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  #6081  
Old Posted Jun 20, 2011, 5:00 PM
michael_d40 michael_d40 is offline
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Originally Posted by Sabien View Post
BMO, St-Huberts, Genivar - what are the other 2 logos on the sign ? (I don't want to have to wait until the next time I drive by)

The other two are just Cobalt and Acadian Construction logos. The drawing shows 4 or 5 stores. But only 2 stores (BMO and St Huberts) are listed tenants that are actually announced now.
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  #6082  
Old Posted Jun 20, 2011, 5:04 PM
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Development: It will be the Halifax-based chain's third location
B7
HILARY PAIGE SMITH
TELEGRAPH-JOURNAL

SAINT JOHN - If you have a sweet tooth, get ready. There is a new candy

Jeremy Smith, owner of the Freak Lunchbox candy chain, says he chose to open a location on King Street because of the nice buildings and atmosphere.

Freak Lunchbox, an independent chain of stores based out of Halifax, has selected the Port City as its third location and the first store to open outside of Nova Scotia.

Jeremy Smith, owner of the chain, said he and his team have been on the lookout for where to grow next. Before picking Saint John, they looked at cities like Moncton and Charlottetown.

"Saint John came out on top of the list, mainly the downtown had some really nice buildings and really nice atmosphere. And we did get a lot of requests from people who wanted to purchase a franchise in that area," he said.

Smith said cruise ship traffic was another factor in the decision to set up in Saint John. "We're not a tourist business, but it's going to help to have that bump-up in the summer."

Freak Lunchbox is expected to open early next week. It is in the former TravelMax location at 6 King St.

"It's very close to the water. It's a very nice building. It's been thoroughly renovated above us and yeah, I'm really excited about the location," Smith said. Smith has had artists working on hand-painted signs for the store for three months.

The space is crammed full of colourful candy, bright displays and novelty items. Smith said their most popular section is usually the wall of bulk candy.

"It's very colourful, very interactive and there's a lot to draw your attention inside the store," he said
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  #6083  
Old Posted Jun 20, 2011, 5:37 PM
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There is a very similar store located on Main St. in Moncton, it's called the Candy Chameleon.
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  #6084  
Old Posted Jun 20, 2011, 5:44 PM
michael_d40 michael_d40 is offline
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Originally Posted by MonctonRad View Post


There is a very similar store located on Main St. in Moncton, it's called the Candy Chameleon.
I've been to Candy Chameleon in Moncton, and Freak Lunchbox in Halifax.

Similar as in they sell candy - Yes. However, Freak in Halifax is definitely far superior.
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  #6085  
Old Posted Jun 20, 2011, 6:31 PM
nwalbert nwalbert is offline
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Originally Posted by michael_d40 View Post
Development: It will be the Halifax-based chain's third location
B7
HILARY PAIGE SMITH
TELEGRAPH-JOURNAL

SAINT JOHN - If you have a sweet tooth, get ready. There is a new candy

Jeremy Smith, owner of the Freak Lunchbox candy chain, says he chose to open a location on King Street because of the nice buildings and atmosphere.

Freak Lunchbox, an independent chain of stores based out of Halifax, has selected the Port City as its third location and the first store to open outside of Nova Scotia.

Jeremy Smith, owner of the chain, said he and his team have been on the lookout for where to grow next. Before picking Saint John, they looked at cities like Moncton and Charlottetown.

"Saint John came out on top of the list, mainly the downtown had some really nice buildings and really nice atmosphere. And we did get a lot of requests from people who wanted to purchase a franchise in that area," he said.

Smith said cruise ship traffic was another factor in the decision to set up in Saint John. "We're not a tourist business, but it's going to help to have that bump-up in the summer."

Freak Lunchbox is expected to open early next week. It is in the former TravelMax location at 6 King St.

"It's very close to the water. It's a very nice building. It's been thoroughly renovated above us and yeah, I'm really excited about the location," Smith said. Smith has had artists working on hand-painted signs for the store for three months.

The space is crammed full of colourful candy, bright displays and novelty items. Smith said their most popular section is usually the wall of bulk candy.

"It's very colourful, very interactive and there's a lot to draw your attention inside the store," he said
Very cool! It is very encouraging to see that while Saint John has been adding significant big box stores recently we have also been adding local boutique style retail like this and the Urban Shoe Myth to the uptown.

