment around the CNR's
Montreal property had become especially sensitive in this regard. The
development of CNR property on the south side of Dorchester had already
commenced in November 1954 with Donald Gordon's announcement of
plans to build the Queen Elizabeth Hotel. The unwisely chosen name
served as a bitter reminder to many francophone Montrealers of the
cultural chauvinism of an anglophone elite living in a predominantly
French-Canadian city. As Marc Levine has observed, it became "the
most heated linguistic controversy in the 1950s." (62) Indeed, In
December 1955 Francois-Albert Angers, president of the Ligue
d'action nationale, had expressed suspicion about Zeckendorf's
involvement and argued for an appropriate French-Canadian name for the
new development. (63) "To us," Zeckendorf later wrote,
"this was a lesson and a warning that whatever name we chose for
our project, it had better be French--or there would be no
project." (64)
[FIGURE 6 OMITTED]
Gordon and Zeckendorf agreed on the name Place Ville-Marie for the
prospective development, after the original French settlement on the
Island of Montreal, Ville Marie. Mayor Jean Drapeau was consulted about
the name and he checked with Montreal's cardinal, Paul-Emile Leger,
"who was equally enthusiastic" about it. (65) Zeckendorf was
very much aware of the need to sell Place Ville-Marie to the public,
since its scale Inevitably made it a political issue that would require
political cooperation. And, indeed, success was evident. The press
lauded the name. La Patrie, for example, congratulated Gordon and the
CNR for the selection of the "beau nom francais de la Place
Ville-Marie." (66) Drapeau, meanwhile, predicted that Place
Ville-Marie would add economic and aesthetic prestige to the downtown,
while the city's C.-E. Campeau proclaimed that it "will make
Dorchester Street one of the meeting places of the world, comparable to
New York's Park Avenue and the Champs Elysees in Paris." (67)
Such grandiose aspirations were stirred by the ongoing boom in
commercial real estate on Dorchester Boulevard. In February 1957
Business Week marvelled at the "furious rate of office
construction" over the previous few years in Montreal, unmatched by
any American city, save for New York and Chicago. Dorchester was at its
centre. "A whole new business boulevard is rising in the heart of
Montreal," declared the American magazine. "A street that very
recently was lined with shabby buildings--Chinese laundries, tourist
homes, small shops with dowdy fronts--is now making a bid to become
Montreal's main stem of big business." Several office towers
had been recently completed, and three new building projects were slated
to begin "before the spring thaw sets in." Large corporations
wanting to "spread out in style" were transforming Dorchester,
which was part of a larger and rapidly expanding metropolitan area. (68)
Zeckendorf addressed an urban space ideally prepared for the modernist
imaginings of Place Ville-Marie.
Planning and Selling Capitalist Modernization
"By firing the public imagination on our projects,"
Zeckendorf declared, "we can hope to swing the politicians behind
us." (69) The genius of William Zeckendorf was indeed salesmanship,
and he masterfully presented Place Ville-Marie in ways that synched with
prevailing and varied nationalist aspirations in Quebec for capitalist
modernization. Webb & Knapp's master plan, which was accepted
by the CNR and unveiled to the public in the summer of 1957, was an
exercise in both urban design and public relations. Zeckendorf declared
that the plan sought "to express the character of Montreal in a
group of buildings," and an exhibition of a scale model of the
project was put on display at Eaton's. (70) The bilingual program
that accompanied the exhibit made explicit that the development
"will bear the proud name of Ville Marie, a name given by
Maisonneuve in 1642 to the first European settlement on the
Island," and it connected this past with the promise that the
complex would serve as "the cornerstone of tomorrow's
Montreal." (71) Thus while the Ville Marie Plan promised a modern
transformation that would introduce "the most dramatic change in
the appearance of post-war Montreal," it did so with the promise
that this transformation would be expressive of the organic culture of
the city. As such, the development was depicted in a manner that linked
modernization to the enhancement of Quebec tradition and the collective
empowerment of a people. In this way, the discursive construction of
Place Ville-Marie, with its integration of the traditional and the
modern, aligned with a broader ethos within Quebec society in the 1950s
that held tradition and modernization to be entirely compatible. (72)
Yet Place Ville-Marie did propose a radical break from the past.
Henry Cobb, the project's chief architect, was not yet thirty years
of age when the project commenced, placed in charge of the development
as project manager because I.M. Pei was occupied with Title I projects
in the United States. It was the first time in Cobb's career that
he was, from beginning to end, in charge of such a development. (73)
Both Cobb and Pei were members of a generation of architects who, as
Cobb later reflected, believed it their calling to "remake the
world." (74) With direction from Zeckendorf, Cobb scrapped his
initial scheme of spring 1956 to have two main towers as the focal point
in favour of the one cruciform tower. Zeckendorf's demand for a
structure able to bestow prestige to corporate tenants dovetailed with
Cobb's interest in pure forms. As an architecture student at
Harvard's Graduate School of Design, Cobb had been inculcated in
the modernist pedagogy of Walter Gropius, the founder of Bauhaus, which
actively sought to avoid historical reference. (75) Cobb designed the
cruciform tower of Place Ville-Marie within this modernist ethos,
creating an autonomous form--derivative of the work of Le Corbusier and
Mies van der Rohe--that was entirely self-referential. (76) It could be
so because Cobb, Zeckendorf, and Gordon believed that they were
"making a new heart of the city." (77) They were actively
seeking to create a new iconography for modern Montreal.
But, as Cobb reflected, the broader design of Place Ville-Marie was
not only about creating a new centre; it was part of an effort to plan
the entire CNR property in a manner that took into consideration how it
"fit into the entire downtown of Montreal, and indeed how it fit
into the entire island and region." (78) Thus, Place Ville-Marie
introduced what one critic would describe in 1960 as "a new and
alien scale which is contrary to the existing urban character."
(79) The "new and alien scale" in which Zeckendorf and Cobb
operated was made possible by technological innovations during the
twentieth century that allowed for the construction of taller buildings,
as well as a postwar political economy that dramatically increased the
ubiquity of the automobile and expanded the potential metropolitan reach
of the downtown core to a larger hinterland. Zeckendorf arrived in
Montreal with this scale in mind, and Webb & Knapp was given access
to a plethora of studies produced by various City of Montreal
departments and the Canadian National Railways. (80) Collectively, these
technical studies and their use in informing the Place Ville-Marie
development show how intimately the project was invested in an
overarching conception of the city that attempted to organize the city
on a much larger scale than before, including efforts to rationalize
traffic flows. (81)
The dapper urban planner Vincent Ponte, another graduate of
Harvard's Graduate School of Design, was placed in charge of the
design of Place Ville-Marie's underground network of transportation
and retail space, crucial to the project's integration into a
rationalized transportation network. Ponte's multilevel design for
Place Ville-Marie separated various modes of transportation-pedestrian,
train, truck, and automobile--in an effort to facilitate the flow of
traffic into and through the downtown core. For Ponte, who would
champion this "multi-level system" for other North American
cities after the completion of Place VilleMarie, the city was not only
about things but about movement. (82) And this movement was governed by
consumer capitalism, which Ponte's "multi-level system"
sought to facilitate. Ponte elaborated on the multi-level system in
1967:
Deep below Place Ville-Marie, where the multi-level system
was first introduced, trains shuttle passengers to and from
Montreal. At the next level above it, garages offer 1,000 parking
spaces. Above them is the shopping level with some 66 stores
fronting onto air-conditioned promenades, where thousands of
Montrealers stroll daily, sheltered and safe from the noise, fumes
and dangers of traffic. There they can shop, go to the movies,
float a loan or dine at any one of many first-class restaurants,
buy a diamond necklace, book a hotel room in the Queen
Elizabeth, or take a train to Vancouver or Florida at the Railroad
station, for both the hotel and the Railroad terminal are linked to
this sheltered pedestrian world. (83)
Facilitating consumerist possibility, this new urban space
articulated the ideals of consumer capitalism in direct fashion, which
would render the old business district of St. James Street an artifact
of a more austere age. Richard Solomon, a mall developer hired by Webb
& Knapp as a planning and leasing consultant, described the
underground promenade as "a shopper's democracy." (84)
Place Ville-Marie thus powerfully assimilated consumerism with civic
purpose, just as it blurred the lines between private and public
benefit. In so doing, it aggressively advanced the commercialization of
space in the new downtown. "The only location where one can now
rest is in restaurants. Commercially this is good," one
architecture student noted of Place Ville-Marie's underground in
the mid-1960s, "but environmentally and architecturally, it is
somewhat ruthless." (85)
Zeckendorf introduced to Montreal a particular type of
commercialism, an approach structured by his lessons in Manhattan:
rather than production, the modern city was to be a site of corporate
prestige, culture, and consumption. He believed that Montreal needed to
capitalize on its reputation as a "sophisticated and cultured
city" and underlined his point by asserting that many corporations
had moved to New York City because "the wife of the chief
executive" wanted to enjoy a higher level of cultural life,
Including easy access to the nation's best shops. (86)
Zeckendorf's boosterism--centred upon consumption, culture, and the
intangible element of prestige--spoke to how cultural values and
economic development strategies had shifted away from producerist and
towards consumerist initiatives and sensibilities during the postwar
period. But, It Is Important to note, while Zeckendorf had effectively
marketed the prospective Place Ville-Marie development to the press and
the broader public, in early 1958, with so many necessary components of
the project only aspirations, the chances of realizing it still seemed
unlikely.
