MONTREAL - A Montreal homeless shelter says it's nearly doubling the number of apartments it can offer the unhoused thanks to a boost in funding from the city, part of a $2-million envelope split among four groups that develop below-market housing.
The Old Mission Brewery says it will receive $400,000, which will allow it to add 237 units to its housing stock by 2028.
"Some have already been bought and are under renovation, and some are in construction," Jean-François Degenais, who oversees the Brewery's rehousing program, said in a recent interview.
Between April 2024 and March 2025, the shelter offered housing to 100 people in units it owns directly or manages. “This is really going to help us grow, to increase our delivery capacity, and the quality of our organization as a pillar in the response to this crisis."
The city issued a call for projects in June, and on Monday announced the four groups that have been chosen to split the $2 million. Montreal estimates that with this money, the groups can expand their operations to add roughly 6,300 units in the city that will be offered below market rates.
The $2 million won't go directly toward building housing. Rather, he said, it will help the capacity of the four non-profits to develop and manage more units.
"We've mainly been inspired by what's being done in Vienna, for example, in Europe," said Rabouin, the lead on economic development on the city's executive committee.
In Vienna, about 50 per cent of the population lives in some type of affordable housing, such as municipally managed apartments, or in subsidized flats.
Rabouin said if he's re-elected, he hopes to raise the funding envelope next year to $5 million.