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  #321  
Old Posted Mar 11, 2011, 4:59 AM
toaster toaster is offline
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Originally Posted by m3i6 View Post
Once in a while I venture into the Carlingwood Mall and by pass a Tim Hortins that has a big line up waiting to get there overly roasted coffe. I then pass a Second Cup with no one in the store. I stop and buy my coffee at the Second Cup because it's not only better coffee, but it's truly still Canadian.

Beat that Dave from Wendys!
Roll up the rim makes many people choose Tim Hortons over the competition.
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  #322  
Old Posted Mar 12, 2011, 3:49 AM
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Roll up the rim makes many people choose Tim Hortons over the competition.

Last edited by m3i6; Mar 28, 2011 at 11:07 AM.
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  #323  
Old Posted Mar 27, 2011, 4:55 PM
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This might be old news, but I noticed the Tommy & Lefebvre location on Carling is closed. it's empty and for lease.

The new cycle shop in Aylmer is almost done.. saw bikes already on display inside.
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  #324  
Old Posted Apr 12, 2011, 8:02 PM
hhunter hhunter is offline
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The Preston Street Roasting Works

Bridgehead is open a flagship coffee shop and micro-roastery on Preston St, just south of Somerset.

Very exciting for nearby coffee lovers.

Their blog post: http://bridgehead.wordpress.com/2011...oasting-works/

And the all knowing West Side Action: http://westsideaction.wordpress.com/...-store-and-hq/
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  #325  
Old Posted May 4, 2011, 10:36 PM
c_speed3108 c_speed3108 is online now
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Farm Boy adds stores, eyes downtown Ottawa locations


By Michael Aubry, The Ottawa Citizen May 4, 2011 6:03 PM Be the first to post a comment



OTTAWA — Ottawa grocery retailer Farm Boy is expanding into Kanata South, and says further locations will follow.

The company announced Wednesday the start of construction at 801 Eagleson Rd. in Kanata. The store will be completed by summer 2012 and employ 140 people, it said.

“The Kanata South community has grown exponentially in the last several years, increasing demand for more places to shop locally,” the retailer said in a release.

Future plans include expansion beyond Cornwall and Ottawa, where it has operated since 1992, and also entering the fray of downtown Ottawa grocers, now dominated by Loblaws and Metro.

“There are 21 Loblaws in Ottawa, and we only have 12 locations right now,” Farm Boy chief executive Jeff York said in an interview. “I think the market can take at least 15 Farm Boys.”

Despite its growth, he said Farm Boy will continue to define itself as a fresh-food retailer, differentiating the company from Metro and Loblaws as well as mass-retailer Wal-Mart, which has been introducing grocery items to nearly all of its locations.

“We don’t sell a full line of products. We’re a fresh grocer, and at this time in Ottawa, there’s nobody else like us,” York said.

“You won’t walk into Farm Boy and see a row of canned goods. We don’t sell dog food, toilet paper or anything in a can.”

Farm Boy says it deals directly with local growers and suppliers to provide organic and unusual varieties of produce not found elsewhere.

“What we’re doing is responding to customer demand,” York added. “We see a large trend moving toward gluten-free and vegetarian food, and we want to make those types of food available nearby to all of our customers.”
© Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen

Read more: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/Farm+ad...#ixzz1LQT6H0Nj
The "we don't sell anything in a can" line isn't exactly accurate....
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  #326  
Old Posted May 5, 2011, 3:06 AM
m0nkyman m0nkyman is offline
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What are the chances of a FarmBoy going into Central II? Weren't they talking about a grocer going in?
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  #327  
Old Posted May 19, 2011, 1:23 AM
c_speed3108 c_speed3108 is online now
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I found analysis done by a Calgary retail consultant that used to work with suppliers of both Zellers and Target and has some familiarity with their operations.

Here is his projection of which Zeller's stores will become Target stores:

http://www.salesisnotsimple.com/uploads/targetfinal.pdf

Ottawa-Gatineau seems to do pretty well in this analysis. It loses only one store: Sparks Street.

Smith Falls would lose it's Zellers.
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  #328  
Old Posted May 19, 2011, 1:38 AM
c_speed3108 c_speed3108 is online now
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The orgional article discussing what Target is looking for in terms of leases and such:

Quote:
Target’s Canadian foray hits cost hurdle
MARINA STRAUSS AND STEVE LADURANTAYE
From Thursday's Globe and Mail
Published Wednesday, May. 18, 2011 7:39PM EDT
Last updated Wednesday, May. 18, 2011 7:53PM EDT


Coming to Canada is turning out to be more expensive for Target Corp. (TGT-N49.96-0.82-1.61%) than it had originally counted on.

