Cones of shame: Montreal officials vow to cut down ubiquitous construction cones
MONTREAL — Along a downtown Montreal street, in sight of city hall, orange-and-white-striped traffic cones stand in a row on the sidewalk. A few metres away, more cones mark off construction sites, while a solitary cone is perched atop a blue bollard separating the street from a bike lane.
Montreal’s ubiquitous traffic cones have become an unofficial symbol of the city: miniature versions are sold as souvenirs and toys, residents dress up as cones for Halloween, and a local artist has transformed one into a comic book hero.
But while some Montrealers have embraced the symbol, the city’s chamber of commerce says the cones — and the road closures that often, but not always, accompany them — are a source of frustration. The cones have become so common drivers no longer interpret them as a warning, Michel Leblanc, the president and CEO of the Chamber of Commerce of Metropolitan Montreal, said in an interview Tuesday.
“People are desensitized, drivers are desensitized, it creates a risk,” he said. “It’s not necessarily about reputation, it’s about the fact that we’ve become a city where cones are everywhere, and we don’t pay that much attention, unless we’re very frustrated because it’s blocking the way where we want to go.”