Once the industrial artery that fueled Montreal’s rise, the Lachine Canal is now where the city slows down—at least for a few kilometers. Cutting through Griffintown, Saint-Henri, and LaSalle, this stretch of water was once jammed with cargo ships and lined with factories, but today, it’s where cyclists, joggers, and kayakers carve their own routes through the city.

The bike path is legendary—one of the best urban rides in North America, leading straight from Old Montreal to Lachine’s waterfront parks. In the summer, it’s a parade of picnics, rollerblades, and boats drifting past converted red-brick warehouses that now house cafés, breweries, and lofts. Winters are quieter, with frozen-over stretches that locals use for skating or simply walking along in crisp solitude.

It’s a place where the city meets the water, where Montreal’s industrial past still lingers in rusted rail bridges and old silos, but where the energy has shifted—from hard work to leisure, from production to play. Whether you’re paddling, pedaling, or just sitting by the locks with a beer and a bagel, the Lachine Canal is where Montreal catches its breath.

Lachine Canal

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