Montreal metro map

You can find on this page the Montreal metro map to print and to download in PDF. The Montreal metro map presents the network, zones, stations and different lines of the metro of Montreal in Quebec - Canada.

Montreal metro stations map

Metro map Montreal

The Montreal metro map shows all the stations and lines of the Montreal metro. This metro map of Montreal will allow you to easily plan your routes in the metro of Montreal in Quebec - Canada. The Montreal metro map is downloadable in PDF, printable and free.

The Montreal Metro (French: Métro de Montréal) is a rubber-tired metro system, and the main form of public transportation underground in the city of Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The Metro, operated by the Société de transport de Montreal (STM), was inaugurated on October 14, 1966, during the tenure of Mayor Jean Drapeau. Originally consisting of 26 stations on three separate lines, the Metro now incorporates 68 stations on four lines measuring 69.2 km (43.00 mi) in length, serving the north, east, and centre of the Island of Montreal with connections to Longueuil, via the Yellow Line, and Laval, via the Orange line as you can see in Metro map Montreal.

Montreal subway station map

Montreal subway map

The Montreal subway map shows all the stations and lines of the Montreal subway. This subway map of Montreal will allow you to easily plan your routes in the subway of Montreal en Quebec - Canada. The Montreal subway map is downloadable in PDF, printable and free.

The first subway proposal, dated 1910, was for a single line running underneath Bleury Street and Park Avenue from Craig Street (now St-Antoine Street) all the way to Mont Royal Avenue. The line was to run underground from Craig to Pine Avenue. An eventual expansion up Saint Laurent Boulevard to De Montigny was also contemplated at the time. In 1944, the Montreal Tramways Company proposed a 2-line network, running underneath Rue Sainte-Catherine from Square Cabot (Rue Atwater) to Avenue Papineau, and a second line under St-Denis Street (from Jean-Talon to Notre-Dame), then turning westwards under Notre-Dame and St-Jacques Street all the way to Rue Guy, then turning north and connecting with the other line at Guy as you can see in Montreal subway map. Proposed extensions were to run northward under De Lorimier up to Beaubien, eastward from De Lorimier to Viau under Rue Ontario, northward Chemin Côte-des-Neiges and Queen-Mary to Snowdon (Décarie), westward under Sherbrooke to Girouard, and southwards under Wellington, Centre and Verdun to 1ère Avenue in Verdun.