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Originally Posted by ILoveHalifax
Note: the shopping center at the Edmonton Airport is apparently an outlet center, which are usually away from the more built up areas. Halifax does not have an outlet center so I can see the attraction. BTW, the airport in Pittsburgh has quite a large shopping facility included.
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Yes - that is true. But that doesn't mean that these outlet malls are any less consistent with a big box retail format. I've seen the ones in Chicago and Las Vegas and they have a very similar format - sea of parking, with the outlet stores surrounding it. The one in Vegas I went to was a little bit different, but the same feel (parking on both sides and the stores clustered in the centre with pedestrian pathways because of the warm climate - it allowed you to walk).
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No one from Dartmouth or Halifax is going to make a special trip to shop at the airport if the same or similar stores are closer. They are making the case that the nearly 10 million people coming and going from the airport would support a lot of the retail amenities. I think the lack of residential itself would prevent any significant retail from wanting to setup shop anyways.
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I agree with q12's comment in part; but not completely. Let's think about this logically (common sense hats on now). Most people go to the airport to either fly in/out or pick up people. Now if you think about picking up a relative, other than perhaps picking up a tim's - what would you purchase there? I can't see myself (if I was picking up relatives or friends) saying 'oh hey, before we head back to the City - let's go to X store because they have a sale and it's right down the road'. So I do agree, likely the commercial component might not fly so well, regardless of a lack of residential.
So then what sort of commercial would work there? If they were talking about doing something along the lines of Gasoline Alley (in Red Deer) - being mainly service stations and hotels, then that's different. But that too also begs the question - do you want to create an area of hotels for the travelling public or try to draw them into the city? One of the critical issues with Gasoline alley was that it fell in the County of Red Deer, whereas the City of Red Deer was a little further east. They didn't like that development and appealed it (and failed) because they wanted people to come into the City to stay. For a long time it was mainly the 'low cost' hotel chains - but lately there have been more of the 3 star type hotels (like Holiday Inn Express) showing up - which could (arguably) take away from people going into the City to spend money.
So perhaps we are jumping the gun and assuming commercial to mean big box retail, I'll grant that. But until we know for certain it really could be anything (including big box retail)...