Manufacturing Prestige
In January 1958, the Place Ville Marie Corporation, a subsidiary of
Webb & Knapp (Canada), acquired a lease from the CNR for the site
north of Dorchester. (87) The following month, this corporation
submitted to the City of Montreal its master plan for the entire CNR
site. But Zeckendorf's realty empire was heavily leveraged, capital
poor, and falling into difficulties in the United States. He certainly
did not possess the resources necessary to finance a development with an
estimated cost of around $100 million. And without major corporate
tenants committed to long-term leases, financing would not be
forthcoming. The local barriers were significant as well. Local realtors
feared that Place Ville-Marie would create an overcapacity in office
space, and in his autobiography Zeckendorf suggests that the
provincialism and prejudice of Montreal's elite worked against his
success; Zeckendorf claimed that suspicion was aroused in high places
towards himself, a Jewish American, and his Chinese head architect, I.M.
Pei. (88) Cobb later reminisced that Zeckendorf "was totally
rejected by the English business community." (89) This provincial
attitude--born of an apparent confluence of ethnocentrism and economic
self-interest--was, indeed, articulated early. In January 1956, one
observer wrote S.M. Finlayson, president of the Montreal Board of Trade,
to complain about Zeckendorf: "I may be very old fashioned but I
find it hard to believe that the C.N.R. have been wise in entrusting
what is a very important development to this man, whose character is so
different to what we understand in Montreal, and who may pay scant
attention to local views and requirements." (90)
Yet local attitudes were not monolithic, and the composition of
Montreal's big bourgeoisie was evolving. After all,
Zeckendorf's ally, legal counsel, and a leading figure in
Montreal's Jewish community, Lazarus Phillips, had been appointed
to the board of directors of the Royal Bank of Canada in 1954. (91)
Moreover, Phillips was also, as Duncan McDowall has observed, probably
the closest confidant of Royal Bank President James Muir on the
bank's board of directors. (92) Indeed, Phillips "inched"
Muir towards the prospect of moving the headquarters of the Royal Bank
from 360 St. James Street to Place Ville-Marie. (93) And by mid-April,
Muir was in negotiations with Webb & Knapp for "an important
amount of space." (94) But ultimately, Zeckendorf convinced Muir to
move the Royal Bank's headquarters after not only agreeing to name
the cruciform tower the Royal Bank of Canada Building but,
significantly, agreeing to purchase the bank's old St. James Street
headquarters: Zeckendorf's willingness to assume more risk
apparently clinched the deal. (95) On 26 May, Muir broke the news of an
agreement to the board. (96) A public announcement was made the
following day. (97) A second large corporate tenant was found by
November, when the Aluminum Company of Canada (Alcan) signed a
twenty-year lease for a minimum of six floors in the cruciform tower.
(98) With these two agreements, 40 per cent of the rentable office space
was filled. (99) Other major tenants followed, such as Montreal Trust
and Trans-Canada Airlines. (100)
From the outset, Zeckendorf was adamant about the need to market
the development as a site of prestige to corporate tenants. Henry Cobb
claimed that Zeckendorf provided only this general directive to him for
the design: "Let me tell you what I need. I need one building. I
need to have at least 1.5 million square feet of office space ... And I
need it to be designed in such a way that I can offer identity to
several major tenants at street level." (101) The design of Place
Ville-Marie was, in fact, altered to suit its new corporate tenants.
Large quadrants at the base of the tower were introduced to house a
grand banking hall for the Royal Bank. To attract Alcan, Zeckendorf
promised that the cruciform tower would be sheathed in aluminum to serve
as an advertisement for the company's product; "600,000 square
feet of custom-designed aluminum satin finish" would be applied to
the exterior of the cruciform tower. (102)
[FIGURE 7 OMITTED]
The making of Place Ville-Marie, therefore, was deeply rooted in
corporate image-making, as the Royal Bank and Alcan, and later many
other companies, sought to identify their brands with it. In this way,
it was a product of the dual nature of commercial real estate. "In
other industries," as Susan Fainstein has noted in her
investigation of late twentieth-century London and New York commercial
real estate, "ownership of the product is distinct from ownership
of the company or rights to future increases in the value of its
production. A building, however, is both part of capital stock and a
commodity." (103) Commercial real estate can serve as a symbol of
prestige and assume intangible value, above and beyond the value of
potential rents. This dual nature of a building helps to explain the
characteristic financial volatility of commercial real estate, since
developers operate in a highly uncertain and subjective environment
where current demand for office or retail space is only one of several
factors to be considered. In this respect, Place Ville-Marie should be
understood not as a rational response to a demand for office and retail
space--for, as local realtors worried, demand did not justify the
project--but as a project of manufacturing and marketing prestige to
corporations.
And, indeed, with the Royal Bank's decision to move into Place
Ville-Marie, other banks were drawn into the prestige contest on
Dorchester. The Canadian Bank of Commerce soon announced plans to build
a forty-two-storey tower, Windsor Plaza, just west of Place Ville-Marie.
(104) Meanwhile, a competing local developer, Ionel Rudberg, convinced
Canadian Industries Limited to move its headquarters to a new
thirty-four-storey tower, CIL House, across from Place Ville-Marie at
the corner of University Street. (105) The Bank of Montreal, though
having recently built a new main office on St. James Street, signalled
its intention to participate "in the dynamic growth and development
of the important uptown area" by establishing "one of the most
modern and best equipped banking offices in the world" in this
building; the bank took up 22,000 square feet, which included a spacious
ground-floor branch. (106) From 1959 to 1962, the erection of these
three modern skyscrapers would transform Montreal's skyline. (107)
By the early 1970s, a similar "bank war" in skyscraper
construction was underway in Toronto. (108) But Place Ville-Marie was
more than the manufacture and sale of prestige.
Local Meanings of the Modern
Before 1958, models of Place Ville-Marie show that Zeckendorf
carefully built around the St. James's Club headquarters at the
corner of Dorchester Boulevard and University Street, home to this elite
social club since 1864 and one of the conspicuous symbols of the
city's old Anglo-Celtic bourgeoisie. (109) Zeckendorf did so to
avoid antagonizing the very people to whom he hoped to sell office
space. But the execution of Place Ville-Marie also required the
cooperation of the municipal government, and the city plans included a
widening of University Street that would require the destruction of the
club's headquarters. City Planning Department correspondence
reveals that city officials remained committed to this plan shortly
after having received the Ville Marie Master Plan from Webb & Knapp
in February. (110) The city's general attitude can be further
illuminated from comments made years later, in a public lecture in 2003,
by Henry Cobb: "The fact is that ... the city government said that
we'll only allow certain things that have to be done around the
perimeter of Place Ville-Marie, various street arrangements and things,
we'll only allow that to happen if the St. James's Club is
also demolished." (111) City officials consciously perceived in
Place Ville-Marie an opportunity to remake the city, which included
destroying the nineteenth-century vestiges of the city's anglophone
bourgeoisie. The CNR's internal correspondence reveals the attitude
of C.-E. Campeau in the summer of 1957: "He feels very strongly
that the St. James's Club should go even though Webb & Knapp do
not require any of the property for their project. As Director of City
Planning, he cannot condone leaving this structure adjacent to the
modern buildings proposed by Webb & Knapp." (112) In August,
when Mayor Drapeau was shown the Webb & Knapp model, which included
the St. James's Club, "he left no doubt ... that the St.
James's Club ought to be removed." CNR Vice-President N.J.
MacMillan elaborated upon Drapeau's attitude: "In fact he
Indicated that the City would not approve the project unless it was
[removed]. He referred, upon different occasions, to what happened to
the St. Denis Club the front of which is being removed to permit a
widening of Sherbrooke Street and he left the impression that if it was
all right to take the front off the oldest French Club, then there was
nothing the matter with condemning the oldest English Club." (113)
Place Ville-Marie was thus not only perceived as a vehicle of
modernization that would eclipse the old, but as a vehicle to correct
the balance of ethno-linguistic relations as expressed In
Montreal's built environment and the division of economic power.
