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De La Concorde (AMT)

De La Concorde
Metro-DeLaConcorde.JPG
Location 1200, Boulevard de la Concorde Ouest, Laval
Quebec, Canada
Coordinates 45°33′39″N 73°42′35″W / 45.56083°N 73.70972°W / 45.56083; -73.70972Coordinates: 45°33′39″N 73°42′35″W / 45.56083°N 73.70972°W / 45.56083; -73.70972
Operated by Société de transport de Montréal
Connections
  STL buses
Construction
Depth 15 metres (49 feet 3 inches), 25th
Architect André Marcotte
History
Opened 26 April 2007
Traffic
Passengers 1,234,745 entrances in 2011, 64th of 68
Services
Preceding station   Montreal Metro.svg Montreal Metro   Following station
toward Côte-Vertu
Orange Line
Terminus
De La Concorde
Location 1240 av. Léo-Lacombe
Laval, Quebec
Coordinates 45°33′38″N 73°42′36″W / 45.56056°N 73.71000°W / 45.56056; -73.71000
Platforms 2 side platforms
Tracks 2
Connections
  STL buses
Construction
Parking None
Bicycle facilities 53 spaces
Other information
Fare zone 3
History
Opened 2007
Traffic
Passengers (2015) 882,300
Services
Preceding station   AMT   Following station
Saint-Jérôme

De la Concorde station is an intermodal transit station in Laval, Quebec, Canada. It serves the Montreal Metro's Orange Line and the Agence métropolitaine de transport (AMT)'s Saint-Jérôme commuter rail line. It is located in the Laval-des-Rapides district and opened April 28, 2007, as part of Montreal Metro's extension into Laval. The intermodal De La Concorde station replaced Saint-Martin station, a commuter rail station located 1.65 km (1.03 mi) to the north.

The station is named after boulevard de la Concorde, which in turn is named for the Place de la Concorde in Paris. The entrance building is split-level, the lower providing access to the Metro station and the upper level to the train station, with the platforms continuing towards the walkway that goes under the rail bridge that crosses Boul. de la Concorde. This walkway is higher than the sidewalk. On the west side of the station, opposite the Metro station, stairs connect the sidewalk with the walkway.

The station is a side platform station, built in tunnel with an open-pit central section in the shape of a cube. The upper surface of the cube protrudes out of the earth and is rimmed with skylights, producing a sundial-like effect as the progress of the sun changes the light within the cube. The station's decor is primarily bare concrete, metal, and steel, with the platform's ultramarine tiles and enlarged photographs of grass providing colour.

The escalator shaft from the entrance building to the ticket hall also protrudes out of the earth as a glazed cylinder reminiscent of Norman Foster's "fosterito" metro entrances in the Bilbao Metro. The entrance building is split-level, one level providing access to the station and the other to the train station; its glazed front is decorated with a large Metro logo.


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Wikipedia

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