Normally on Easter Sunday one spends time his or her family, however on this particular Easter a friend and I decided to wake up early and do some Urban Exploration.
What is great about living in Germany is that there are several abandoned...
It's over 92 years of industrial history that ended in 2004 when the Spexel factory was closed down. The story of this plant start in 1912 when is built the paper mill, which took the name of Howard Smith Paper Mill. Over the following years, the plant became the best plant in Canada for the production of banknotes. Thus in 1932, the Bank of Canada commissioned the Beauharnois plant to print all the paper currency of the country, an exclusivity who will stand for more than 70 years.
In the late 1990s, the plant is threatened with closure by Domtar who is then the owner. After months of uncertainty, the plant was finally revived in 1997 by its own employees, who have invested $ 2,000 each, and the CSN action funds (a labor union), who will invested more than a million and a half dollars.
Despite the willingness of employees, the future remains bleak for the Spexel. Early 2001, the Bank of Canada is undertaking steps with the factory to produce new and more difficult to copy currency. Because the plant doesn't have the necessary technology, the Bank of Canada launches a global public tender in November 2002. A few months later, a German firm wins the contract for the production of the $ 20, $ 50 and $ 100, which creates a shock wave at the plant in Beauharnois.
For Spexel is the beginning of the end. The loss of this two million dollars contract represents a large portion of its revenue. In 2004, the announcement of the closure is finally announced. In total, over 110 jobs are lost.
Today, over ten years later, the site has been the prey of several fires (which resulted in the destruction of a part of the plant) and suffered the wrath of metal thieves and others vandals. Nevertheless, the current owner keeps the faith and hope to find the right project and wish to be able to reset the factory one day. Until then, it's a paintball paradise where paint splashes are visible everywhere...
Normally on Easter Sunday one spends time his or her family, however on this particular Easter a friend and I decided to wake up early and do some Urban Exploration.
What is great about living in Germany is that there are several abandoned...
A true emblem of the Old Port of Montreal, it is difficult to miss the Silo # 5, a gigantic concrete structure south of McGill Street. The complex consists of 206 silos and an amalgam of buildings built over a period of more than fifty years,...
This is one of the oldest stationery in Quebec. Founded in 1851 by a american businessman, the company is composed of a half-dozen buildings on a fifteen hectares site. Saying that the site is large is an understatement, not only because it has a...
Built in 1954, the Dickson incinerator was, at the time, the most modern one in North America. It was built to replace these old incinerators where horses were used for harvesting waste.
In the 1920s, the city of Montreal was struggling...