[FIGURE 8 OMITTED]
That said, the fact that the city announced its decision to
expropriate the St. James's Club when Drapeau was out of office,
during the summer of 1958, demonstrates that the razing of the
club's headquarters was not, ultimately, due alone to the reasons
Drapeau articulated. Indeed, the archival record reveals that both CNR
and Webb & Knapp officials anticipated the razing of the St.
James's Club, but they--rather cannily--preferred the city take
responsibility for it. (114) With the Royal Bank lease announced, by
June the city was moving ahead with its plans. Director of Departments
Lucien Hetu and some members of the city's executive committee were
of the view "that the St. James's Club should be removed. The
feeling seems to be that this antiquated structure has no place in Place
Ville Marie development and that this Is the appropriate time to clean
the site." (115) While the razing of the club was based upon a
widening of University Street to improve traffic circulation, the
modernist impulse--to attempt to erase the past--shaped the
consciousness of those who advocated demolition. But, only in late July,
through a city councillor, did club members begin to learn about what
the city was considering. (116) The city's decision on the St.
James's Club appears not to have become a truly public issue until
early August, after Montreal's executive committee presented
recommendations for expropriations and street widening that included the
razing of the club's headquarters; "Montreal Landmark Slated
to Disappear," reported the Gazette the following day. (117)
[FIGURE 9 OMITTED]
Not unexpectedly, the razing of the St. James's Club was
contested and protracted. (118) The image of greyed men, armed with
seltzer bottles and golf clubs, defending the club's headquarters
from the wrecking ball, published in the October 1958 issue of the
Montrealer, echoed the idea that Place Ville-Marie represented a sharp
break from an older society. And though Drapeau had, like other members
of the Civic Action League, voted against a controversial bylaw to have
the city pay for expropriations and street widening needed for the
execution of Place Ville-Marie in the summer of 1958, when he returned
to the mayoralty in 1960 he was quick to resume a cordial relationship
with Zeckendorf. (119) Indeed, Zeckendorf's status as an outsider
in relation to Montreal's Anglo-Celtic bourgeoisie was
advantageous. Zeckendorf was, according to Cobb, embraced by francophone
leaders precisely because he was largely rejected by the city's
moneyed, anglophone establishment. (120) And, through Thomas Vien,
Zeckendorf had in early days established close contacts with the
municipal bureaucracy. Vien recruited Aime Cousineau, the recently
retired director of city planning, to work as Webb & Knapp's
liaison with City Hall; and, in 1958, Campeau moved from that same post
in the city to work himself as a liaison for Webb & Knapp. (121)
Gaining influence within the municipal bureaucracy was centrally
important, of course; as Michele Dagenais has shown, the bureaucracy was
a significant power in its own right. (122) The demolition of the St.
James's Club headquarters was delayed until the summer of 1961 to
give the membership time to vacate the building. (123) Johnny Newman,
whose firm won the contract for its demolition, gave the public an
opportunity to participate in the destruction of the clubhouse, offering
people the chance to swing the giant wrecking ball for a five-dollar
donation to the charities of the Kiwanis Club. It took Newman's
crew, including about a dozen people who paid the five dollars to swing
the wrecking ball, less than six hours to flatten the commanding,
red-brick building. (124)
The obliteration of the old thus paved the way for the modern, and
allowed for the construction of a new myth. As construction of Place
Ville-Marie proceeded into the 1960s, the rising structure of the
cruciform tower began to transform Montreal's skyline. Always a
clever salesperson, at the topping-out ceremony in July 1961 Zeckendorf
implied to Cardinal Leger that the cruciform shape of the tower was
intended as a religious reference. This was not true--the tower's
shape was built in a form, inspired by Le Corbusier, to maximize natural
light and valuable corner office space--but it was an idea that allowed
Leger and other French-Canadian observers to imagine in Place
Ville-Marie an organic link to a French-Canadian, Catholic tradition.
(125) Ideologically, it allowed Place Ville-Marie to appear to meet
growing expectations within Quebec society--especially among the
"new middle class"--that modernization would empower the
marginalized francophone majority and enhance their collective identity.
(126) The view that Place Ville-Marie was accomplishing this was
plausible at the time, since Zeckendorf and the municipal administration
did truly appear to create a new urban symbol that defied the control of
Montreal's old Anglo-Celtic elite.
To be sure, the spectacle of the displacement of the AngloCeltic
bourgeoisie stoked the classic myth of modernity's sharp break from
the past and broadcast Place Ville-Marie's transformative capacity.
But Place Ville-Marie did not threaten to destroy capitalist privilege.
In a very real sense, Zeckendorf, Gordon, Phillips, and Drapeau were
members of a new generation of power elite, who in Place Ville-Marie
were constructing a new urban form to supersede the ossified image of
the St. James's Club and its association with Anglo-Celtic
privilege. Donald Gordon's biographer has asserted that Gordon,
born In Scotland Into humble circumstances, displayed "Irreverence
for all those icons of Westmount, McGill, Montreal and all the
rest." (127) And while Gordon embraced cultural sensibilities that
were different from those of the archetypical Anglobourgeois Montrealer,
he, like Phillips, was a fervent champion of private enterprise; as CNR
president, he made sure that the "Dorchester Street hole" was
to be developed by and for private capital. As Marshall Berman has
observed, "The pathos of all bourgeois monuments is that their
material strength and solidity actually count for nothing and carry no
weight at all, that they are blown away like frail reeds by the very
forces of capitalist development that they celebrate." (128) The
progressive modernity of Place Ville-Marie assuredly participated in
this pathos.
[FIGURE 10 OMITTED]
The Rise of Place Ville-Marie, the Fall of William Zeckendorf
Just as Place Ville-Marie was beginning to come to fruition in
1958, Webb & Knapp Inc., the parent company of Webb & Knapp
(Canada), "recorded Its first operating loss since the company
became publicly-held in 1952," as Zeckendorf carried on with a
heavy expansion into the hotel business, acquiring nine hotels in New
York City and three in Chicago between 1956 and 1960. (129) Like before,
this expansionism was financed through borrowed money. Between 1956 and
1959 the company's short-term debt doubled, and its "interest
on loans and other expenses" rose four-fold. (130) Place
Ville-Marie, like the rest of Zeckendorf's developments, would have
to be built with borrowed money too.
Moreover, ongoing difficulty to attract tenants seemed to confirm
fears that Place Ville-Marie would create an overcapacity In downtown
office space. While the concrete foundation began to be poured in the
spring of 1959, rentals in Place Ville-Marie were "rumored slower
than had been expected." The Financial Post noted that in
"real estate circles it Is reported that Inquiries are lagging and
that this building and others being erected in the uptown area will
create over-capacity for at least five years." (131) With plans for
the thirty-four-storey CIL Tower across from Place Ville-Marie and
construction on the forty-two-storey Windsor Plaza slated to begin in
the fall, on Dorchester alone, reported John Yorston, "some
2,500,000 square feet of office space will be created," and
Montreal Real Estate Board President David S. Keast observed that the
"new buildings will create vacancies elsewhere." (132)
Nonetheless, the ongoing boom on Dorchester had developed its own
momentum, and had greatly expanded property values in the immediate
vicinity. (133) As Yorston seemed to recognize, however, this building
boom was not simply a product of demand for office space. While the
"smaller, less pretentious" buildings were "felt to be
the result of normal business growth," the plans for buildings such
as Windsor Plaza and the Royal Bank Building on Dorchester resulted from
"a race for prestige." (134) Zeckendorf, as we have seen, was
active in creating this prestige market, which, although it facilitated
a boom, created new volatility. Indeed, already in early 1957 Business
Week had reported that the expansion of modern office space on
Dorchester was not due to a lack of space: "There are vacancies In
some of Montreal's older, less resplendent office buildings."
