The Eaton's Ninth Floor Restaurant (also known as "The Ninth Floor" or "Le 9e") was a popular eatery in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, operated by the Eaton's department store for 68 years, until its bankruptcy and closure in 1999. After being closed to the public for a quarter of a century, it was renovated and reopened as a special events venue with its peripheral Île de France Restaurant in 2024. It remains an Art Deco landmark, and a registered historical site.
History
Lady Eaton, the wife of the multi-millionaire owner of the Eaton's department stores, gave her interpretation of "class and style" to the major Eaton's stores. In 1925 Eaton's purchased the three-storey Goodwin building[1] at 677 Saint Catherine Street West and commissioned architects Ross & MacDonald to build it up to six storeys in 1927. The top three floors were added in 1930–1931.[2] On January 26, 1931, Lady Eaton opened a large Art Deco restaurant on the 9th floor of the building. The restaurant was designed by architect Jacques Carlu, and[3] the floor-to-ceiling mural at the back of the restaurant was created by his wife Natacha Carlu.[4] It was patterned on dining hall of the transatlantic liner SS Île de France. The 9th floor corridor between the elevators and restaurant is also in the Art Deco style.
See also
- Complexe Les Ailes
- The Carlu (Toronto)
Other sources
- Anderson, Carol and Mallinson, Katharine. Lunch with Lady Eaton: Inside the Dining Rooms of a Nation, Toronto: ECW Press, 2004. ISBN 978-1550226508
- Cohen-Rose, Sandra. Northern Deco: Art Deco Architecture in Montreal. Montreal: Corona Publishers, 1996 Sandra Cohen-Rose. ISBN 0-919631-06-1
- Martin, Catherine. The Ladies of the 9th Floor. 60 minute film. Winner of the 1998 Telefilm Canada prize for short and medium length films.
External links
- Art Deco Montreal - Photo of the Ninth Floor Restaurant
- NFB Web page for Les Dames du 9e (in French)
- Close up of floor to ceiling mural
- Finding aid for Ross & Macdonald Architects, Canadian Centre for Architecture
- Urban Exploration Montreal - A 2004 photo and video documentation of the abandoned 9th floor
- May 1931 issue of the Journal of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (Volume 8, Number 5) with photos and a brief architectural review of the restaurant shortly after it opened (Click View/Open and see pages 181-186 in the downloaded PDF file)
References
- Civilization.ca - Before e-commerce - Company history - Montréal's St. Catherine Street Shopping District Historymuseum.ca, retrieved February 12, 2019^
- Ross & Macdonald Architects, "General Specifications for Extensions to Store for The T. Eaton Co. Limited of Montreal," February 19, 1930, Ross & Macdonald Fonds (Canadian Centre for Architecture – Archives) 5-10.^
- Andrew Chung. Deprived of an Art Deco wonder Toronto Star, May 17, 2009, retrieved 2009-05-26^