Snowdon
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Location | 5111, Queen Mary Road, Montreal Quebec, Canada |
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Coordinates | 45°29′08″N 73°37′41″W / 45.48556°N 73.62806°WCoordinates: 45°29′08″N 73°37′41″W / 45.48556°N 73.62806°W | |||||||||||||||
Operated by | Société de transport de Montréal | |||||||||||||||
Platforms | 4 split platforms (2 on each level) | |||||||||||||||
Tracks | 4 (2 on each level) | |||||||||||||||
Connections | ||||||||||||||||
Construction | ||||||||||||||||
Depth | 19.5 metres (64 feet) (upper platform) 24.6 metres (80 feet 9 inches) (lower platform), 6th deepest |
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Disabled access | Yes | |||||||||||||||
Architect | Jean-Louis Beaulieu | |||||||||||||||
History | ||||||||||||||||
Opened | 7 September 1981 (Orange Line) 4 January 1988 (Blue Line) |
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Traffic | ||||||||||||||||
Passengers | 3,163,288 entrances in 2006, 29th of 68 (excluding transfers) |
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Services | ||||||||||||||||
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Snowdon station is a Montreal Metro station in the borough of Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is operated by the Société de transport de Montréal (STM) and is a transfer station between the Orange Line and Blue Line; it is the western terminus of the Blue Line. It is located in the Snowdon neighbourhood.
The station opened on September 7, 1981 with service on the Orange Line only, though the Blue Line platforms were built at the same time. At the time it was the western terminus of the Orange Line, taking over from Place-Saint-Henri station; it is thus the only station to have been the terminus of two different lines. Service on the Blue Line began on January 4, 1988.
The station was constructed as an anti-directional cross-platform interchange, with three lateral tunnels containing two stories each, joined by four cross-tunnels; both lines therefore have stacked platforms. This layout was intended to allow rapid transfer between a future extension into Notre-Dame-de-Grâce and service to downtown; this service never opened, and the station's layout means that most people who transfer between the Blue and Orange Lines must go down stairs.
The station's central access tunnel is connected at its western end to the station's single entrance, which is integrated into an STM control centre and contains a small sunken garden.
The station was designed by Jean-Louis Beaulieu, who also provided sculptural grilles for the station's main staircase and the rear of the control building. The station's main artwork, a group of four murals by Claude Guité running the full length of the platform and entitled Les quatre saisons (the four seasons). The murals are painted on 500 panels of asbestos cement stretching the entire length of the platforms, they portray semi-abstract scenes of the foliage and weather associated with each of the four seasons. The seasons go in order, counterclockwise around the platforms, with winter on the Côte-Vertu platform, spring on Montmorency, summer on the Saint-Michel departure platform, and autumn on the Snowdon arrival platform.