(135)
While evidence of wider volatility In the market could be seen,
after the Royal Bank and Alcan had committed to leases in 1958, the
realization of Place Ville-Marie as the new centre of Canada's
largest city could be reasonably anticipated. This enabled Zeckendorf to
secure the large amounts of capital necessary for the project. In 1959
Webb & Knapp arranged a mortgage bond Issue in the amount of $53
million to finance the construction of the cruciform tower. It was,
claimed the Financial Post, "the largest such issue mortgage placed
on an office building anywhere"; Metropolitan Life Insurance agreed
to purchase $25 million of the offering. (136) Capital Investment meant
construction could proceed. In September 1959, to make way for the
development, buildings along University Street were demolished and
excavation on the street begun; in March 1960 the massive steel columns
and beams of the tower began to be erected; and by June
"carpenters, steelworkers, construction labourers, concrete
workers, plumbers, electricians and other tradesmen," numbering
over six hundred men, were at work, having erected "more than 6,000
tons of steel." (137)
The speed with which the physical structure of Place Ville-Marie
began to take shape obscured the lingering problems of the Zeckendorf
real estate empire. As before, Zeckendorf needed to find cash to feed
his projects and creditors; by the end of 1959, the liabilities of Webb
& Knapp (Canada) exceeded its assets by $6,469,621. (138) Zeckendorf
pursued two strategies. He accepted a "consolidation phase"
for Webb & Knapp (Canada), ending a spate of expansion since 1956
that included the construction of the Wellington Square Shopping Centre
in London, Ontario, the Brentwood Shopping Centre in suburban Vancouver,
and Flemingdon Park in Toronto. (139) Zeckendorf's second strategy
was to look for investors. In February 1960, Zeckendorf's son,
William Zeckendorf Jr., vice-president of Webb & Knapp (Canada),
reported to the Montreal Star that "his company had made an
intensive study of U.K. and European money markets," where
"investors were much more conscious of the possibilities of real
estate development." (140) As early as April, Zeckendorf was in
talks regarding Place Ville-Marie with a British group that journalist
Henry Aubin would later describe as "an old aristocracy in new
multinational property ventures." (141) At the head of the group
was Sir Brian Mountain, chairman of both Eagle Star Insurance Company
and Second Covent Garden Property Company. And playing a central role in
these developments was the London investment-banking house of Philip
Hill Higginson Erlangers, and its chairman, Kenneth Keith. (142)
The directors' minutes of Eagle Star Insurance show that by
June the British Foreign Exchange Control had granted the company
permission to transfer funds for the Place Ville-Marie transaction.
(143) On 20 July the assistant general manager of Eagle Star, H.J.A.
Harbour, reported to the company's board of directors on his visit
to the Place Ville-Marie site and noted that negotiations were ongoing.
(144) And on 19 October, the Eagle Star board was told that the
"Place Ville Marie transaction ... [was] reaching a satisfactory
conclusion." (145) Less than ten days later, on 27 October 1960,
Philip Hill Higginson Erlangers announced that two British firms, Eagle
Star and Second Covent Garden Property, would provide $16.5 million
towards the first stage of the Place Ville-Marie project, slated to cost
$80 million. Under this arrangement, Trizec Corporation was formed as a
holding company representing an equal partnership between Webb &
Knapp (Canada) and the British group, Eagle Star and Second Covent
Garden Property. Trizec assumed ownership of Place Ville-Marie (with the
Place Ville Marie Corporation becoming its wholly owned subsidiary),
and, reported the London Financial Times, was to "be given the
first offer of any Webb and Knapp development project in Canada."
(146)
Though Webb & Knapp (Canada) reported a "greatly improved
liquid position" by the spring of 1961, Zeckendorf's financial
position remained highly tenuous. (147) As interest payments corroded
the Webb & Knapp empire, Zeckendorf accepted a refinancing plan with
the British group--involving more than $43 million in long-term
financing to replace high-interest debt--that resulted in the formation
of a new city-improvement firm, Zeckendorf Property Corporation, and
greatly reduced his control of Webb & Knapp Inc. (148) The Wall
Street Journal wrote in early 1962 that sources close to Webb &
Knapp anticipated a shift towards more conservative management, as the
British group was "eager to protect its substantial investment in
Webb & Knapp." (149) But in the United States the "realty
market went sour" in the spring of 1962, and rather than retrench
Webb & Knapp's financial position and take losses on some
investments, Zeckendorf pursued new opportunities apparently without
regard for his British partners, who soon became dissatisfied. (150) By
late 1962, already fragile confidence in publicly traded real estate
firms in the United States was dealt a serious blow with the revelation
that Louis J. Glickman, founder of the Glickman Corporation, had misled
investors and used company assets for personal business ventures. The
Glickman episode and other instances of mismanaged publicly traded real
estate firms caused a more general decline in the shares of these firms,
Webb & Knapp included. (151)
Having failed to rein in Zeckendorf's expansionism, the
British financiers had seen enough. On 21 January 1963 Zeckendorf
announced that the three directors of Webb & Knapp Inc. representing
the British interests in Webb & Knapp had resigned from the board
"to be able to concentrate their attention on Zeckendorf Property
Corporation." (152) Six months later the British group had forced
Zeckendorf out of Zeckendorf Property Corporation. "In return for
having his financial obligations to them written off," later
explained Time magazine, "Zeckendorf had to give up his interest in
almost all the developments he had signed over to the company."
Zeckendorf also resigned as chairman of Webb & Knapp (Canada) and
Trizec; Sir Brian Mountain assumed the chairmanship of Trizec. (153) And
following the announcement in August 1964 by Webb & Knapp Inc. of
losses of $52 million over the previous two years, the Zeckendorf
empire's need for cash resulted in Webb & Knapp (Canada)
selling its remaining share of Trizec in October 1964, purchased by
Covent Canada Corporation Ltd., a Canadian subsidiary of Second Covent
Garden Property Company Limited. "It means that the U.K.
group," reported the Montreal Star, "now have effective
control of ... Place Ville Marie ... and three major shopping centre
properties in Halifax, Toronto and Vancouver." (154) The transfer
of ownership of Place Ville-Marie to the British group thus occurred as
an outcome of the crisis and eventual dissolution of the Zeckendorf
realty empire. The corporate records of the Eagle Star Insurance
Company, one of the original partners in Trizec, show the company's
acquisition of Trizec stock beginning in January 1962 and picking up
speed that summer. (155) Zeckendorf, indeed, had already lost control of
Trizec when he triumphantly appeared at Place Ville-Marie's
official inauguration in 1962.
Fainstein has argued that real estate developers "operate
within a subjective environment partly of their own creation,"
where "personal rewards are not wholly tied to the ultimate
profitability of projects." (156) And she reports being struck by
the discovery that developments had "been driven by individual male
egos that find self-expression in building tall buildings and imprinting
their personae on the landscape." (157) Zeckendorf conforms to
Fainstein's findings; indeed, after it was revealed that the CIBC
building (originally named Windsor Plaza) would be slightly taller than
the Royal Bank building, Zeckendorf secretly planned the construction of
extra floors to best his competitor, which he succeeded in doing. (158)
As Zeckendorf declared, Place Ville-Marie--"one of the greatest
edifices ever conceived and executed in the history of man"--was
"not done for bread alone." (159) He, as Cobb reminisced, saw
money as a means to do something. (160) Without this mentality,
powerfully shaped by extra-economic goals, it is unlikely that Place
Ville-Marie could have been conceived or realized.
[FIGURE 11 OMITTED]
The business and financial genesis of the project defies the
narrative of modernization, of planning and progress. It Is true that
Place Ville-Marie established a new centre for the city and ultimately
created new value in that location. For Instance, though retailers were
Initially reticent, rents in its underground shopping promenade by 1967
had reportedly become among the world's highest for retail space.
(161) But Place Ville-Marie also rendered older properties less
attractive. Less than a month before Its official inauguration, the Wall
Street Journal reported that Montreal office building vacancies were at
a staggering 26 per cent. (162) "By my calculations," reported
one unidentified veteran realtor early the following year,
"downtown is now overbuilt by about 30 per cent and we have more
than enough office space until 1975." And, indeed, significant rent
concessions had been necessary to attract tenants to Place Ville-Marie.
(163) In May 1964 the Financial Post reported that the Place Ville Marie
Corporation was continuing to run at a loss. Apart from the inability to
command rents as high as once expected, the company was also absorbing
losses stemming from Zeckendorf's efforts to attract corporate
tenants to Place Ville-Marie. The company had taken over Alcan's
lease in the Sun Life Building, which was not due to expire until 1965,
and, as noted earlier, had purchased the old headquarters of the Royal
Bank on St. James Street, which was reported to have been operating at
"a substantial loss." (164) Undoubtedly, Place Ville-Marie
contributed to an overcapacity of office space in Montreal's
downtown core, and profit was not realized by the innovatorentrepreneur
of this story, Zeckendorf.
Conclusion
As a case study of the "production of space," Place
Ville-Marie demonstrates the Importance of business and economic
imperatives in determining the shape and purpose of urban forms.