The U.S. discount retailer is locked in complex negotiations with an array of landlords as it picks up as many as 220 existing Zellers stores and converts them to the Target banner by 2013. It’s all part of the chain’s $1.8-billion deal with Hudson’s Bay Co. for rights to the Zellers leases, the first half of which is to be paid at the end of next week, when Target is expected to unveil its first batch of locations in Canada.

Target is driving a hard bargain with landlords to get concessions, including long-term leases, money for renovations and plenty of parking spaces. But the retailer is also finding that it needs to spend more money than it had planned for the Canadian launch – enough to drag down its estimated profit per share by 16 to 20 cents (U.S.) this year, far higher than its previous estimated cost of 10 cents a share. That implies its Canadian expansion will cost up to $139-million this year.

Target has been spending heavily on its Canadian preparations, shelling out $11-million in its most recent quarter. It’s putting together an executive team for its division here, which “is deeply engaged in studying Canada broadly, along with each of the separate markets throughout the country,” said Gregg Steinhafel, chief executive officer of Target.

“We’re still in the process of evaluating sites, working with landlords for the current Zellers stores to determine which sites we will begin to release and, subsequently, how many of those sites will become Canadian Target stores.”

The stakes are high, not just for Target but also for landlords and other retailers that are anxiously waiting in the wings to snap up leases that Target rejects, amid a dearth of attractive store locations in Canada. The jostling comes as a growing number of foreign retailers are looking to expand in Canada, putting pressure on incumbents, including Canadian Tire Corp. and Wal-Mart Canada Corp., to strengthen their business before competition gets more intense.

“It’s a chess game and negotiations will go down to the wire,” said Alex Arifuzzaman, partner at retail specialist Interstratics Consultants. “The biggest concessions will come from properties which have the most to gain by getting a Target and these will typically be the mid-tier ones with high vacancy and low rent.”

Industry sources suggested that Target is close to signing lease deals with such major landlords as RioCan Real Estate Investment Trust and Cadillac Fairview. Executives of the shopping centre operators did not return calls. Other mall owners involved in the talks include Ivanhoe Cambridge, First Capital Realty Inc., Primaris Retail REIT, Oxford Properties Group and Calloway REIT.

The costs are higher than expected because Target is closing deals faster than anticipated, which means it will be sitting with stores that aren’t yielding revenue for a longer period, said Wayne Hood, retail analyst at BMO Nesbitt Burns. “If you take a lease earlier, you’re going to have more upfront costs.”

But Target also said it is boosting its own internal projections of how much money it can earn in Canada. “Both the expected profits once we open in Canada and the expected burdens prior to opening are larger than we thought was likely 90 days ago,” Douglas Scovanner, executive vice-president and chief financial officer at Target, said on Wednesday.

Target is pushing for flat-rate leases that could extend for up to 60 years, while landlords typically opt for 20-year deals with eight five-year extension options, industry sources said. The U.S. retailer also wants its stores shut down for six months while renovations are done, while developers worry that closed anchor stores tarnish the image of an entire mall.

And Target is looking for big reinvestments from the landlords, ranging from fixing roofs to repaving parking lots, sources said. It wants landlords to wipe out a provision in Zellers leases under which they collect a percentage of sales.

Target is expected to generate roughly $300 of sales per square foot within a few years of operating here, at least 50 per cent more than those at Zellers currently, according to estimates in a National Bank Financial report earlier this year.

Jeff Doucette, a principal in Calgary-based consultancy Sales Is Not Simple, has compiled a list of 193 of Zellers’ total 273 stores that he thinks are most likely to be picked by Target. He based his predictions on his familiarity with Zellers stores – he used to work for suppliers of the retailer – and on Target’s operations in three border states – Maine, North Dakota and Montana – which are sparsely populated and have one Target store for every 187,000 inhabitants.

He also put together a list of the 20 busiest Zellers, where Target could make a big splash in its launch. They range from Vancouver’s Oakridge Centre to Calgary’s Chinook Centre, Square One in Mississauga, and Shoppers World in Toronto.

