Rigaud, Quebec
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Rigaud is a municipality in southwestern Quebec, Canada in Vaudreuil-Soulanges at the junction of the Ottawa River (Riviere des Ouatouais) and the Rigaud River. It is the farthest western suburb of Montreal. The commuter train to downtown Montreal starts at the Rigaud station.
Its main attraction is Mont-Rigaud, a small mountain with downhill ski runs, a private school (Collège Bourget), a monastery, and a shrine dedicated to the Virgin Mary (Sanctuaire Notre-Dame-de-Lourdes). The mountain is also home to an unusual, natural rock garden known as the "champs de patates", so named because of the local legend that it was once a potato field, turned to stone by God because the farmer worked on the Sabbath. On the opposite side of the mountain is a residential community know as "Mountain Ranches." The middle to upper-middle class community features large, mostly secluded building lots in a wooded setting that draws residents because of its isolated tranquility and privacy. As such, it was the hiding place for fugitive Charlie Wilson, one of the leaders of the notorious 1963 Great train robbery in England.
Also located in Rigaud is a training center for the Canada Border Services Agency.
According to the 2001 Statistics Canada Census:
- Population: 6,095
- % Change (1996 – 2001): 0.6
- Dwellings: 2,666
- Area (sq. km.): 99.08
- Density (persons per sq. km.): 61.5
Communities
- Dragon
- Rigaud
North: Pointe-Fortune | ||
West: East Hawkesbury |
Rigaud |
East: Hudson, Vaudreuil-Dorion |
South: Très-Saint-Rédempteur, Sainte-Marthe |