Potholes in Boisbriand, QC

Population 28,308 · Quebec

This page shows pothole reports submitted in Boisbriand, Quebec. RoadRot is a free, independent platform — anyone can report a pothole, and reports get forwarded to the responsible municipality.

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Report a pothole in Boisbriand

Why Boisbriand gets potholes

Boisbriand sits in the Greater Montreal lowlands under a humid continental climate, which puts it squarely in one of Canada's most punishing freeze-thaw regimes. Quebec's ground can freeze to depths of 1.2 to 3 metres for more than four months of the year, and when spring arrives it tends to arrive unevenly, with temperatures swinging above and below zero within the same week. That repeated freezing and thawing forces water into pavement cracks, expands them, and eventually turns them into potholes. The spring thaw period is especially rough: Quebec's road network is recognized to become 30 to 70% more fragile during this window after a hard winter.

How to report potholes in Boisbriand

Boisbriand doesn't operate a 311 system. The official way to report a road problem is through the city's online e-request portal at boisbriand.edemandes.com, or by calling the city directly at 450 435-1954. If the pothole is on Autoroute 15 or Autoroute 640, those are provincial highways under the Ministère des Transports et de la Mobilité durable du Québec (MTMD), not the city, so it's worth checking which authority owns the road before you file. RoadRot works alongside those channels: you can drop a pin on the public map, let neighbours confirm the report, and use the built-in email-your-rep tool to send a complaint directly to your municipal or provincial representative yourself.
Guides

Hit a pothole in Boisbriand and damaged your vehicle? Read the Quebec pothole damage claim guide — deadlines, where to file, and what evidence you need. New to RoadRot? See how to report a pothole.

Common questions

Who is responsible for fixing potholes in Boisbriand?

It depends on the road. The city's Public Works service (Travaux publics) handles Boisbriand's municipal streets, sidewalks, and bike paths. Provincial highways like Autoroute 15 and Autoroute 640 are the responsibility of the Ministère des Transports et de la Mobilité durable du Québec (MTMD). Check whether the road you're reporting is municipal or provincial before submitting a complaint, because each authority has its own system.

Does Boisbriand have a 311 service for pothole reports?

No, Boisbriand doesn't appear to operate a 311 system. Your best bet is the city's official e-request portal at boisbriand.edemandes.com, or a phone call to city hall at 450 435-1954. There's also a third-party SeeClickFix page for Boisbriand, but that's not an official city channel.

What's the worst time of year for potholes in Boisbriand?

Spring is typically the worst, and it starts earlier than most people expect. March brings significant temperature swings that can go from above zero to well below freezing within a day or two, and that back-and-forth is exactly what breaks up pavement. Quebec's road network is officially considered 30 to 70% more fragile during the spring thaw period, and Boisbriand's heavy truck traffic through its industrial zones makes the damage accumulate faster.

How do I make a damage claim against Boisbriand for a pothole?

You need to move fast. Any damage claim against the City of Boisbriand must be submitted to the city clerk (greffière) within 15 days of the incident, or it will be rejected outright. Contact city hall at 450 435-1954 or visit 940, boul. de la Grande-Allée to get the process started. Documenting the pothole with photos and a pin on a public map like RoadRot can help you establish a record.

Does RoadRot send my pothole report to the city automatically?

No, RoadRot doesn't forward reports to municipalities or contact 311 on your behalf. What it does is put your report on a public map where other residents can confirm it, which creates visible community pressure. From there, you can use the built-in email-your-rep tool to send a complaint directly to your municipal or provincial representative yourself.