Another positive sign for the retail sector.
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  #6086  
Old Posted Jun 20, 2011, 7:57 PM
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Interesting that there will be a St. Hubert in both Saint John & Rothesay. I'm excited to see how that corner lot at McAllister turns out.
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  #6087  
Old Posted Jun 21, 2011, 11:36 AM
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I find it odd that they'd put one in East SJ and Rothesay, it's almost a redundant market

The alpolic cladding has started to go up on the Harbourfront Building, and given what I've seen so far, I think it could turn out to look pretty good for a re-fit.

(photo by me)
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  #6088  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2011, 11:50 AM
nwalbert nwalbert is offline
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Originally Posted by GregHickman View Post
Who in SJ has the kind of money to splash 200K on a piece of land?

Higher density would be a bad idea for water/riverfront property. You need big homes, with access to the water, and etc. etc.

All i'm saying is that the St. John river system is one of the largest inland water systems on the eastern seaboard of North America, and people from all over travel here to sail it on a yearly basis. The river is underdeveloped not just in Saint John but for the majority in comparison to what it could be.

When you speak about sailing spots in North America you usually speak of Southwest & Northeast Harbours, Chester, Lunenburg, etc. and Saint John, in comparison, falls by the wayside quite easily, despite our proud maritime and sailing history.
Plenty of folks in SJ can afford $200K pieces of land. There are plenty of well paying jobs in Saint John.

I still am not totally sure what it is you are referring to, but we will have to agree to disagree on this one. I am not into sailing, so cant speak to that. My assumption was that we were talking about developments and housing, sounds like you were talking about recreation maybe.
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  #6089  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2011, 6:19 PM
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Higher density would be a bad idea for water/riverfront property.
I still don't understand this
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  #6090  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2011, 8:01 PM
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Anything new going on at East Point. I read on cbc that there was blasting going on and cars were damaged while blasting.
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  #6091  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2011, 9:51 PM
Wolkenkratzerliebhab Wolkenkratzerliebhab is offline
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Anything new going on at East Point. I read on cbc that there was blasting going on and cars were damaged while blasting.
I'm not sure what they might have in mind, but I live not too far away from East Point and I've noticed that they have several drilling machines on top of the big rock drilling. I've seen sketch's from way back that clearly shows several large building's, plus two two smaller ones. Considering the size of two of the renderings, they could very well be some type of big-box retailer. I would like to see a Best Buy, but apparently I've heard that they're not coming.
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  #6092  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2011, 10:22 PM
RaginRonic RaginRonic is offline
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Originally Posted by Wolkenkratzerliebhab View Post
I'm not sure what they might have in mind, but I live not too far away from East Point and I've noticed that they have several drilling machines on top of the big rock drilling. I've seen sketch's from way back that clearly shows several large building's, plus two two smaller ones. Considering the size of two of the renderings, they could very well be some type of big-box retailer. I would like to see a Best Buy, but apparently I've heard that they're not coming.
Walmart Supercentre, maybe?

Oh, does anyone have any updated pics of that shopping centre? And if so, can you please post them? I've not seen that shopping centre on the ground in 2 years.
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  #6093  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2011, 11:32 PM
Wolkenkratzerliebhab Wolkenkratzerliebhab is offline
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Originally Posted by RaginRonic View Post
Walmart Supercentre, maybe?

Oh, does anyone have any updated pics of that shopping centre? And if so, can you please post them? I've not seen that shopping centre on the ground in 2 years.
Sorry, my digital camera is kapute, but it's not the Walmart SuperCentre, they don't look quite that large. They look to be about half the size of Costco. The WalMart Super Center is supposed to be going farther up the street near the new auto parts center.
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  #6094  
Old Posted Jun 23, 2011, 12:30 AM
nwalbert nwalbert is offline
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Originally Posted by Wolkenkratzerliebhab View Post
Sorry, my digital camera is kapute, but it's not the Walmart SuperCentre, they don't look quite that large. They look to be about half the size of Costco. The WalMart Super Center is supposed to be going farther up the street near the new auto parts center.
Yes, as I understand it, the WalMart SuperCentre is going to be built near the CarQuest Building at the new Intersection. Apparently that's why such a large set of lights went in there.

Could be a Lowes being added to East Point, it would certainly make sense.
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  #6095  
Old Posted Jun 23, 2011, 1:45 AM
michael_d40 michael_d40 is offline
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According to the East Point website it's Tweed and Hickory.


It was jumbled in with this blurb on their website.

