pawhell.pages.dev


Gay village montreal shopping

Featured Hotels

HOTEL10

Excellent

Based on reviews


Samantha checked us in and was very helpful and accommodating. Other staff members that we

Samantha checked us in and was very helpful and accommodating. Other staff members that we hadn't dealt with remembered us and our situation and we're very cooperative. Was really nice to see. Calling after 11pm for some information and assistance wasn't the optimal but during the night they are. I really disliked the parking situation. You can only compensate for valley and it's $30/night. But if you find street parking then it's cheaper or free. Or public underground parking is cheaper.

Show more

Bilal, Canada


We stayed here and we got a great deal through Agoda. There was free breakfast and our roo

We stayed here and we got a excellent deal through Agoda. There was free breakfast and our room was more like a small apartment with a kitchen, living room, bedroom and bathroom. The kitchen has a full size refrigerator, sink, dishwasher and microwave, but no stove. The wind conditioner initially didn't labor, but the front desk sent someone up to fix it. After that, it worked okay, but was a little raucous. The location is gay village montreal shopping

Your Gaycation Guide to Montreal

Know before you go

Whenever I’ve done research on LGBTQ-friendly places to travel, my priorities are safety and avoiding hostility. It had never even crossed my brain to think of places in the world where warmth and kindness could be expected. In Montreal, we were welcomed, not just tolerated, but embraced. There aren’t words for how nice that feels when you’ve never experienced it before. And although Montreal’s history of the Gay Village will declare you otherwise, it showed us a new frontier is on the horizon. And just as everywhere may have a history that’s not so amazing, many destinations are forging a new generation that is much more welcoming and safe for LGBTQ travelers.

But as a homosexual traveler, this trip meant something to me in a way that other destinations just haven’t. So it’s important to perceive the places where presently queer people are safer, look into what initiatives certain destinations have that support LGBTQ people, and as I’m doing, spread the word.

Representation matters in choosing travel destinations

I was drawn to Montreal when I heard about the opening of an exhibit on

Guide To The Gay Village Montreal

This guide to the famous Montreal Gay Village will show you why Montreal has become a top LGBT tourist destination for travelers around the world. Montreal is acknowledged for its welcoming and diverse people, vibrant same-sex attracted nightlife, and beautiful architecture. Also, poutine. 

The Montreal Lgbtq+ Village is easy to spot and even easier to differentiate from the rest of the capital. Named unsurprisingly exactly what it is, Gay Village Montreal is full of restaurants, shops, bars, nightclubs, hotels, street performers, stunning art, and surprises around every corner.


[quads id=2]

The Gay Village Montreal runs along Sainte-Catherine Street from Berri to Papineau Avenue. Stepping onto Sainte-Catherine Road is like leaving the regular world and entering gay world (yes, that was a Mean Girls reference). Upon stepping onto the street, you will see over , rainbow balls strung above your head, spanning the 1km stretch that makes up the Montreal Gay Village. It is seriously flawless for the ‘gram.

From April until September, this colorful stretch of Ste-Catherine lane is closed down to vehicle traffic, meaning the street fills with vibrant people, pati

The Village

The Village’s come-one, come-all spirit marks this rainbow-hued quarter as a essential part of the city’s urban landscape. Both an LGBT+ community gathering direct and a living, breathing neighbourhood, the Village is far more than one of Montréal’s liveliest party hubs and the centre of summer's Pride events – although, nowhere else quite gets down in the quite same way.

Montréal’s big gay heart

Openness 24/7

Beaudry metro station with its rainbow pillars stands proudly at the geographic heart of Montréal’s Village, the biggest of its kind in North America. Bustling Sainte-Catherine Street running east to west acts as the gaybourhood’s main drag, stacked with satisfactory eateries, eye-popping boutiques, and a multitude of B&B options housed in uniquely Montréalaise architecture. Welcoming nightclubs that stay packed distant into the night personify Montréal’s joie de vivre and the anything goes scene awaits with arms open wide. But the fun runs 24/7, making Le Village one of Montréal’s most vibrant, uncover, and inclusive quarters both day and night.



.