National Bank Place: Five Granites Define Montreal’s Financial District Plaza

Location

Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Installation Size

Multi-level site including ground plaza and fifth-floor rooftop terrace

Landscape Architect

CCxA (Chevalier Morales architectes + Cibinel architectes & associรฉs)

Installed By

National Bank Place: Five Granites Define Montreal’s Financial District Plaza

National Bank Place, completed in 2024 in Montreal’s financial district, demonstrates the design potential of coordinated granite palettes. The $2.287 million CAD landscape project by CCxA (Chevalier Morales architectes + Cibinel architectes & associรฉs) transforms the ground plane and fifth-floor rooftop terrace of the National Bank tower, creating multi-level public spaces serving both employees and the broader Montreal community.

Named Parc Michel-Bรฉlanger in honor of a prominent Quebec business leader, the project uses five distinct Polycor granites, four sourced from Quebec quarries, to create a visual hierarchy across multiple site levels. The stone selection reflects both practical requirements for Montreal’s extreme climate and design goals of establishing a welcoming urban space within a corporate environment.

The project integrates Caledoniaโ„ข granite for primary paving, Titanium Pearlโ„ข for secondary surfaces, Kodiak Brownโ„ข for accent pavers and defining curbs, Bethel Whiteโ„ข for custom seating blocks, and Stanstead Greyโ„ข for steps and pavers on the building’s secondary elevation. All pavers use a 4″x4″ format, providing a human scale appropriate for pedestrian spaces while accommodating complex geometries across both ground-level and rooftop conditions.

Caledonia granite, quarried in Quebec, forms the plaza’s paving foundation. Its warm, dark backdrop, mottled with flecks in various shades of taupe and grey, establishes a professional character appropriate for the financial district context while offering visual richness that avoids institutional appearance. The stone’s proven performance in Montreal’s freeze/thaw climate provided reliability for a project with multiple installation phases across different elevations.

Titanium Pearl granite introduces luminous silver-grey tones with a delicate crystalline structure. This lighter stone creates subtle variation across the plaza surfaces, preventing monotony while maintaining overall design cohesion. The silvery character adds brightness, particularly valuable for the rooftop terrace where reflected light enhances the user experience.

Kodiak Brown granite appears in dual applicationsโ€”as accent pavers integrated into the primary paving field and as curbing throughout the project. Sourced from Polycor’s Quebec quarry, this granite’s chocolate tones are punctuated by small pale flakes, introducing additional warmth to the palette. The curbs clearly delineate circulation paths, planting beds, and seating zones, with brown accent pavers creating rhythmic patterns through the space.

The project’s most distinctive material application involves Bethel White granite blocks fabricated into custom seating benches. This bright Vermont-quarried granite with subtle brown-grey speckling creates strong visual contrast against the smaller format, darker paving. The white blocks function as both practical seating and focal points throughout the plaza. Their clean lines and elliptical shapes echo the ellipse of the central plaza in a bold architectural statement.

The color contrast between white seating and darker paving creates legible spaces that encourage social interaction. Rather than conventional benches requiring multiple materials and complex detailing, the solid granite blocks offer integrated solutions. They are durable, maintenance-free, and visually striking. Their monolithic form references the solidity and foundational nature of financial institutions, while their accessible surfaces welcome public use for employees and pedestrians alike.

On the building’s secondary elevation, Stanstead Grey granite provides steps and paving surfaces with consistent medium-grey tone. This Quebec-quarried granite offers textured surfaces with slip resistance for safe grade transitions. Stanstead Grey’s historical use in significant Canadian architecture, including Montreal’s Sun Life Building, adds heritage resonance while meeting contemporary performance standards.

The coordination of dark Caledoniaโ„ข, medium Stanstead Greyโ„ข, and Titanium Pearlโ„ข, warm Kodiak Brownโ„ข, and bright Bethel Whiteโ„ข creates spatial definition without requiring physical barriers. The interplay of tones adds visual depth while maintaining a professional character appropriate for National Bank’s corporate identity. The 4″x4″ paver format provides practical installation advantages, accommodating complex geometries while maintaining consistent joint patterns.

All selected granites share critical performance characteristics for Montreal’s climate: low absorption rates, high compressive strength, superior slip resistance, and proven freeze-thaw capabilities. Montreal subjects exterior materials to extreme stress, with temperatures ranging from -30ยฐC in winter to +30ยฐC in summer. The stones’ natural crystalline structure provides inherent slip resistance, enhanced by thermal textured finishes that maintain traction in snow and rain.