However, these imperatives were not structured by a disembodied or
idealized market, for the making of Place Ville-Marie--pursued by a
constellation of elite figures--was itself creating and redefining the
commercial real estate market In Montreal. Nor was this activity
structured by a singular effort to achieve maximum returns on capital,
for Zeckendorf operated--above all else--as a promoter of grand
projects, as understandable In terms of male ego and status as profit.
Zeckendorf declared bankruptcy for the first time 1965; it would not be
his last. Yet, when he published his autobiography in 1970, he wrote as
a man whose vision had been vindicated, a man who had defied the
city's stodgy elite and had transformed the city. Zeckendorf's
boasts were not completely audacious. Vincent Ponte placed Place
Ville-Marie at the heart of what he described as the "ten golden
years of Montreal's Downtown," from 1956 to 1966. (165) In
Ponte's telling, a direct line ran from the building of Place
Ville-Marie and the tax revenues it generated for the city, to the
city's financial capacity to fund the construction of the Metro, to
the city's ability to capture Expo, and to its ability to engage in
"massive highway improvements." (166) Place Ville-Marie not
only established a new symbol of the modern; it stimulated urban growth.
But if it appeared to achieve the economic and cultural status
Zeckendorf promised, the history of Place Ville-Marie's making
reveals the operation of capitalist incentives and a process of
"creative destruction" that were both much more limited and
chaotic than suggested by the mythic rhetoric that surrounded the
project.
The discursive construction of Place Ville-Marie by its promoters,
as this study has argued, was an exercise in both salesmanship and
cultural hegemony. Sold to corporate tenants as a site of prestige and
to politicians and the public as a vehicle for modernization and growth,
Place Ville-Marie executed a reimagination of Montreal's downtown
core, presented as a sharp break from the past. The myth of Place
Ville-Marie accommodated and absorbed nationalist aspiration, celebrated
consumer capitalism, and projected corporate prestige. The popular
appeal of this modernist mythology was powerfully demonstrated by the
spectacle of Place Ville-Marie's inauguration, which we encountered
in the introduction; it was a fleeting moment. The modern future
imagined on that day was not to be. Underlying the imagery of Place
Ville-Marie persisted remarkably colonial financial arrangements: the
U.K. firm Eagle Star Insurance collected a profit of over $4 million
when it sold off its Trizec stock in 1970. (167) Prescient about the
tensions and contradictions between nationalist objectives and a
globalizing capitalist economy, Hubert Aquin considered Place
Ville-Marie an empty gesture and critiqued its contrived efforts to
appear French-Canadian. (168) Place Ville-Marie was an exemplar of the
paradoxical intensification of global connectedness accompanied by
rising nationalisms during the 1950s and 1960s in Quebec and elsewhere.
(169) While Place Ville-Marie appeared to facilitate nationalist aims of
modernization and eclipse old barriers of ethno-linguistic privilege, it
also embodied new capitalist values and the rise of new capitalist
forces that were superseding the old. As such, it reinforced and
revitalized capitalism in its new forms, a product of the dynamic social
order from which it had arisen.
Acknowledgments
I want to thank David Meren and Andy Parnaby for commenting on
several drafts of this essay. Rebecca Khettou provided skillful research
assistance. Caroline Durand, Suzanne Morton, Leslie Tomory, and Mathieu
Lapointe offered helpful feedback and advice at different stages of this
project. Sylvie Grondin and Gilles Lafontaine were especially helpful in
facilitating my research at the Archives de Montreal. I also want to
thank the editor and anonymous readers of Urban History Review / Revue
d'histoire urbaine for their helpful comments. This research was
supported by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
postdoctoral fellowship and by a Research Policy Grant from Cape Breton
University.
Notes
(1) The Place Ville-Marie complex also included a building at the
corner of Cathcart and University, and two additional buildings that
were not completed in 1962. These remaining office buildings opened in
1965 and 1969, located at the corners of Mansfield Street and Cathcart
Street, and Mansfield and Dorchester Boulevard (Boulevard
Rene-Levesque), respectively. These components of Place Ville-Marie are
beyond the purview of this study. For a broader survey of the
development, see France Vanlaethem, Sarah Marchand, Paul-Andre Linteau,
and Jacques-Andre Chartrand, Place Ville Marie: Montreal's Shining
Landmark (Montreal: Quebec Amerique, 2012).
(2) Proceedings, Place Ville Marie Opening, 13 September 1962, file
144, box 14, series 2, Donald Gordon Papers, 2129, Queen's
University Archives (QUA).
(3) Pierre Berton, "The Lesson of Place Ville Marie,"
Toronto Daily Star, 25 September 1962.
(4) Jean Pelletier and Ludger Beauregard, "Le centre-ville de
Montreal," Revue de geographie de Montreal 21, no. 1 (1967): 5-40;
David Brown, "The Indoor City: From Organic Beginning to Guided
Growth," in Grassroots, Greystones and Glass Towers: Montreal Urban
Issues and Architecture, ed. Bryan Demchlnsky (Montreal: Vehicule,
1989), 71; Jean-Claude Marsan, Montreal in Evolution: Historical
Analysis of the Development of Montreal's Architecture and Urban
Environment (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1991),
343-8, 355-7; Andre Lortle, "Montreal 1960: The Singularities of a
Metropolitan Archetype," in The 1960s: Montreal Thinks Big, ed.
Andre Lortie (Montreal: Canadian Centre for Architecture, 2004), 95-100;
Fabien Degllse, Montreal souterrain: Sous le beton, le mythe (Montreal:
Heliotrope, 2008), 20-1, 80.
(5) Marsan, Montreal in Evolution, 355-6.
(6) Vanlaethem et al., Place Ville Marie, 27 and 603 (pagination
from electronic version here and below).
(7) The internal contradictions and "creative
destruction" present in the making of the modern city are explored
in David Harvey's influential Paris, Capital of Modernity (New
York: Routledge, 2003).
(8) See Tina Loo, "Africville and the Dynamics of State Power
in Postwar Canada," Acadiensis 39, no. 2 (Summer/Autumn 2010):
23-47; Roger M. Picton, "Selling National Urban Renewal: The
National Film Board, the National Capital Commission and Post-war
Planning In Ottawa, Canada," Urban History 37, no. 2 (2010): 301-21
; Rhodri Windsor Liscombe, "A Study In Modern(ist) Urbanism:
Planning Vancouver, 1945-1965," Urban History 38, no. 1 (May 2011):
124-49; Danielle Robinson, "Modernism at a Crossroad: The Spadina
Expressway Controversy in Toronto, Ontario c. 1960-1971," Canadian
Historical Review 92, no. 2 (2011): 295-322; and Robinson,
"'The Streets Belong to the People': Expressway Disputes
in Canada, c. 1960-75" (PhD diss., McMaster University, 2012); and
Will Langford, "Gerald Sutton Brown and the Discourse of City
Planning, 1953-1959," Urban History Review / Review d'histoire
urbaine 41, no. 2 (Spring 2013): 30-41.
(9) Elizabeth Blackmar documents the similar Importance of the
"supply side" in suburban real estate development in "Of
REITS and Rights: Absentee Ownership In the Periphery," in City,
Country, Empire: Landscapes in Environmental History, ed. Jeffry
Diefendorf and Kurk Dorsey, 81-98 (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh
Press, 2005). See also David Harvey, Social Justice and the City, rev.
ed. (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2009), 32.
(10) T.D. Regehr, The Canadian Northern Railway: Pioneer Road of
the Northern Prairies, 1895-1918 (Toronto: Macmillan of Canada, 1976),
321.
(11) See Annick Germain and Damans Rose, Montreal: The Quest fora
Metropolis (Toronto: John Wiley & Sons, 2000), 62.
(12) Webb & Knapp (Canada) Limited, "Historical Notes on
Place Ville Marie," n.d., file 6, Place Ville-Marie,
XCP00-S3-P03958, Archives de Montreal (AM).
(13) Ibid. For more on the Canadian Northern's Montreal plans
and activities, see Regehr, Canadian Northern Railway, 320-4.
(14) John Schofield, "A Modern Station for Montreal,"
Architectural Record (December 1943): 100.
(15) See Paul-Andre Linteau, Histoire de Montreal depuis la
Confederation (Montreal: Boreal, 2000), 356-57; and Pelletier and
Beauregard, "Le centreville de Montreal," 8-9.
(16) Paul-Andre Linteau, "From Dorchester to Rene-Levesque
Boulevard," in Vanlaethem et al., Place Ville Marie, 82-5.
(17) "It Shows What Can Be Done," Montreal Gazette, 12
September 1955.
(18) "City-in-City for Montreal?" Financial Post, 19 May
1956.
