To accommodate some of the events on the Games program, Montreal built the Olympic Basin on Notre Dame Island, the Claude Robillard Centre in Ahuntsic and the Étienne Desmarteau Centre in Rosemont.
The Rosemont venue was named after one of Quebec’s first Olympians, Étienne Desmarteau, who participated in the 1904 Games and won a gold medal in the 56-pound weight throw.
Montreal already had several facilities that could be used for sports, like the Maurice Richard Arena and the Maisonneuve Centre, now known as the Pierre Charbonneau Centre in the Mercier-Hochelaga-Maisonneuve area, the Forum in Ville-Marie, the Botanical Garden in Rosemont-La Petite-Patrie (used for running races, among other events) and university sports complexes (McGill University in Ville-Marie and Université de Montréal in Côte-des-Neiges-Notre-Dame-de-Grâce).
Other events had to be held outside Montreal, like the equestrian competitions in Bromont, archery in Joliette, football in Sherbrooke, and yacht races in Kingston, Ontario.