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  #2281  
Old Posted Aug 16, 2011, 10:59 PM
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Don't think this has been mentioned yet.....

RioCan has announced a partnership with Tanger Outlets to bring 10 to 15 outlet malls across Canada. It’s also not clear if the typical mix of American outlet mall tenants such as Burlington Coat Factory or Off Saks Fifth Avenue will appear north of the border.

http://www.thespec.com/news/business...where-you-shop
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  #2282  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2011, 2:30 PM
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My wife was in Kelowna BC on the weekend and noticed they have a Carl's Jr. there... apparently the first one to open in Canada.
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  #2283  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2011, 10:50 PM
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yup opened a few months ago - apparently there are some in the works for vancouver area right now by the same franchisee as kelowna
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  #2284  
Old Posted Sep 1, 2011, 11:02 PM
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Surprised this hasn't been posted ...

Blockbuster to pull plug in Canada
marina strauss AND iain marlow
From Thursday's Globe and Mail
Published Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2011 6:03PM EDT
Last updated Thursday, Sep. 01, 2011 9:31AM EDT

Quote:
After more than two decades, Blockbuster Canada is about to roll its final credits and fade to black by the end of the year.

Its receiver was unable to find a suitor for the rental retailer, which was facing burgeoning competition from online rivals and mail-order services and went into receivership in May.

Although 55 parties mulled buying the chain – 14 of them made offers and eight of them were for all or almost all of the assets – none of the proposals were acceptable to Blockbuster’s court-appointed receiver.

...

It’s similar to what happened in past years to other struggling U.S. chains, such as Linens ’n Things, which succumbed to cutthroat competition in their home market and, in the process, dragged down their stronger Canadian arms.

...

As a result, the remaining stores will be liquidated by Dec. 31, according to the receiver's recommendation, allowing it to benefit from the heavy holiday shopping season.
Read More: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repor...rticle2149222/
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  #2285  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2011, 11:29 AM
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Not surprising to hear though. With Netflix (etc), free online streaming, and cheap (illegal) bootleg DVD copies, Blockbuster has become an obsolete entertainment alternative. I can't think of any recent times where I or someone I know has gone to Blockbuster to rent something. I started to notice something was up months ago when all the Toronto stores were closing up.
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  #2286  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2011, 4:49 PM
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youtube movies has just started offering its service here in canada last week too, they have had it in the states for a while
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  #2287  
Old Posted Sep 5, 2011, 8:35 PM
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Canadian Tire plans big expansion with Forzani buy

More square footage and marketing in store

By Mario Toneguzzi, Calgary Herald

CALGARY — Canadian Tire is hoping to score big with its $771-million acquisition of Calgary's Forzani Group, namely to become the retail sporting goods authority in Canada.

Michael Medline, who recently replaced Bob Sartor as president of FGL, told the Herald Wednesday that the goal was simply to grow in size and reach.

“To do that you have to be looking at more square footage. We have six and a half million square feet today. We’ll need more square footage,” said Medline of the FGL stores under various banners across the country. “We have great stores today but I think they’re going to be bigger over the medium to long term."

The company is also focused on marketing, specifically in boosting its presence through social media, in addition to the traditional avenues of advertising.

"Those are the ways I think we can really appeal to Canadians and become more a part of their lives and their sporting lives," said Medline, who previously was president of the company’s automotive and dealer relations division.

“We want to be very strong in numerous categories ... And sports was one of them,” he said, making the acquisition a good strategic fit.

A local retail expert agrees.

“The Canadian Tire purchase of the Calgary-based Forzani Group is an excellent example of one gorilla-sized retailer teaming up with another and will be a powerful combination,” said Michael Kehoe, an Alberta-based retail specialist with Fairfield Commercial Real Estate Inc. in Calgary.

“In the ultracompetitive Canadian retail environment, every advantage counts and the real estate, operational and retailing efficiencies to be gained by both firms are obvious."

FGL was conceived in 1974 when John Forzani, along with brothers Joe and Tom and friend Basil Bark, opened Forzani’s Locker Room.

Today, FGL operates more than 500 stores from coast to coast under the corporate and franchise banners: Sport Chek, Sport Mart, Athletes World, National Sports, Sports Experts, Intersport, Atmosphere, Tech Shop, Nevada Bob’s Golf, Hockey Experts, The Fitness Source and S3.

Last fall Canadian Tire became serious about the opportunity to acquire FGL, which was formalized in February.