(19) Donald Gordon, memo, 24 July 1953, file 9660-1-2
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Lazarus
Phillips & Group)," vol. 13209, Canadian National Railways
(CNR) Fonds, RG 30, Library and Archives Canada (LAC).
(20) Lazarus Phillips to Donald Gordon, 8 July 1954, file 9660-1-2
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Lazarus
Phillips & Group)," vol. 13209, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(21) Donald Gordon to Lazarus Phillips, 29 July 1954, file 9660-1-2
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Lazarus
Phillips & Group)," vol. 13209, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(22) Donald Gordon, memo, 21 October 1954, file 9660-1-2
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Lazarus
Phillips & Group)," vol. 13209, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(23) See Henry Cobb, lecture, Hotel St. Paul, Montreal, 14
September 2003, video recording, Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA);
Peter C. Newman, "Bill Zeckendorf and His Big Plans for
Canada," Maclean's, 24 November 1956; and S.W. Fairweather,
"Memorandum of Meeting Held in the President's Office on April
7, 1955," file, 96660-1-1, "Montreal Terminal Development:
Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb & Knapp, Inc.) vol. 1 vol. 13208,
CNR Fonds, LAC.
(24) William Zeckendorf with Edward McCreary, The Autobiography of
William Zeckendorf (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970), 21.
(25) Eugene Rachlis and John E. Marqusee, The Land Lords (New York:
Random House, 1963), 267.
(26) Zeckendorf, Autobiography, 93; Rachilis and Marqusee, Land
Lords, 273.
(27) Zeckendorf, Autobiography, 142-3.
(28) Ibid., 42.
(29) "The Man Who Loves Leverage," Forbes, 1 May 1957,
16-17.
(30) For Zeckendorf's description of the "Hawaiian
Technique," see Zeckendorf, Autobiography, 143-8.
(31) Ibid., 63-78.
(32) William Zeckendorf, "Real Estate Is Everybody's
Business," Analysts Journal 11, no. 3 (June 1955): 12-13.
(33) Zeckendorf, Autobiography, 95-6.
(34) David Harvey, The Enigma of Capital and the Crises of
Capitalism (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010), 169. For the
history of suburbanization in Canada, see Richard Harris, Creeping
Conformity: How Canada Became Suburban (Toronto: University of Toronto
Press, 2004).
(35) For instance, his development of the modern, multi-use Mile
High Center in downtown Denver, completed in 1956, was about
revitalizing a "dry-rotted core" of a rapidly suburbanizing
city. See Zeckendorf, Autobiography, 107.
(36) Hilary Ballon, "Robert Moses and Urban Renewal: The Title
I Program," in Robert Moses and the Modern City: The Transformation
of New York City, ed. Hilary Ballon and Kenneth T. Jackson (New York:
W.W. Norton, 2007), 105.
(37) Samuel Zipp, "The Roots of Urban Renewal," Journal
of Urban History 39, no. 3 (2012), 379.
(38) Fairweather, "Memorandum of Meeting Held in the
President's Office."
(39) S.W. Fairweather, memo, 1 February 1955, file 9660-1-2
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Lazarus
Phillips & Group)," vol. 13209, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(40) S.W. Fairweather, memo, 25 February 1955, file 9660-1-2
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Lazarus
Phillips & Group)," vol. 13209, CNR Fonds, LAC; S.W.
Fairweather, memo, 4 March 1955, file 96660-1-1 "Montreal Terminal
Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb & Knapp, Inc.), vol.
1," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(41) Zeckendorf, Autobiography, 168.
(42) "Webb & Knapp Reports $3.6 Million 1954 Net, Up from
$1.5 Million," Wall Street Journal, 6 June 1955.
(43) R.H. Tarr to Donald Gordon, 23 August 1955, file 96660-1-1
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb
& Knapp, Inc.), vol. 1," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(44) David Rockefeller, senior vice-president, Chase National Bank,
to S.W. Fairweather, 21 March 1955, file 9660-39 "Preparation of
Master Plan and Construction of Ville Marie Plaza (Webb & Knapp,
Inc.)," vol. 13211, CNR Fonds, LAC
(45) James Muir to Donald Gordon, 6 March 1955, file 9660-39
"Preparation of Master Plan and Construction of Ville Marie Plaza
(Webb & Knapp, Inc.)," vol. 13211, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(46) Unnamed source, 28 February 1955, file 9660-39
"Preparation of Master Plan and Construction of Ville Marie Plaza
(Webb & Knapp, Inc.)," vol. 13211, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(47) J.M. Symes, president, Pennsylvania Railroad Company, to
Gordon, 16 March 1955, file 9660-39 "Preparation of Master Plan and
Construction of Ville Marie Plaza (Webb & Knapp, Inc.)," vol,
13211, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(48) S.W. Fairweather, "Memorandum of Meetings Held on March
17 and 18, 1955," file 96660-1-1 "Montreal Terminal
Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb & Knapp, Inc.), vol.
1," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC; and William Zeckendorf to S.W.
Fairweather, 28 March 1955, file 96660-1-1 "Montreal Terminal
Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb & Knapp, Inc.), vol.
1," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(49) Donald Gordon, memo, 15 September 1955, file 96660-1-1
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb
& Knapp, Inc.), vol. 1," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(50) "$125 Million Site Nearing Reality," Montreal
Gazette, 16 November 1955; Webb & Knapp (Canada) Limited, Annual
Report (1956), 2 April 1957, file "Conseil, Rapports et
Dossiers," series 4, 3126.1-4/1, AM.
(51) Press release for 22 March 1956, Cockfield, Brown and Company
Limited, for Webb & Knapp (Canada) Limited, file, 96660-1-1,
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb
& Knapp, Inc.), vol. 1," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(52) "Is Zeckendorf Mystery Man in Dominion Square
Building!?]," Financial Post, 3 March 1956.
(53) Donald Gordon to George Marler, 6 February 1956, file
96660-1-1 "Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights
(Webb & Knapp, Inc.), vol. 1"; N.J. MacMillan, memo, 25 April
1956, file 9660-1-1 "Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of
Aerial Rights (Webb & Knapp), vol. 2," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds,
LAC.
(54) N.J. MacMillan, memo, 25 April 1956, file 9660-1-1
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb
& Knapp), vol. 2," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(55) Gordon to Marier, 9 May 1956, file 9660-1-1 "Montreal
Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb & Knapp), vol.
2," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(56) N.J. MacMillan to Donald Gordon, 5 February 1957, file
9660-1-1 "Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights
(Webb & Knapp), vol. 2," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(57) Marier to Gordon, 20 July 1956, file, 9660-1-1 "Montreal
Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb & Knapp), vol.
2," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(58) Gordon, memos, 2 and 13 August 1956, file 9660-1-1
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb
& Knapp), vol. 2," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(59) Gordon to Symington, 1 February 1956, file, 96660-1-1
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb
& Knapp, Inc.), vol. 1," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(60) George Marier, minister of transport, to Donald Gordon, 11
August 1956, file 9660-1-1 "Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal
of Aerial Rights (Webb & Knapp), vol. 2," vol. 13208, CNR
Fonds, LAC.
(61) Press release, 12 October 1956, file "Terminal: Montreal
Place Ville-Marie, 2," vol. 14521, Public Relations Department, CNR
Fonds, LAC; prospectus, Webb & Knapp (Canada) Limited, October 1956,
file "Terminal: Montreal Place Ville-Marie, 2," CNR Fonds,
LAC; Vincent Egan, "Note," Financial Post, 27 October 1956.
See "New York's Zeckendorf Signs Today to Build
Montreal's 'Rockefeller Centre,'" Montreal Herald,
12 October 1956. See also France Vanlaethem, "A Major Urban Project
on Flold," In Vanlaethem et al., Place Ville Marie, 189-92.
(62) Marc V. Levine, The Reconquest of Montreal: Language Policy
and Social Change in a Bilingual City (Philadelphia: Temple University
Press, 1990), 37.
(63) John Switzman, "Is CNR Cooking Up Another Deal with New
York?" Canadian Tribune, 12 December 1955.
(64) Zeckendorf, Autobiography, 185.
(65) Ibid; "Development Plan Signed for Plaza," Montreal
Star, 12 October 1956.
(66) Conrad Langlois, "Bravo, Mr. Gordon," La Patrie, 12
October 1956.
(67) "Une cite erigee au coeur de la metropole," La
Patrie, 14 October 1956; Newman, "Bill Zeckendorf," 87.
(68) "Building Boom, Canadian Style," Business Week, 23
February 1957.
