Montreal

Quebec's Colisée, home of the Nordiques, to be demolished after sitting empty for a decade

The 76-year old arena in Quebec City will be demolished after serving as a storage unit for 10 years. In its place, the city wants to propose a mixed-use real estate project for the neighbourhood, which would include housing.

76-year-old multi-purpose arena to be dismantled over 2 years, cost $20M, city says

A photo of an arena taken in the 1970s.
The Colisée de Quebec, pictured in June 1979, has been the hub of several of Quebec's most famous hockey teams. On Monday, the city confirmed its plans to demolish the 76-year-old building. (Archives de la Ville de Québec)

Quebec City's Colisée arena is more than a relic of the city's hockey history for Nicole Bouchard.

While it was home to many of Quebec's most famous teams, including the Aces, Citadelles, Remparts and Nordiques, it was also where Bouchard got her first internship and job.

The assistant general manager of the Quebec Remparts, she says the amphitheatre is more like her second home.

"This is where I started my career a long time ago in 1981," said Bouchard. "I spent over 30 years walking in[to] that building."

On Monday, the city confirmed it will soon be demolished.

Mayor Bruno Marchand's administration is considering the future of the Colisée de Québec, formerly known as the Colisée Pepsi. In its place, the city wants to propose a mixed-use real estate project for the neighbourhood, which would include housing.

A woman writing on a type writer
Nicole Bouchard pictured in 1981 when she was hired as an assistant at the Colisée. (Submitted by Nicole Bouchard )

"It's hard to believe that that building will disappear," said Bouchard. "It's part of the history of the city."

She worked in the arena until the Remparts moved out in 2015 when the amphitheatre was replaced with an 18,000-seat neighbouring arena known as the Vidéotron Centre.

Since then, the Colisée has been sitting empty.

"Even if there was nothing in [it] since 2015, that's a building full of history and I don't think you can just blow it down and just forget about it," said Bouchard.

A man signs a photo behind him is a woman and a man
Nicole Bouchard, back left, pictured with Montreal Canadiens legend Jean Béliveau, centre, in April 2000 during the 50th commemoration of the arena. (Submitted by Nicole Bouchard)

The building was constructed in 1949 and enlarged in 1980.

In 2000, for its 50th anniversary, former NHL stars Jean Béliveau, Guy Lafleur and Peter Stastny gathered at the Colisée for a special ceremony.

A photo taken from the stands. Looking down at a hockey rink.
The arena, pictured in 1985 for a hockey game, also welcomed singers and bands over the course of its 76-year history. (Archives de la Ville de Québec)

Stastny recalled scoring a goal with only one glove on in 1985. He said the "roof lifted off the auditorium."

'We'll be able to commemorate it,' says city

City councillor Mélissa Coulombe-Leduc, responsible for heritage in Quebec City, says the building has been used for storage purposes since 2015.

"I understand the public's attachment to the Colisée, and I think we'll be able to commemorate it," said Coulombe-Leduc.

"We hesitated far too much over the past 15 years, ever since we knew the Vidéotron Centre was going to be built."

A black and white image of an arena being built
The Colisée was built in 1949. It would later be replaced in 2015 with a neighbouring arena known as the Vidéotron Centre. (Archives de la Ville de Québec)

Coulombe-Leduc says the city considered doing partial demolitions to keep aspects of the older structure. In the end, she says demolishing the newer structure from 1980 to keep the older one would considerably alter the heritage of the building.

"We keep everything, or we deconstruct," said Coulombe-Leduc. "The longer we wait, the more expensive it will be, both technically and environmentally."

She estimates that the structure will be dismantled over a two-year period — the costs of which would exceed $20 million.

A black and white photo of a hockey player accepting an award
Marc Tardif pictured on May 26, 1977 when the Nordiques won the Avco Cup at the Colisée. (Archives de la Ville de Québec)

Richard Martel has amassed hours, if not days, in Quebec City's beloved arena over the years. 

It's where he watched hockey games, rock concerts and skipped school to line up for tickets. It's the place his dad would drop him off at 7 a.m. so the teen could line up to secure a spot closest to the stage.

"[He was] a cool dad just [to] drive me there with my friends," he said. "There were people who slept all night long to get tickets."

"My dad was more into classical music, so, rock he didn't like that a lot," he said with a chuckle.

Martel estimates he's seen 300 shows in the Colisée — his first when he was just 13 years old.

Though he says the building's demolition was inevitable, he's "kind of sad," to see it go.

"I've got great memories," he said. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rachel Watts

CBC journalist

Rachel Watts is a journalist with CBC News in Quebec City. Originally from Montreal, she enjoys covering stories in the province of Quebec. You can reach her at [email protected].

With files from Mélina Lévesque and Radio-Canada