“We’re very picky about acquisitions. We don’t do a lot of them. We did the (Calgary-based) Mark’s Work Wearhouse deal in 2001 which closed in 2002 which I ran back then," said Medline. "Mark’s has been an incredible success strategically and financially. We’re really happy with that.”

...

Read more: http://www.calgaryherald.com/busines...#ixzz1X7255kmP
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  #2288  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2011, 2:14 AM
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  #2289  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2011, 3:56 PM
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Yeah, and it sure looks it.

I'm actually going to miss the early/mid 80s feel of the place, if they ever get around to renovating it. It's one of the very few things that has remained virtually unchanged since my childhood.
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  #2290  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2011, 4:11 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Coldrsx View Post
I've always liked the non-pretentious name of the mall.


I hate the names "Mall of America" (red white and blue flags waving in the breeze....maybe even a crying eagle or two), "American Dream Mall" (NJ: city on a hill B/S and all that).
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  #2291  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2011, 4:15 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SteelTown View Post
Two new Apple Stores coming to Ontario....

Conestoga
Waterloo, Ontario

Mapleview Centre
Burlington, Ontario
Please bring one to London.
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  #2292  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2011, 4:39 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by freeweed View Post
Yeah, and it sure looks it.

I'm actually going to miss the early/mid 80s feel of the place, if they ever get around to renovating it. It's one of the very few things that has remained virtually unchanged since my childhood.
The entire mall has MAJOR interior renos going on right now. But I agree.

Whale - gone
Brass - going
neon arcades - mostly gone
water jets in food court - basically gone
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  #2293  
Old Posted Sep 20, 2011, 4:04 AM
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i remember when it was just phase one an dthan phase two seemed so exciting and than phase three was like mind blowing
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  #2294  
Old Posted Sep 20, 2011, 4:35 AM
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Topshop opened at the flagship Bay locations in Calgary and Vancouver over the weekend. Hopefully the "Topman" mens line is soon to follow. I'd say that the Bay is on par with Macy's for women's clothing and shoes (at least at their downtown location), but the menswear is lagging behind.
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  #2295  
Old Posted Sep 20, 2011, 5:53 AM
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it's not too bad in Vancouver they have a good Ralph Lauren polo shop, the new Ralph Lauren Denim Supply line, a diesel shop, Penguin, Ben Sherman, Firetrap, Bench, Armani Jeans, Esprit, Kenneth Cole, etc. and they have a new white space with Hugo Boss and DKNY and some other higher end labels and the shoe dept is really good
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  #2296  
Old Posted Sep 20, 2011, 3:48 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by artvandelay View Post
Topshop opened at the flagship Bay locations in Calgary and Vancouver over the weekend. Hopefully the "Topman" mens line is soon to follow. I'd say that the Bay is on par with Macy's for women's clothing and shoes (at least at their downtown location), but the menswear is lagging behind.
Is this the real Topshop or the fake imitation from Montreal?
According to Topshop's website they are not in Canada yet.
I thought the Yorkdale Bay was their first location in end of September.
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  #2297  
Old Posted Sep 20, 2011, 4:39 PM
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It's the real Topshop from the UK.

I was in the downtown Vancouver store the other day and asked a couple workers in the Men's dept to find a confirmed date for Topman but all I could get was the same info we already know, it will be around 6 months till it opens.

On a side note, I'll have to assume the delicatessen will be closed permanently. I've always liked popping by there and getting a few items.
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  #2298  
Old Posted Sep 20, 2011, 6:18 PM
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they have to wait for the deli and wine store lease before they can proceed - apparently their leases expire in 2012

I am interested to see how the separate entrance from granville street will work

will they also shut down the godiva and pharmaplus stores?

Nespresso is looking for a new downtown location too (info from retail thread in vancouver)
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  #2299  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2011, 4:05 AM
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Sobeys signs deal to supply Canadian Target stores with food and groceries



By The Canadian Press

STELLARTON, N.S. - U.S. retailer Target ( NYSE :TGT) laid down more groundwork Friday for its entry into Canada in 2013 with additional store locations and a supply deal with Sobeys (TSX:EMP.A).

Under the Sobeys deal, the Canadian grocer will supply Target with frozen, dairy, and dry grocery products, including both national brands and Target's private label products starting early in 2013.

As part of the agreement, the two companies will use each other's distribution networks to help reduce transportation expenses.

Target also announced 84 additional Zellers locations that it is entitled to under a $1.825 billion deal with the Hudson's Bay Co. that gave it up to 220 sites.

The retailer said that it has acquired leasehold interests for 29 of those locations of which the vast majority will become Target stores, while the remaining leases have been sold to other retailers or back to the landlords.