(69) "Big Man with Big Ideas: William Zeckendorf," New
York Times, 19 March 1956. His earlier involvement in public disputes
surrounding the United Nations headquarters In New York and the Mile
High Center In Denver had served as lessons In the Importance of public
relations In large real estate projects. See Zeckendorf, Autobiography,
74-6, 120, 128.
(70) Press release, 30 August 1957, 5, file "Terminal:
Montreal Place Vllle-Marie, 2," CNR Fonds, LAC.
(71) The Ville Marie Project: In the Heart of Montreal (1957).
(72) Gilles Bourque and Jules Duchastel, Restons traditionnelles et
progressifs: pour une nouvelle analyse du discours politique: le cas du
regime Duplessis au Quebec (Montreal: Boreal, 1988).
(73) Henry Cobb, lecture, 4 November 2004, Canadian Centre for
Architecture, Montreal, video recording, CCA.
(74) Cobb, lecture, 14 September 2003.
(75) Cobb, lecture, 4 November 2004. At Harvard, Cobb was also
influenced by Joseph Hudnut. Dean of the Graduate School of Design,
Hudnut was less dogmatic than Gropius. See France Vanlaethem, "The
Place Ville Marie Project," in Vanlaethem et al., Place Ville
Marie, 173-4.
(76) Cobb, lecture, 4 November 2004.
(77) Cobb, lecture, 14 September 2003.
(78) Cobb, lecture, 4 November 2004.
(79) Jan C. Rowan, "The Story of Place Ville Marie,"
Progressive Architecture (February 1960): 135.
(80) "Central Area Project, Montreal, Canada: Inventory of
Material at Hand," 20 February 1956, file "Conseil, Rapports
et Dossiers," series 4, 3126.1-4/1, AM.
(81) See Edwards, Kelcey, and Beck, "Central Area Development,
Montreal: Traffic Survey," 6 July 1956, 3, file "Conseil,
Rapports et Dossiers," series 4, 3126.1-4/1, AM; and Webb &
Knapp (Canada) Limited, Master Plan, "Ville Marie Montreal,"
December 1957, "Introduction," file "Conseil, Rapports et
Dossiers," series 4, 3126.1-4/1, AM.
(82) See, for example, Charissa N. Terranova, "Ultramodern
Underground Dallas: Vincent Ponte's Pedestrian-Way as Systemic
Solution to the Declining Downtown," Urban History Review / Revue
d'histoire urbaine 37, no. 2 (Spring 2009): 18-29.
(83) Vincent Ponte, city planning consultant, Montreal, "Place
Ville Marie, Montreal, Quebec," proceedings, Fourteenth Annual
Conference, International Downtown Executives Association (Dallas, 16-18
October; Fort Worth, 18 October; San Antonio, 19-20 October 1967), 4.
(84) "Shopper's Democracy in Ville Marie," Montreal
Gazette, 13 September 1962.
(85) Arthur Beitel, "Place Ville Marie" (McGill School of
Architecture, ca. 1965), 55, McLennan Library (ML).
(86) "City's 'Rockefeller Centre' to Be Started
This Year," Montreal Gazette, 18 February 1958.
(87) N.J. MacMillan to Sarto Fournier, 26 February 1958, file
"Conseil, Rapports et Dossiers," series 4, 3126.1-4/1, AM.
(88) "Place Will Spur Growth of City," Montreal Gazette,
5 November 1958; Rowan, "Story of Place Ville Marie," 25;
Zeckendorf, Autobiography, 175.
(89) Cobb, lecture, 14 September 2003.
(90) Eric Reford, 221 St Sacrement Street, to S.M. Finlayson,
president, Montreal Board of Trade, 23 January 1956, file 96660-1-1,
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb
& Knapp, Inc.), vol. 1," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(91) See "Profile Phillips," 18 April 1966, file
"Correspondence with Business Leaders, 1949-1969, vol. 1,"
Lazarus Phillips Papers, MG 32 18, LAC.
(92) Duncan McDowall, Quick to the Frontier: Canada's Royal
Bank (Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1993), 349.
(93) Ibid. A confidential bank study confirmed the view that
"the tower building will become equally as well known as such
developments as Rockefeller Centre [s/c] and the Empire State
Building." Memo for Mr. Muir, 3 April 1958, quoted In Ibid., 349.
(94) Ibid., 350.
(95) Zeckendorf, Autobiography, 176.
(96) McDowall, Quick to the Frontier, 350.
(97) Press release, "For Release Commencing with A.M. Papers
of Tuesday, May 27" [1958], file "Terminal: Montreal Place
Ville-Marle, 2," CNR Fonds, LAC.
(98) "Ville Marie to House Aluminum, Limited and Allies,"
Montreal Gazette, 26 November 1958.
(99) Press release, "For Release In A.M. Wednesday, November
26, 1958" (for Webb & Knapp [Canada] Limited, from Public
Relations Division, Cockfield, Brown & Co. Ltd.), file
"Terminal: Montreal Place Ville-Marle, 2," CNR Fonds, LAC.
(100) Zeckendorf, Autobiography, 178.
(101) Cobb, lecture, 4 November 2004.
(102) Booklet, Webb & Knapp (Canada) Limited, Buildings
Standards, Place Ville Marie Tower Office Floors, n.d., Vincent Ponte
Fonds, Rare Books and Special Collections, ML.
(103) Susan S. Fainstein, The City Builders: Property Development
in New York and London, 1980-2000, 2nd rev. ed. (Lawrence: University of
Kansas Press, 2001), 199-200.
(104) McDowall, Quick to the Frontier, 350; John Yorston,
"Montreal's Skyline Worries Traffic, Real Estate
Experts," Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, 22 July 1959.
(105) Zeckendorf. Autobiography, 188-91.
(106) The quotations are attributed to Bank of Montreal president
G. Arnold Hart in advertisement, "C-I-L House to Accommodate
Canada's First Bank," Montreal Gazette, 21 March 1961. See
also Hedley Burrell, "C-I-L House Opened by Premier," Montreal
Gazette, 30 April 1962.
(107) Jean-Claude Marsan notes that the CIL House and Windsor
Plaza, renamed the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce Building by the
time of its completion, were responses to Place Ville-Marie. Marsan
writes that the location of these buildings was evidence that
"Place Ville-Marie was growing into a hub of attraction. In the
minds of planners, the enlargement of the boulevard was intended to
channel the downtown development towards the east, but Place Ville-Marie
brought this trend to a standstill." See Marsan, Montreal in
Evolution, 348.
(108) Christopher Armstrong, Making Toronto Modern: Architecture
and Design, 1895-1975 (Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's
University Press, 2014), 282-92.
(109) For more on the St. James's Club, see Francois Hudon
with Karine Fortin and Alex Harper, L'histoire du Club Saint-James
de Montreal, 1857-1999 (Montreal: Anchor-Harper Publications, 2000).
(110) C.-E. Campeau to Lucien Hetu, 6 March 1958, file
"Conseil, Rapports et Dossiers," series 4, 3126.1-4/1, AM.
(111) Cobb, lecture, 14 September 2003.
(112) L.E. Mitchell, special projects engineer, to Gordon, 30 July
1957, file 966039 "Preparation of Master Plan and Construction of
Ville Marie Plaza (Webb & Knapp, Inc.)," vol. 13211, CNR Fonds,
LAC.
(113) N.J. MacMillan, memo, 27 August 1957, file 9660-39
"Preparation of Master Plan and Construction of Ville Marie Plaza
(Webb & Knapp, Inc.)," vol. 13211, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(114) See N.J. MacMillan, memo, 13 December 1956, file 9660-38
"St. James Club: Accommodation for, in Lieu of the Present Site in
the Montreal Terminal Development Area," vol. 13211, CNR Fonds,
LAC.
(115) L.E. Mitchell, special project engineer, to N.J. MacMillan,
17 June 1958, file 9660-38 "St. James Club: Accommodation for, in
Lieu of the Present Site in the Montreal Terminal Development
Area," vol. 13211, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(116) John B. Sterling, chairman, Premises Committee (St.
James's Club), Progress Report, 1 May 1959, file 9660-38 "St.
James Club: Accommodation for, in Lieu of the Present Site in the
Montreal Terminal Development Area," vol. 13211, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(117) "Montreal Landmark Slated to Disappear to Make Way for
the Projected Place Ville Marie Works," Montreal Gazette, 8 August
1958.
(118) See, for example, "On and Off the Record: Legality of
Expropriation Queried," Montreal Gazette, 9 September 1958.
(119) Extrait du process-verbal de la seance du Conseil municipal
de Montreal, tenue le 13 aout 1958, file "Conseil, Rapports et
Dossiers," series 4, 3126.1-4/1, AM; and Cobb, lecture, 14
September 2003.
