Is your 30 box move causing you headaches? Imagine having 30,000 to move.
This is the task that Montreal’s municipal archives are tackling these days, which are returning to a newly renovated city hall after six years of absence. A deadline which stretched with the delay in the work.
At the end of May, when La Presse visited the temporary premises on rue Saint-Denis, everything was ready for the move. On each box: three digital codes. Its former location at city hall, its temporary location and its future location upon its return to the depot.
The archives of the City of Montreal are “5.6 kilometers of documents, approximately 2,000,000 photos,” explains archivist Nicolas Bednarz.
No question of misplacing or storing away all these memories as some movers have a reputation.
The dual objective “is to ensure the integrity of the documents and to find them,” explained division head Florian Daveau.
Hundreds of glass negatives, for example, will have to be moved even though they are “very fragile”. “Movers have very specific instructions. You have to be careful with all the boxes, but for these, there are special instructions, he continued. There is always an archivist or technician who will be with the movers to ensure that these documents arrive in good condition. »
The archives did not sleep during their years on rue Saint-Denis, in a former industrial building located on the corner of boulevard Rosemont. Researchers and city officials continued to consult the documents they needed, in person or – for those that were digitized – via the internet.
However, it is not assisting researchers that has taken up most of the archivists’ time in recent weeks. “Since January, we have been working almost daily” on the move, said Mr. Daveau. In endless Excel files, the 30,000 boxes and their 216,000 sets of documents are listed.
Planning remains key to the move’s success, he and his colleague said. No boxes were lost in the move from city hall to Saint-Denis Street, but “to be quite honest, there were some that took a little while” to locate, Bednarz said. “I’m pretty proud.”
Three trucks will travel back and forth between the two locations throughout the month of June.
This is not the first upheaval of Montreal City Hall that the municipal archives have experienced. In 1922, the building burned down completely, some fifty years after its construction.
The bulk of the archives, however, escaped unscathed: an underground vault had been built under the building’s forecourt in 1919. “The documents had been transferred gradually between 1919 and 1922,” recounted Mr. Bednarz. It’s a chance, really. […] We have photographs of the opening of the doors which closed the vaults. We see the documents, everything around them is destroyed. »
A second underground vault was built next door in the 1950s.
It is into these two spaces that the archives are returning at this very moment. However, they have been rearranged, allowing archivists to gain approximately 20% more space. The price for the efforts invested by the archives teams since 2018.
“A move like that is once every 100 years,” assured Florian Daveau. In 2124, the archives will be able to tell if he was wrong.