East Point Shopping currently has over 80 acres of land under active building development. Anchored by the Costco Wholesale warehouse, the development is home to fashion retail stores, hospitality and business services including Home Depot, Fairweather, Sally Beauty, Indigo Books & Music, International Clothiers, Le Château, Montana’s, Moores, Mr. Big & Tall, Nakai Spa, Randy, Roots 73, Starbucks, TD Canada Trust, Tip Top Tailors, Urban Planet, Wok Box and a Hampton Inn and Suites Hotel by Hilton. Tweed & Hickory are opening a new store in the Fall of 2011. The total building area developed to date is nearly 450,000 square feet, with the eventual site build out expected to reach over 700,000 square feet of retail, hospitality and service establishments.

Heres a link to their page showing the row of stores that will be there.

http://www.eastpointshopping.ca/shops_and_services.php

Looks like Tweed and Hickory will just be one of many new stores going there.
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  #6096  
Old Posted Jun 23, 2011, 1:22 PM
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SAINT JOHN - As the Regional Hospital welcomes the first liver specialist in the province, four new family doctors are busy setting up their practices and Dr. David Marr has his sights set on two more.

Dr. Lise McKnight is the first liver specialist to practise in New Brunswick, arriving in April at the Saint John Regional, part of a recruiting initiative by Horizon Health's Network's Saint John zone .

"We're aggressively recruiting. We've got a full-court press on there," said Marr, the medical director of Horizon Health Network's Saint John zone.

Right now, there are 106 family physicians practising in Saint John and area; four retired earlier this year.

The arrival of Dr. Lisa McKnight in April means most people with liver disease will no longer have to travel to Halifax to receive their basic care and ongoing management, Marr said.

"It would only be a small group of people that would have to leave the province for transplant."

McKnight was born and raised in Fredericton, graduated from UNB and then went on to Dalhousie Medical School, graduating as a physician in 2004.

She practised internal medicine in Edmonton for three years, followed by a stint in London, Ont., and a year concentrating on the intricacies of the liver, qualifying her as a hepatologist or liver specialist.

"The liver is a pretty interesting organ," she said.

"The thing I like about gastroenterology is that some things are simple and other things are complicated. Patients with liver disease are sometimes a little bit more complicated and I enjoy that."

McKnight said she and her husband, chemist Hubert Fortier, are finding a big difference in quality of life since their move to Millidgeville.

"I had some interest in coming back here because it's my home province," she said.

"It's great. In southwestern Ontario, my husband had to commute an hour every day. It was just a whole different lifestyle for us."

The new Dalhousie Medicine New Brunswick program also enticed the couple, she said.

"There is a lot of opportunity here for teaching and for research, Saint John - being somewhat of a referral centre for certain things for the whole province - is kind of a dynamic hospital in that sense."

McKnight says her hope is to be able to provide local service for patients in conjunction with the hepatologists in Halifax.

"Through a collaborative kind of effort, patients can be followed more locally," she said.

Meanwhile, McKnight and Fortier are still settling in and getting to know the city.

"I like to run and Millidgeville is great for that with Rockwood Park close by and lots of nice areas around Kennebecasis Drive."

So far this spring and summer, they've been spending a lot of time with family and working on the backyard of their home.

McKnight, who's in her early 30s, is the daughter of Darrell and Louise McKnight of Fredericton and has a sister, Audra McKnight, an accountant and also lives in Fredericton.

Marr says McKnight and a second new gastroenterologist, Dr. Chad Williams, fill what he describes as a "significant" need. Their arrival brings the complement of gastroenterologists to four.

"The reason for the success for recruiting these people is partly related to the medical school presence here and a lot of the tertiary-care facilities here," Marr said.

The challenge still exists with recruiting family doctors, but the Regional's emergency department is in "great shape," he said.

The Regional is also recruiting for a vascular surgeon, urologist and rheumatologist.



Nice to see the Medical community growing. Doctors make so little money in NB it is tough to draw them.
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  #6097  
Old Posted Jun 27, 2011, 12:08 PM
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Visionary eyes future on city's upper floors

SAINT JOHN - The rooftop of Keith Brideau's King Street property overlooks the signature streetscapes of the historic commercial district, rich with colour and stunning architectural design. A cascade of red brick buildings tumble down to the waterfront, a view with considerable market value.

Keith Brideau, co-founder of Historica Developments, stands on the rooftop of the firm's King Street apartments, which are still under construction. With space at a premium, he plans to build a rooftop patio there for building tenants.

A floor below Brideau's rooftop are three spacious lofts with vaulted, 16-foot ceilings. They're among nine apartments his development company owns on three floors above the Urban Shoe Myth and Silver Daisy Designs.

Even for people who live uptown, walking around these grand apartments can be disarming, because they're reminiscent of high-end living in Boston or New York. That was intentional.

