During the 1990s, the city set up a sorting center for recycling and a power plant to convert the biogas extracted from the landfill site into electricity.
A cycling and pedestrian path, transformed into a cross-country ski trail in winter, is laid out all around the park.
For several years now, the Cité des Arts du cirque (TOHU), a non-profit organization, has been installed on the site.
Its mission is to make Montreal an international capital of the circus arts, to contribute to the environmental rehabilitation of the landfill site, and to support the community development of the Saint-Michel district.
Spheres intended to protect the biogas collection wells are scattered throughout the eastern sector of the park.
Their spherical shape is intended to prevent noticing any ground movement, due to the nature of its content (of the waste).
One part is a cast aluminum rectangular volume, from the top of which emerges a tree as a sign of renewal.
The other part includes thirty partially buried stones along the nearby path, words and reproductions of residents appearing on them.