The restaurant drew its inspiration from the 1st class Salle a Manger on the French Line’s transatlantic liner the Ile De France (see pic below). The company’s matriarch Lady Flora Eaton travelled aboard the luxury liner in the 1920s, and was so impressed by what she found on the liner that the dining room was incorporated into the plan when Eaton's decided to expand its Rue St. Catherine store to nine floors from six in 1928.
The 650-seat dining room opened on Jan. 25, 1931, as Le François Premier, but the ladies who lunched there never called it that. It was always known as "The Ninth Floor."
The room is the work of interior designer Jacques Carlu, the French-born professor of advanced design at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was also responsible for the celebrated Trocadéro in Paris and the Rainbow Room in New York's Rockefeller Plaza. Carlu was also responsible for Toronto equivalent at the Toronto store, which I am happy to say, has been restored and functioning as an event space.
With opal glass, nickel steel railings, and pink marble columns with black Belgian marble accents, and monumental space the dining room remains one of the most staggeringly beautiful art deco rooms in Montreal, if not the world. This was a luxurious escape for lunch where with a bit of careful imagination we were on our way to Europe cocooned by the luxury around us.

Mothballed? Nonsense, nothing a little breaking and entering wouldn't fix. I want to go, I NEED to go.
ReplyDeleteMrpeenee, I am with you! I will get my grandmother to knit us black balaclavas and we can go and break in under the cover of darkness
ReplyDeleteGosh what amazing incentives to go to Canada. Fabulous venues, oh to have lived in those days. So glad to see that some have preserved.
ReplyDeleteLesley from Decolish.com
San Francisco has destroyed almost all its marvelous dining spaces.
ReplyDelete