René Lépine


René G. Lépine, Sr. was a Canadian real estate developer, philanthropist and founder of Groupe Lépine, a privately owned real estate company headquartered in Montreal, Quebec, of which he was the Chairman and President.
He is considered to be one of the all-time largest and most influential real estate developers in Quebec. He had developed over time, more than 20,000 residential units, mainly houses and condominiums, as well as around 5,000 subdivided properties. Combined and adjusted to inflation, his projects are valued at more than $1 billion.
He was the owner and operator of numerous rental buildings and towers in Downtown Montreal. In 1969, he and partner Lorne Webster bought the Le Cartier building on Sherbrooke Street in Montreal out of bankruptcy from the Montreal Trust Company. He also built the Peel Plaza building right next to it in 1973.
Since the 1960s, he built more than 1,500 houses in Montreal's Hampstead, Westmount and Côte Saint-Luc areas, as well as over 10,000 condominium units across Canada and the United States.
Lépine developed many buildings and landmarks in Montreal, including the Olympic Village and Le Sanctuaire du Mont-Royal.
Since his early 70s, Lépine spent his time between work in Montreal and his other home in Palm Beach, Florida.
Lépine died at his home on April 18, 2012, after a lengthy battle with prostate cancer.

Early life

Lépine was born and raised in Verdun, a working-class neighborhood of Montreal, in a family of 10 children. At the age of 14, he had to drop out of high school to earn money for his family after his father became ill. He worked many jobs and later used money he had saved to build a split-level house in Côte Saint-Luc, which was sold immediately after its completion to a wealthy bystander who was passing by on the street. Lépine quickly doubled his money, and started building homes, and eventually incorporated Groupe Lépine in 1953.

Career

In 1974, he, Joseph Zappia, Gerald Robinson and Andrew Gaty, were directly appointed by the then mayor of Montreal, Jean Drapeau to build the Olympic Village for the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal.
In 1999, he bought the old YMCA building in Downtown Montreal and built two 28-floor towers originally called Les Tours Lépine. The project cost approximately $80 million. The towers were later renamed Le 1200 Ouest after they were purchased during development in 2005 by the Israel-based company El-Ad Group/Delek Group.
In 2001, he received the UDI Quebec Award for Excellence in Real Estate for the redevelopment of the Downtown Montreal YMCA project.
His ultra-luxurious projects, such as the Sir George Simpson and the Sir Robert Peel are exclusively represented by Sotheby's International Realty.
He was the Chairman of Real Estate for MD Financial and bought over $1 billion worth of properties for the MD Realty Fund.

Business in Russia and assassination threats

In 1991, Lépine was doing business in Moscow, attempting to expand his business operations to Russia after the fall of the Soviet Union. He was planning to build two projects valued then at $775 million, being one of the first Western companies to develop real estate in Moscow since the Cold War. He was asked by the Government of Canada to build the Canadian embassy in Moscow. He was also asked by the Canadian Government to give a personal tour of Montreal to Yury Luzhkov, the former Mayor of Moscow during his official visit. He also met Mikhail Gorbachev, the then-President of the Soviet Union, during this time in Montreal.
A few years later, all projects planned were dropped after he and one of his sons received anonymous assassination threats that were deemed credible. Lépine decided to leave the country immediately and instantly decided to scrap over $850 million worth of projects. He had not actually started any of the projects and didn't lose much money, although the period was a relatively unproductive 3 years for him and his business.

1999 controversy

In 1999, one of Lépine's companies purchased land from the Canada Lands Company, a federal crown corporation reporting to Public Works Minister Alfonso Gagliano, for $4 million, less than half its assessed value of $9 million. The terms of the acquisition also required that a large abandoned historical building encumbering the center of the site be renovated and preserved at Lépine's company's expense. Lépine claimed that the city had not agreed to make the roadwork and sewers which cost him $2 million in expenses, bringing the land cost to a fair price. Even though the sale was the result of a public tender for which Lépine's company offered the highest price, the sale still raised questions because Lépine had been a longtime supporter and donor to the Liberal Party of Canada.

Notable developments

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