On a visit to Paris, France, Mayor Drapeau fell in love with the Parc des Princes Stadium designed by French architect Roger Taillibert. He contacted Taillibert directly and asked him to design the Olympic Stadium and Velodrome. The Quebec Order of Architects was not happy about this, because it did not give the province’s architects a chance to show off their talents.
The Olympic Village
Good news: two Quebec architects, Roger d’Astous and Luc Durand, were hired to design the Olympic Village.
D’Astous had built projects like the Beaubien metro station and the Château Champlain hotel, while Durand had designed Place Dupuis and the Quebec Pavilion at Expo 67. Today, the Quebec Pavilion and the former French Pavilion make up the Casino de Montréal.
The Olympic Stadium
Taillibert was known for his extensive and expert usage of concrete. He liked to work with precast components, which meant some elements could be made in advance to save time at the construction site. However, the curved shapes he designed required the use of new building techniques that local construction companies found very challenging.
All in all, the Stadium is composed of 12,000 prefabricated pieces. These elements contain 71,500 cubic metres of poured concrete, embedded with approximately 1,000 kilometres of high-tensile steel cables! Work on the Stadium began on April 28, 1973.
The Velodrome
For the first time in the history of the Olympic Games, track cycling events took place on an indoor track. The Velodrome has a very unusual shell-like structure, and the roof features a number of long curved skylights. Even the way it was built was surprising: the pieces were assembled from the top, downwards, which is quite unusual!
As he did for the stadium, Taillibert used prefab concrete segments, arches, panels and supports, which were then assembled on site. Each piece is designed to support another, a little like a giant jigsaw puzzle.
Construction began on August 27, 1973, and wrapped up in May 1976, just in time for the Games.