Landlords that currently house a Zellers can gain considerably if Target moves into their buildings. The retailer is expected to act as a magnet, drawing shoppers to smaller malls they previously avoided.

“Replacing Zellers with Target is almost like going from worst to first in terms of an anchor,” said Michael Smith, an analyst at Macquarie Securities. “For most landlords, there will be a significant amount of higher rental rates from adjacent tenants. It will also be a lot easier to get a loan on a property anchored by a Target compared to a Zellers.”

Smaller landlords have the most to gain, and may have to give in to more of the retailer’s demands to secure a deal, said RBC Dominion Securities analyst Neil Downey. “The strongest landlords and those with premier assets will have the upper hand, even when bargaining with Target,” he wrote in a report.

Smaller landlords may be in a position of less influence, he said, and may be “required to contribute capital to the redevelopment, expansion, and conversion from the Zellers format.”

Target has forecast that it will roll out between 100 and 150 stores in Canada, and eventually more than 200. It expects them to ring up $6-billion-plus of annual sales and EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) of at least 10 per cent within six or seven years, Mr. Scovanner said last month.
Also on the same note....Ottawa is home to two of the twenty busiest zellers locations. Place D'Orleans and Bayshore...

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe.../?from=2027480
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  #329  
Old Posted May 19, 2011, 4:06 PM
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I think this report ignores Target's new smaller urban store strategy, still usually much larger than Sparks location, but this could be an interesting test case for them.
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  #330  
Old Posted May 20, 2011, 1:25 PM
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I think this report ignores Target's new smaller urban store strategy, still usually much larger than Sparks location, but this could be an interesting test case for them.
That struck me too when I read through the list. I remember the Target guy mentioning the urban format stores when he was here a little while back.

Probably the thing going against that location is that it is probably a harder lease to negotiate.
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  #331  
Old Posted May 20, 2011, 4:54 PM
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No doubt, but we can hope (urgh) that the NCC will have the sense to negotiate this to avoid yet another business leaving Sparks Street...

I've long thought that the best way to rejuvenate Sparks Street (other than getting the NCC to stop their crazy 2 year lease terms) would be to get some mainstream major retailers set up...a new brand like Target would get people coming to the area to check it out, not just to buy snacks at their lunch hour.
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  #332  
Old Posted May 27, 2011, 2:33 AM
c_speed3108 c_speed3108 is online now
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Not as many as the retail analysis thought...at least in the first wave...


Quote:
Six Ottawa locations on Target list


By Vito Pilieci and Hollie Shaw, The Ottawa Citizen May 26, 2011 9:52 PM


U.S. retailer Target Corp. TGT.N on Thursday announced plans to enter the Canadian market, taking over leases for up to 220 Zellers stores owned by storied retailer Hudson's Bay Co.

U.S. retailer Target Corp. TGT.N on Thursday announced plans to enter the Canadian market, taking over leases for up to 220 Zellers stores owned by storied retailer Hudson's Bay Co.
Photograph by: File, Getty Images

Seven Ottawa-area Zellers locations have been named as future homes of Target stores, leaving the region’s remaining nine Zellers outlets in limbo.

Target Corp. which, in January, announced it was coming to Canada, issued a list Thursday of the first 105 locations it will take over from Zellers when it begins retailing in Canada in early 2013.

Included are Zellers locations at Bayshore Shopping Mall, St. Laurent Shopping Centre, Billings Bridge Plaza, Hazeldean Mall, Place d’Orléans and the Meadowlands Shopping Centre in Ottawa, plus a store in County Fair Mall in Smiths Falls.

The announcement leaves the future of Zeller’s landmark Sparks Street location in downtown Ottawa, as well as stores on Robertson and Ogilvie roads and three locations in Gatineau, up in the air.

Stores in Pembroke, Cornwall and Brockville were also left off the list.

Target initially said it planned to open between 100 and 150 stores in Canada. The company said it would look for buyers to assume the remainder of the 220 locations it chose not to move into. Thursday’s announcement puts the company well within its quota for new Canadian locations, although company management did say more locations would be announced in coming months.

“This is just the first wave,” Target Canada president Tony Fisher told media in a presentation in Chicago.

He said Target Canada stores would have up to 74 per cent more employees than the Zellers stores it replaced because the company expected sales would be “substantially higher” than those of the lagging retail chain. Target will pour up to $10 million into each store site and hire 150 to 200 employees per store, higher than the Zellers average of 115, he said.

