The Expo Express ran from April 1967 to October 1973. After Expo, when service continued during the early days of
Man and his World, the Express only ran for two months during the summer each year. In 1968, the
New York City Transit Authority looked into the feasibility of modifying the cars for use on the
Staten Island Railway, but this plan never came to fruition. That same year, the Societe des Transports Rapides Incorporated made a bid to modify the cars for a monorail system running from Laval to Montreal, but that plan also fell through. In the end, the Montreal Transit Commission (now the STM) purchased the cars for $1.8 million and took over operation of the train–simply renamed
The Express, and kept its rolling stock, route and stations unmodified throughout 1968. In 1969, service at Cite du Harve was ceased, and the line south-west of St. Helen's Island was demolished along with its two stations. That same year St.Helen's Island became the new starting point for the train and the
Notre-Dame East station opened. In 1972, both stations on Notre-Dame Island closed (Notre Dame Island was inaccessible to the public that year onward), making it a non-stop ride to La Ronde. In 1973, the Express saw its final year of operations. At season's end, the trains were moved and put in storage on Pont des Iles bridge, between Saint Helen's and Notre Dame Islands. In 1974, the line north of Notre-Dame Island was demolished for the construction of the
Olympic basin, leaving the trains stranded on the bridge with the line now cut in both directions. In 1979, the trains were sold to a Montreal business man for $380,000 and that summer the trains were moved again, to the
Port of Montreal via a temporary track, and stored at the nearby CN Point St-Charles Shops. In 1984, unable to resale the trains, and concerns about returns on the investment, they were sold to Pemik Enterprises and the cars were moved from Point St-Charles to an outdoor field storage facility in
Les Cèdres. In 1988, after four years of failed plans, including a reported sale to the
New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority, Pemik proposed the Government of Quebec renovate the cars and use them for a new commuter train route between
St Hilaire and Montreal, with
Bombardier interested in renovating the cars, but this too failed. In 1995, after several unrealized schemes and the deteriorated state of the rolling stock, the cars were finally scrapped. Virtually nothing remains of the Expo Express today. The only evidence is at La Ronde, where a train bridge deteriorates in the river and remnants of the La Ronde station have been converted into the main park entrance. The area where Place d'Accueil stood is now a parking lot, and part of the track route is a paved
bicycle path. ==References==