In 1903, blacksmith Wilfrid Cadieux acquired the three-story building where he established his workshop and residence. A family business, the forge housed three generations of Cadieux, who worked as blacksmiths, welders, and machinists. They manufactured and repaired equipment, parts, and tools for the construction industry.
Since its closure in the 1980s, the Cadieux Forge has remained mostly unoccupied, except for occasional events or film shoots that make use of the living quarters. The building has received only basic maintenance and monitoring. The blacksmith’s workshop, housed in an attached former house dating from the 1870s, has already had to be demolished. Given the transformation of the former Faubourg des Récollets into a multimedia district, the dissolution of the Société du Havre, and a certain indifference from the City of Montreal toward this less grandiose heritage in its Bonaventure Expressway reconstruction project, the future of the forge and its equipment remains uncertain.
In July 2024, the building was damaged by a fire.