The popular restaurant-bar that became a symbol of the deadly 2013 train derailment in the Quebec town of Lac-Mégantic is up for sale.
Le Musi-Café owner Yannick Gagné has set the asking price at $2.5 million.
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Nearly two-thirds of the 47 victims who died after the train derailed and exploded were inside the establishment at the time.
The runaway oil-tanker train was operated by the now defunct Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Railway (MMA).
The two-storey establishment with two outdoor terraces reopened in December 2014 — some 17 months after the tragedy.
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Gagné said at the time the new restaurant-bar would cost $1.5 million when all the bills were finally paid.
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When he reopened, he had a staff of about 20, which was five more employees than before.
Only three of his original employees returned to work in his new business.
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Gagné lost three workers in the blast and about a dozen decided to not come back.