Robillard Block

The Robillard Block (French: Édifice Robillard) was a landmark building in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, situated in Montreal's Chinatown on the corner of Viger Street and Saint Laurent Boulevard. On 17 November 2016, the building was destroyed by fire.[1]
Constructed in the Neo-Renaissance style, the structure was built in 1879, and transformed into a hotel in 1890.[2] In 1891, it housed the Gaiety Museum and Theatorium, a popular Victorian-era curios showcase. In May 1896, it started housing the Palace Theatre, and on June 27 showed the first movies in North America, making it the first cinema in North America.[3] The cinema system used a projector system developed by the Lumiere brothers, the cinématographe, and had a screen the size of a towel. The first films shown were of a train, a ship, a cavalry charge, and demolishing a wall.[4] The show continued for two months, and were presented by Louis Minier and his assistant Louis Pupier.[5] In September 1896, continuous showings with the cinematographe lumiere started.
References
- ^ "Fire destroys Montreal heritage building that housed Canada's 1st cinema". CBC News. Retrieved 2016-11-17.
- ^ Template:Fr City of Montreal, L'Édifice Robillard: premier cinéma du Canada, Nicolas-Hugo Chebin, Patrice Lalonde, Chantal Déry (accessed 28 October 2008)
- ^ Template:Zh icon SinoMontreal, 唐人街地标式建筑免于出售(图), 2004-09-08 18:20:23, (accessed 28 October 2008)
- ^ Montreal Gazette, Renewed Gaiety in Chinatown, Tuesday October 28, 2008, page A8
- ^ Cinema in Quebec in Silent Era, The Arrival of the Cinematographe in Québec (accessed 28 October 2008)
- Landmarks in Montreal
- Culture of Montreal
- Museums in Montreal
- Commercial buildings completed in 1879
- Museums established in 1891
- 1896 in film
- 1896 establishments in Quebec
- Renaissance Revival architecture in Canada
- Ville-Marie, Montreal
- Defunct museums in Canada
- Former cinemas in Montreal
- Burned buildings and structures in Canada
- Theatres that have burned down
- Canadian film stubs
- Quebec history stubs
- Montreal stubs