Brideau, a local developer behind several residential and commercial projects in the area, is trying to help Saint Johners rediscover the uptown, a district he sees transforming into an energized urban landscape in the next 10 or 20 years.

For this reason, he is somewhat of a visionary. He sees growth on the horizon and he has put himself in the driver's seat.

"A lot of people talk about developing these older buildings and what Saint John could be like, but you don't always see action," says Brideau, co-founder and vice-president of Historica Developments, a real estate firm funded by private investors. Their portfolio includes 35,000 square feet of apartments, offices and restaurants on Canterbury, Princess and Prince William.

"Saint John has already been coming around the corner pretty significantly here in the last few years. And for the next 10 to 20 years I see more urban development and urban change happening uptown. I wanted to get on board as quickly as possible."

Building vacancies in the district are down significantly from what they were even five years ago, but there still remains considerable room for expansion, says Peter Asimakos, general manager of Uptown Saint John Inc., the group that oversees the business improvement area.

CenterBeam Place, the brainchild of another real estate visionary, John Irving, swallowed up at least 20 per cent of all vacancies uptown when the 110,000 square foot building that fronts onto King Street opened a few years ago, Asimakos said.

Several remaining vacancies, though, are hard to ignore. The former Bargain Shop on the corner of King and Charlotte has been barren for months. The former hardware store on King, next to the Tim Hortons, is empty and has been for decades. Others speckle the uptown landscape.

Historica Developments isn't having the same problem. The company hasn't even finished building all nine King Street apartments - completion isn't expected until early September - but they've all been snatched up. No vacancies.

Demolition crews are getting the next project ready at the old CompuCollege buildings on Prince William, which also touch Water Street. The ground floor of the Prince William side is already leased to retailers who are expected to open by September.

Historica's residential customers are generally young professionals in their 20s and 30s, but the firm is also seeing people in their 50s and even 60s who are looking to downsize and live comfortably.

Similar clientele have signed on the dotted line to live in John Rocca's big condominium project on Water Street, with just 12 vacancies in an 84-unit building that will start welcoming tenants in September.

Rocca, a local developer, says more people are starting to return to the uptown core after decades of outmigration to suburbia. The speed of the momentum, he says, will depend on a range of factors, such as the city's investment in roads and streetscapes and private-sector investment in the district's upper floors.

"There has been and will continue to be a trend (of people moving uptown)," he says. "To what extent that trend will continue will depend I think to a large extent as to what the city will do to improve the uptown area."

A draft municipal plan, a document designed to guide growth in the city for the next 25 to 30 years, would encourage the development of attractive streetscapes in the uptown area with more trees and grass, alluring façades and preserved heritage buildings.

In the years ahead, Brideau sees more boutiques and high-end retailers opening up. With the development of the Coast Guard site, where the Hardman Group plans to build condominiums, offices, retail space and a hotel, the uptown would start to realize a denser population base that would deepen the demand for more businesses.

As things get moving, Brideau expects stores will stay open longer. They won't close at 6 p.m., he says, but will continue welcoming customers until 8 or 9. And restaurants will start to thrive a little more.

"Down the road, as you get more and more people developing these buildings, and getting more people living uptown, all of a sudden Sunday is going to be busy. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday in the evening will be busy. It won't be deserted after business hours."



This is great stuff. What is great is that even though Brideau is the face of these projects all of the funding is coming out of province. It is great to see outside money being invested in the Uptown.
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  #6098  
Old Posted Jun 27, 2011, 12:11 PM
nwalbert nwalbert is offline
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I was uptown this weekend checking out a few of the local art galleries and noticed that there was A LINE to get into the Freak Lunchbox candy store all day Saturday! The shopfront is very nice. King Street is becoming a very nice place to shop.

Although it is significant to be recognized by retailers like Target, I believe shops like this add as much to the overall Saint John retail sector. The big box stores eventually end up in all municipalities but we are one of the fortunate few to have a fantastic downtown core to offer these boutiques.
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  #6099  
Old Posted Jun 27, 2011, 7:54 PM
michael_d40 michael_d40 is offline
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I was uptown this weekend checking out a few of the local art galleries and noticed that there was A LINE to get into the Freak Lunchbox candy store all day Saturday!
Make that Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. I've been trying to get there for several days now but refuse to wait outside. I will give it another shot next week LOL.
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  #6100  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2011, 12:52 PM
nwalbert nwalbert is offline
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Traveled Main Street North this morning into the downtown core and noticed that the Provincial Courts building is really taking shape and going to really contribute to the skyline.

Anyone heard any news on the Coast Guard site project lately?
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