Montreal Eaton 9th floor restaurant
The Montreal Eaton 9th floor restaurant is an Art deco landmark in Montreal. It used to be known simply as "the ninth floor". Flora McRae Eaton was the wife of the multi-millionaire owner of the former Eaton's chain of department stores in Canada. For several decades she endeavoured to give her own interpretation of "class and style" to the major stores in the chain. In 1931 she opened a large art deco restaurant on the top 9th floor of the Montreal Eaton store. It was a very close copy of the first class dining hall of her favourite transatlantic liner, the Ile de France. After being closed for several years following Eaton's bankruptcy in 1999 the 9th floor restaurant was recently restored by Fournier, Gersovitz, Moss et associés, a Montreal architectural firm. This restaurant is now the largest memento of the defunct liner and is a registered historical site. It has been the locale for rites of passage and/or female bonding activities over several generations, as described in The ladies of the 9th Floor documentary movie. The main 9th floor corridor leading from the elevators to the restaurant is also finished in the art deco style.
References - 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 minutes film. Winner of the 1998 Telefilm Canada prize for short and medium length films.
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