The list includes properties in 10 provinces; 13 in Alberta, 15 in British Columbia, five in Manitoba, one in New Brunswick, two in Newfoundland and Labrador, two in Nova Scotia, 45 in Ontario, one in PEI, 19 in Quebec, and two in Saskatchewan.

While taking over 105 leases, not all will get the Target name. However, the “vast majority” of the sites will become Target stores, Fisher said, after securing construction approval for renovations. Those that do not could be offered to another retailer or sold back to the landlord. “Our goal is to open as many Target stores as possible.”

Target will pay half of the $1.82-billion purchase price to Zellers owner Richard Baker in coming days for Zellers leasehold interests. In January the retailer announced it was buying up to 220 leaseholds from Zellers, a unit of Hudson’s Bay Co.

Target also announced it would open its Canadian headquarters in 180,000 square feet of space at Mississauga. The Canadian management team will be moving to Canada this summer.

In September the retailer will announce a second wave of store sites, Fisher said.

Financial Post and Citizen staff
© Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen

Read more: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/Ottawa+...#ixzz1NW4LRngL
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  #333  
Old Posted May 27, 2011, 2:48 AM
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There's no Zellers at the St-Laurent Centre? Will they be converting The Bay? Also surprised to not see the Gloucester Centre location on the list.
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  #334  
Old Posted May 27, 2011, 9:44 AM
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There's no Zellers at the St-Laurent Centre? Will they be converting The Bay? Also surprised to not see the Gloucester Centre location on the list.
The one on St. Laurent is refered to as "Zeller's St Laurent". Presumably some crappy reporter assumed it was in the mall!

It is a terribly old and crappy looking Zeller's but it is located in a RioCan proporty so I imagine the lease was easy since it probably just got lumped in with other RioCan proporties.

I was surprised at the Gloucester Centre one too since that Zeller's was expanded not all that long ago. It might come in a second round perhaps as they said this list was only about 105 and I believe they wanted 200 or so. I am not sure who owns that mall. If it is someone weird it might take longer to negotiate since it is a one off lease rather the ones you could do in a sprta batch negotiation with the huge landlords. This was the same reason was not optimistic about sparks street....ncc only owns one Zeller's location (although I am still certainly disappointed)
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  #335  
Old Posted May 28, 2011, 12:08 AM
eternallyme eternallyme is offline
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Originally Posted by c_speed3108 View Post
Not as many as the retail analysis thought...at least in the first wave...
The downtown location would be best off sold to some other retailer that is more suited for urban locations.
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  #336  
Old Posted May 28, 2011, 3:43 PM
kwoldtimer kwoldtimer is offline
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Too small for a Simon's, I guess.
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  #337  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2011, 3:53 PM
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Rideau Centre

Does anyone know the details of what the Rideau centre is doing in the spot of the old small food court (where burger king and taco bell were)

the've had that area sealed off forever and now have the outside walls completely blown out over 2 floors.

If I was to take a guess.. i think this may be the H&M many of us have been waiting for.. or an Abercrobie & Fitch or Hollister.. but I would think it's something definitely on the prominent side of things..

does anyone know ?
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  #338  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2011, 4:14 PM
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Originally Posted by kwoldtimer View Post
Too small for a Simon's, I guess.
Simons would never go on Sparks. Not in the street's current state anyway...
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  #339  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2011, 4:39 PM
TransitZilla TransitZilla is offline
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Originally Posted by spotlight View Post
Does anyone know the details of what the Rideau centre is doing in the spot of the old small food court (where burger king and taco bell were)

the've had that area sealed off forever and now have the outside walls completely blown out over 2 floors.

If I was to take a guess.. i think this may be the H&M many of us have been waiting for.. or an Abercrobie & Fitch or Hollister.. but I would think it's something definitely on the prominent side of things..

does anyone know ?
I think it will be a "Forever 21". Apparently it will have doors opening out onto Rideau St in addition to an entrance from the mall.

http://www.rideaucentre.net/en/fashion/blog/2011-01-06
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  #340  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2011, 11:21 PM
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Yes it will be a Forever 21

The store will comprise two levels encompassing 16, 000 square feet, complete with an in-store escalator. There will be three entrances: one on the first floor, one on the second floor, and direct entry from Rideau Street as mentioned in the post above.

http://ottawa.openfile.ca/ottawa/fil...cks-forever-21
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