Montreal Is Marketing a 50-Year-Old Olympic Basin Like It's New

Photo credit: Myriam Baril-Tessier

An Olympic Basin most Montrealers have never set foot in, and a stadium a lot of them walk past without a second thought, are getting a second life this summer.

Fifty years after Montreal hosted the 1976 Games, the city isn't just marking the anniversary with plaques and press releases. Parc Jean-Drapeau, Olympic Park, and the City of Montreal have spent the past few weeks turning legacy infrastructure into something people actually show up for, and there's more still to come: an open house at a rowing basin normally reserved for sports clubs, period-inspired programming on the Olympic Park Esplanade, athletes from the actual 1976 Games returning to the venues, and a couple of free outdoor concerts. The brands attaching themselves to it are doing it the same way the smartest sports sponsors do: showing up inside the experience, not slapping a logo on the outside of it.

Photo credit: Myriam Baril-Tessier

A Rowing Basin Opened Its Doors

The Olympic Basin at Parc Jean-Drapeau was built for the 1976 Games and has spent most of the 50 years since serving sports clubs, not the public. That changed on July 4, when the venue opened for a full day: training equipment the public doesn't normally get near, watercraft out on the water, and meet-and-greets with Olympic athletes including Émilie Fournel, Guylaine Bernier and Lyne Tremblay. It was presented with support from the Government of Quebec, hosted by Meeker Guerrier, and built around the idea that the best way to mark an anniversary is to let people into the thing itself.

Olympic Park ran the same playbook a few kilometres away. The Esplanade hosted “First Fridays" on July 3 and 4, period-inspired staging built around 1976 archives, with international food echoing the 92 nations that competed. That's just the opening stretch. The Esplanade hosts a full concert on August 1, which lands exactly 50 years to the day after the 1976 closing ceremony, followed by an Orchestre symphonique de Montréal show on August 12 featuring the OSM Choir, actress Sophie Cadieux and a special appearance from Diane Dufresne.

Photo credit: Myriam Baril-Tessier

Two Brands Showed Up Differently

Intact Insurance and Qualité Motel were both attached to the Basin open house, and neither did it as a sponsor watching from the sidelines.

Qualité Motel played a free two-hour set at the event, open to everyone on site. That's not a logo placement, it's the band being part of the day's actual programming, the same way a good sports sponsorship gets a brand into the pregame ritual instead of just the arena signage.

Intact's presence worked the same way. The insurer didn't run ads adjacent to the anniversary, it presented the day's meet-and-greet opportunities with Olympic athletes, giving people a reason to actually do something rather than watch something. It's the difference between buying attention and earning a place inside the memory people walk away with.

Photo credit: Myriam Baril-Tessier

The Athletes Are Coming Back

The last week of July brings the anniversary's biggest names back to the city that hosted them.

Nadia Comăneci, the five-time Olympic champion whose perfect 10 defined the 1976 Games, returns to Montreal July 31 through August 1 alongside her husband Bart Conner, a two-time Olympic champion who also competed at the '76 Games. Her itinerary reads like a tour of the city's Olympic memory: an honorary doctorate from Université de Montréal, a commemorative plaque unveiling at the Claude-Robillard Centre, a guided visit to the McCord Stewart Museum's Montreal 1976 exhibit, a meet-and-greet with fans named Nadia at Olympic Park, and a photo opportunity at the plaza that already bears her name, Place Nadia-Comăneci.

She's joined by two people who lived the Games from the other side of the podium. Tricia Smith, a four-time Olympian in rowing at the 1976 Games and now President of the Canadian Olympic Committee, and Thomas Bach, who won Olympic gold in fencing in 1976 and later served as IOC President from 2013 to 2025. Smith takes part in activities at the Olympic Basin tied to the Montréal Aviron 1976–2026 rowing celebration, and both join Comăneci for the museum visit and the run-up to the August 1 concert. It's a rare case where the people the anniversary is honouring are also the ones showing up to help market it.

The Takeaway

None of this needed a nine-figure budget or a new building. It needed a 50-year-old basin, a stadium with a legacy, and organizations willing to treat both as living assets instead of monuments, plus the athletes who made the memories in the first place willing to come back and stand in them again. That's a template any city or brand sitting on old infrastructure could borrow: the anniversary isn't the story, what you let people do during it is.

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