(120) Cobb, lecture, 14 September 2003.
(121) S.W. Fairweather, memo, 25 July 1955, file 96660-1-1
"Montreal Terminal Development: Disposal of Aerial Rights (Webb S
Knapp, Inc.), vol. 1," vol. 13208, CNR Fonds, LAC; L.E. Mitchell,
to N.J. MacMillan, 17 June 1958, file 9660-38 "St. James Club:
Accommodation for, in Lieu of the Present Site in the Montreal Terminal
Development Area," vol. 13211, CNR Fonds, LAC.
(122) Michele Dagenais, Des pouvoirs et des hommes:
l'administration municipale de Montreal, 1900-1950 (Montreal and
Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2000).
(123) "St. James's to Remain until May," Montreal
Gazette, 13 October 1960.
(124) "Wrecking Crews Quickly Flatten St. James's
Club," Montreal Star, 12 June 1961; advertisement, "He's
the Most Destructive Man in Canada," Montreal Gazette, 7 November
1961.
(125) Cobb, lecture, 4 November 2004; Vanleathem, "Place Ville
Marie Project," 239-42. This myth about Place Ville-Marie's
supposed religious connotations has since been perpetuated in written
accounts. See, for one example, McDowall, Quick to the Frontier, 349.
(126) Marcel Fournier, "A Society in Motion: The Quiet
Revolution and the Rise of the Middle Class," in Lortie, The 1960s,
32-4.
(127) Joseph Schull, The Great Scot: A Biography of Donald Gordon
(Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1979), 165.
(128) Marshall Berman, All That Is Solid Melts into Air: The
Experience of Modernity (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1982), 99.
(129) Jermoe J. Zukosky, "Zeckendorf's Saga," Wall
Street Journal, 9 February 1959; Chris Welles, "A Big Man on the
Thin Edge," Life, 12 February 1965.
(130) Welles, "A Big Man on the Thin Edge."
(131) "Dom. Structural and Dom. Bridge Sign Steel Deals,"
Financial Post, 25 April 1959.
(132) Yorston, "Montreal's Skyline Worries."
(133) "'Big Buildings' Boom Hits Montreal's
Centre," Calgary Herald, 28 July 1959.
(134) Yorston, "Montreal's Skyline Worries."
(135) "Building Boom, Canadian Style."
(136) Vince Lunny, "Mortgage Bonds Finance Building in Ville
Marie," Financial Post, 21 November 1959.
(137) Progress Reports, Place Ville Marie, April 1960, June 1960,
and 18 November 1960, file "Terminal--Montreal Place Ville-Marie,
2," CNR Fonds, LAC; "Parfaite coordination des travaux,"
La Presse, 30 April 1960.
(138) "Webb & Knapp Reports Improved Position,"
Montreal Star, 4 April 1961.
(139) "Webb & Knapp (Can.) In Consolidation Phase,"
26 April 1960, clipping, no title, file "Terminal: Montreal Place
Ville-Marie, 2," CNR Fonds, LAC; "Webb & Knapp, U.K.
Partners In New Projects," Financial Post, 15 April 1961. See also
"Investors Syndicate Block Sold for over $33 a Share,"
Financial Post, 6 August 1960.
(140) "Zeckendorf Sees Boom Continuing in Montreal in Big
Office Buildings," Montreal Star, 24 February 1960.
(141) Henry Aubin, City for Sale: International Financiers Take a
Major North American City by Storm (Montreal: Editions l'Etincelle,
1977), 79; and Eagle Star Life Insurance Co. Ltd., Board Minutes, 27
April 1960, 60/76, vol. June 1955-December 1960, CLC/B/005/ES01/0, Eagle
Star Insurance Company Limited Fonds, London Metropolitan Archives
(LMA).
(142) "Mr. Kenneth Keith," Financial Times, 28 March
1962.
(143) Eagle Star Life Insurance Co. Ltd., Board Minutes, 15 June
1960, 60/112, vol. June 1955-December 1960, Eagle Star Fonds, LMA.
(144) Eagle Star Life Insurance Co. Ltd., Board Minutes, 20 July
1960, 60/138, vol. June 1955-December 1960, Eagle Star Fonds, LMA.
(145) Eagle Star Life Insurance Co. Ltd., Board Minutes, 19 October
1960, 60/179, vol. June 1955-December 1960, Eagle Star Fonds, LMA.
(146) "U.K. Companies to Invest 6m [pounds sterling]. in
Montreal Skyscraper," and "Second Covent Garden's
Canadian Venture," Financial Times (London), 27 October 1960. See
also news release, Cockfield, Brown & Company Limited for Webb &
Knapp (Canada) Limited, "Not for Publication until Thursday, Oct.
27, 1960," file "Terminal: Montreal Place Ville-Marie,
2," CNR Fonds, LAC. By December, a syndicate of banks led by the
Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of New York agreed to provide $50 million
in short-term financing "in the form of 6'/2% first mortgage
bonds maturing 31 December 1962," which, upon completion of Place
Ville-Marie, would "be replaced by the long-term financing"
arranged through Metropolitan Life. See Progress Report, Place Ville
Marie, 18 November 1960, file "Terminal: Montreal Place
Ville-Marie, 2," CNR Fonds, LAC.
(147) "Webb & Knapp Reports Improved Position,"
Montreal Star, 4 April 1961.
(148) "Webb & Knapp Has $43,750,000 Financing Plan,"
Wall Street Journal, 22 December 1961.
(149) "Zeckendorf, Son in New Webb-Knapp Jobs; Management,
Financing Changes Expected," Wall Street Journal, 24 January 1962.
(150) Welles, "Big Man on the Thin Edge."
(151) Laurence G. O'Donnell, "After Criticism, Some
Firms' Promoters Turn Over Control to Public Investors," Wall
Street Journal, 14 August 1963.
(152) The three directors were "Mr. Kenneth Keith, chairman of
Philip Hill Higginson Erlanger, Mr. Grayson Murphy, a partner In the New
York firm of Shearman and Sterling, and Mr. Stuart Siloway, president of
Harrlman Ripley, of New York." See "Three U.K. Directors Leave
Webb and Knapp Board," Financial Times (London), 23 January 1963.
(153) "Zeckendorf Quits Posts In Canadian Companies," New
York Times, 28 June 1963; "Zeckendorf Resigns Posts at W-K,
Trizec," Montreal Star, 25 June 1963; and Welles, "Big Man on
the Thin Edge," 82-3.
(154) "W & K Annual Report Shows Clearer View of
Troubles," Globe and Mail, 28 August 1964; "W. & K. Sells
Its Holding in Trizec Corp.," Montreal Star, 14 October 1964.
(155) See tables entitled "General Fund" and "Life
Fund," CLC/B/005/ ES04/13/04/27/008, Eagle Star Fonds, LMA.
(156) Fainstein, City Builders, 25.
(157) Ibid., 4.
(158) France Vanlaethem, "The Construction of Place Ville
Marie," in Vanlaethem et al., Place Ville Marie, 349-50.
(159) "Webb & Knapp Holds Its Annual Meeting in Place
Ville Marie," Montreal Star, 2 March 1962.
(160) Cobb, lecture, 14 September 2003.
(161) Cobb lecture, 4 November 2004; and Ervin Galantay,
"Space/Time in Montreal," Nation, 1 May 1967, 558.
(162) "Montreal's Office Building Boom Intensifies Battle
for Tenants; Vacancies Soar to 26%," Wall Street Journal, 20 August
1962.
(163) "Canada's Place Ville-Marie," Architectural
Forum (February 1963): 84.
(164) "Troubled but Hopeful Developer Cuts Costs,"
Financial Post, 2 May 1964.
(165) Peter Blake, "Downtown in 3-D," Architectural Forum
(September 1966): 83.
(166) Vincent Ponte, "Montreal's Multi-Level City
Center," Traffic Engineering (September 1971): 25.
(167) "1970 Sale Trizec Corporation Ltd. Common No. Par Shares
@ Can$1.50 per Share to Star (Great Britain) Holdings Ltd.,"
CLC/B/005/ES04/13/04/27/008, Eagle Star Fonds, LMA. Trizec had turned
its first profit in 1967. See Sarah Marchand, "A Precious Jewel to
Cherish," in Vanlaethem et al., Place Ville Marie, 507.
(168) Hubert Aquin, "Essai cruclmorphe," Liberte 5, no. 4
(1963): 323-6.
(169) See David Meren, With Friends Like These: Entangled
Nationalisms and the Canada-Quebec-France Triangle, T944-1970
(Vancouver: UBC Press, 2012).