"The church of Sainte-Cécile is a place of worship in the Catholic tradition erected in 1913 and 1914 according to the plans of the architects Viau and Venne. The stone building, in the Beaux-Arts style, has a Latin cross plan composed of a nave, a transept and a projecting choir with a flat apse.
It is topped with a copper roof with two straight slopes. The facade, built into a gable wall, is flanked by two bell towers at the ends and pierced by a rose window in the upper part, in the center.
The bell towers are slightly set back from the central projection comprising the three portals; they are topped with a dome and surmounted by a cross.
The main portal, framed by columns, is topped by an ornamented stone arch. The openings of the church are arched, with the exception of the rose windows on the facade and the arms of the transepts and a few loophole windows. The crossing of the transept, octagonal in shape, is marked by a pinnacle.
The building is extended at the rear by a one-story rectangular sacristy and the presbytery which is connected to it. The church of Sainte-Cécile is located at the head of an island comprising residential buildings. It is located in a former working-class neighborhood of Trois-Rivières.
Historical information
The Wabasso Cotton textile factory, founded in 1907, is one of the most important companies in Trois-Rivières in the 20th century. For several decades, it employed hundreds of workers. Around 1910 all the available lots south of rue des Commissaires were built. The increase in population in this part of the district, called “Hertel sector”, led to the creation of a new parish. The parish of Sainte-Cécile was therefore canonically established on May 3, 1912. Construction work on the church and the presbytery began the following year under the direction of the entrepreneur Anselme Dubé, and the place of worship was inaugurated in July 1914.
The plans for the building were designed by Louis-Alphonse Venne (1875-1934) and Joseph Dalbé Viau (1881-1938). The latter were among the most sought-after architects in the French-speaking institutional environment in Montreal between 1912 and 1934.
The interior decoration of the church, in Beaux-Arts style, was completed in 1928 by François-Xavier Renaud, a Montreal painter. Subsequently, the building underwent several additions, transformations and renovations. For example, in 1948, the wooden side porticos were replaced by new stone ones and an annex to the sacristy was built according to the plans of the architects Gascon and Parant. An access ramp for people with reduced mobility was also added around 2010.
The church of Sainte-Cécile was closed to worship in 2008 and sold the following year. It is transformed into a sports arena and offices."