Quebec granites’ proven performance in urban plaza applications includes resistance to de-icing salt penetration, power washing without surface degradation, and snow removal equipment impact. This is especially important at street level, where plows regularly degrade concrete curbing but have little to no effect on granite curbing. The substantial 4″ paver thickness prevents cracking under mechanical loads, while the stone’s low absorption prevents salt-related deterioration common in concrete pavers and more porous materials.

The rooftop terrace location exposes materials to additional challenges: temperature swings exceeding 50 degrees, high wind exposure, and limited substrate depth. Granite’s thermal mass helps moderate temperature extremes, while its density provides stability against wind displacement. The material’s natural durability eliminates the need for refinishing, with color integral to the stone rather than applied as a coating or surface treatment.

The project draws conceptual inspiration from Montreal’s Victorian squares (1801-1914), translating historical precedents of clearly defined edges, central gathering spaces, and integrated seating through contemporary materials and forms. The granite palette references stone materials prevalent in 19th-century Montreal while supporting current spatial programming and accessibility requirements.

“National Bank Place is much more than a real estate investment,” said Marie Chantal Gingras, Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice-President, Finance, who is responsible for the real estate business strategy. “It’s a people-centric, unifying and sustainable work environment where design and technology foster health and wellbeing. Most of our Montreal teams are now based here, strengthening their collaboration as well as our contribution to the economy and the vitality of downtown Montreal.”

The use of Quebec-sourced granites (with the single exception of Vermont’s Bethel White) celebrates regional heritage while minimizing transportation impacts. This local sourcing aligns with sustainable material selection priorities, reduces embodied carbon, and supports Quebec’s stone industry. Natural stone’s durability and essentially permanent character advance environmental goals through multi-generational service life, dramatically reducing life-cycle impacts compared to materials requiring replacement every 10-15 years.

The project demonstrates how coordinated granite palettes can transform corporate landscapes into welcoming public spaces. The thoughtful, sophisticated stone selection, and not the purely standard concrete or asphalt common in corporate plazas, signals that the space invites community use. The mix of formats, from 4″x4″ pavers to custom seating blocks, shows granite’s versatility across both functional paving and architectural focal points.

For corporate plaza projects requiring climate resilience, design quality, and long-term performance in extreme urban environments, National Bank Place confirms natural stone’s value. The coordinated application of multiple Quebec granites creates a unified design language serving daily employee use and public programming while ensuring the space will serve National Bank and Montreal’s broader community for generations.


Project Specifications:

  • Project Name: National Bank Place / Parc Michel-Bรฉlanger (Place Tour BNC)
  • Location: Financial District, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  • Project Type: Corporate plaza and rooftop terrace landscape
  • Size: Multi-level site including ground plaza and fifth-floor rooftop terrace
  • Budget: $2.287 million CAD
  • Completion: 2024
  • Construction Period: 2018-2024
  • Client: National Bank of Canada
  • Landscape Architecture & Architecture: CCxA (Chevalier Morales architectes + Cibinel architectes & associรฉs)
  • Photography: TARMAC (Damien Ligiardi), Stephane Brugger
  • Stone Specifications:
  • Primary Paving: Caledoniaโ„ข granite, 4″x4″ pavers
  • Secondary Paving: Titanium Pearlโ„ข granite, 4″x4″ pavers
  • Accent Paving & Curbs: Kodiak Brownโ„ข granite, 4″x4″ pavers and curbs
  • Seating Elements: Bethel Whiteโ„ข granite, custom fabricated blocks
  • Steps and Pavers (Secondary Elevation): Stanstead Greyโ„ข granite
  • Stone Supplier: Polycor
  • Characteristics:
    • Caledonia: Dark background with taupe and grey flecks (Quebec)
    • Titanium Pearl: Silver-grey with crystalline structure (Quebec)
    • Kodiak Brown: Chocolate tones with pale flakes (Quebec)
    • Bethel White: Bright white with brown-grey speckling (Vermont)
    • Stanstead Grey: Medium grey, consistent tone (Quebec)
  • Origin: Primarily Quebec-sourced (Caledonia, Titanium Pearl, Kodiak Brown, Stanstead Grey) with Bethel White from Vermont
  • Design Concept: Reinterpretation of Montreal’s Victorian squares (1801-1914) for contemporary corporate-public space

Sources: CCxA, National Bank of Canada, project photography,  National Bank of Canada press release

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