A modern cave: The design of Le Drug

Date: 1965
Credit: John Max (photographer), copyright 1965
Courtesy of François Dallegret
François Dallegret carried out his first Montreal project in 1964, the year of his arrival. This is Le Drug, on de la Montagne (then named Mountain Street) in downtown Montreal. It was much more than a pharmacy with a unique design and concept. It also housed an upscale boutique, a a café-restaurant-discotheque, and a Gallery-Lab. In addition to designing the distinctive interior, Dallegret also managed the Gallery-Lab himself. Le Drug was futuristic with curved, smooth walls and ceilings of fiberglass painted entirely white, like a modern cave!
Le Drug, like The New Penelope, was experimental and avant-garde for its time. Unfortunately, its decor reportedly made it difficult to maintain.