Loss of government funding, secularism putting many Quebec churches ‘on the brink’
MONTREAL — In 2023, the Ste-Marie-de-l’Isle Maligne church in Alma, Que., completed its transformation into the St-Crème — a combination hotel, ice cream shop and event space. It’s one of dozens of churches that have been restored in recent years, with some finding new vocations as climbing gyms, housing or distilleries, while others continue to offer religious services and community spaces.
However, experts say the Quebec government’s decision last year to suspend programs that provided financial aid for church renovations and transformations is putting future projects in jeopardy, just as soaring renovation costs are pushing more churches to close.
Cameron Piper, an adviser with Conseil du patrimoine religieux du Québec — the heritage group that administered the funds — says church closures have been an ongoing story ever since his group began tracking them in 2003. And he expects the trend to accelerate as attendance continues to decline and repair costs skyrocket.
“I think that our general feeling … is that we’re kind of on the edge of a precipice, where a lot of this is going to start accelerating pretty rapidly in the next few years,” Piper said. “Just because we’ve noticed that, while we do have already a lot of churches closing and a lot of churches changing vocation, what we have a lot more of are churches that are kind of just on the brink.”