The 84 locations are in addition to 105 locations identified in May.

...

http://ca.finance.yahoo.com/news/Sob...695053882.html
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Old Posted Sep 27, 2011, 4:16 AM
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Canada a magnetic north for U.S. retailers

NEW YORK/TORONTO (Reuters) - More U.S. retailers looking for fresh markets are turning to Canada, lured by their northern neighbor's resilient economy, strong currency and the familiarity with their brands.
Express Inc , a specialty clothing retailer with about 600 U.S. stores, last week opened a Canadian store in Toronto and said it would have six by the end of the year.
Nordstrom Inc and Kohl's Corp is looking into opening department stores in Canada, though neither has announced plans.
Target Corp , the No.2 U.S. discount retail chain behind Wal-Mart Stores Inc , expects to start opening Canadian stores in 2013.
Many chains see Canada as untapped territory, having nearly run out of promising locations in the United States to open new stores, said retail consultant Wendy Evans.
"Many of them have reached or are about to reach saturation in the U.S.," said Evans, whose firm, Evans and Co, advises companies on cross-border expansion.
U.S. chains are also looking for ways to counter a poor outlook for retail sales at home because of unemployment and a weak economy.
Home improvement chain Lowe's Cos Inc, which last month reported worse-than-expected quarterly sales, has sought a boost in Canada where it has 28 locations. It has about 1,700 stores in the United States.
"Canada is going well," Lowe's Chief Executive Robert Niblock told Reuters last month. "We have got many more stores in the pipeline."
The United States has nine times as many people as Canada's population of about 34 million.
But compared to a U.S. economy in danger of tipping into a double-dip recession, Canada is holding up much better, even though it is vulnerable to any U.S. slowdown. It also has regained all the jobs lost in the 2008-09 recession.
Its currency has traded at nearly the same value as the U.S. dollar for years, flattering the top lines of retailers that report their results in greenbacks.
Zale Corp , which owns Peoples Jewellers, Canada's largest jewelry chain, said the Canadian dollar added 1 percentage point to its sales gains in established stores last fiscal year.
Zale gets 17 percent of its sales north of the border, where its stores generated on average $1.4 million last year, compared with $1.2 million stateside at its Zales chain.
Upscale jewelry store chain Tiffany & Co this year opened a store in Calgary to tap that oil boomtown's growing wealth.
PRICE CONSIDERATIONS
To be sure, Canada's economic picture is far from perfect. Unemployment rose to 7.3 percent in August, and Canadian retail sales slipped 0.6 percent in July, a steeper-than-expected drop.
Cultural differences might be a constraint. Consumer spending accounts for 58 percent of Canada's gross domestic product, compared with 70 percent in the United States. Even so, that might suggest more room for growth if Canadians adopt the free-spending ways of their American neighbors.
For retailers, one of the attractions is that they often can charge higher prices than in the United States for the same products, much to the chagrin of consumers.
J. Crew Group Inc, which last month opened its first Canadian store, annoyed Canadian shoppers with its higher prices. The company told Toronto's Globe and Mail newspaper that prices would remain about 15 percent higher because of the costs of doing business in Canada.
Canadian shoppers prize value, making the country "fertile ground" for lower-price chains, said John O'Bryan, vice chairman of commercial real estate firm CBRE Canada.
That's one reason that the trend of expanding in Canada is most evident among discount retailers.
Target Corp plans to open up to 150 outlets. Wal-Mart has some 329 stores in Canada, with more to come.
TJX Cos Inc, earlier this year opened its first Canadian location for its Marshalls discount department store chain, and believes the market could sustain 100 stores.
GOOD NEIGHBORS
For chains considering their first venture outside the United States, Canada is an obvious destination. Retailers and analysts say Canadians are familiar with U.S. names, in part because thousands of them make cross-border shopping trips every year to take advantage of lower prices and greater selection in the states.
"Canadians have been shopping Express for years. We see a lot of Canadian activity around our border locations," said Express spokeswoman Barbara Coleman. Express may open up to 50 stores within five years.
But the push also stems from a concern among retailers that spot locations are becoming more scarce.
"There is limited real estate," said Daniel Baer, Canadian retail and consumer products leader at Ernst & Young. "They want to be in certain key malls where space is limited."
Working with Canadian commercial real estate developers is different than with U.S. developers, Nordstrom Chief Financial Officer Michael Koppel said at a conference earlier this month.
The upscale retailer, which is opening fewer full-service department stores at home, started looking north last year.

...

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/canada-magn...213041298.html
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