Quote:
Originally Posted by JamieDavid Exchange
Quote:
Originally Posted by CoryB
Regardless of the current lack of or the future possibility of residential near the former Peace Hills location on Portage access for the type of deliveries typical of grocery stores seems to be severely restricted at that location. It would also be disappoint to see a relatively high profile location on Portage become a grocery which is unlike to bring traffic to the area, rather it would depend of people that are otherwise there for some other reason.
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It would be if the two graham lots and the one MPI lot further west constructed 900+ residential units. That's the equivalent to three 55 Nassau high rise buildings. (38 floors a piece)
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Nicely missing the main point of my original post in your reply which you moved to a different forum.
1. There is no public confirmation of any new tenant for the site being discussed.
2. Grocery stores typically have a proper loading dock for delivery vehicles to use and the Portage Ave site does not.
3. Based on the layout of the site there does not appear to be a possible for a proper loading dock unless delivery vehicles are allowed to block the entire lane while unloading.
4. Access to the lane is fairly tight meaning deliveries would most likely be restricted to smaller cube vans which could increase the overall delivery cost.
5. A new build, such as the main floor space of the Glass Lofts could address most of these issues as part of their initial design phase.
6. The Glass Loft site would also be a similar distance from the Exchange and new housing on Graham and at the MPI plus it would have all the residential being built above.
7. The Portage Ave site will likely attract other interest as it has significantly highly visibility that either the Glass Lofts on Ellice, the MPI lots of the speculated development on Graham Ave.
8. The location of a grocery store on Portage also does not prevent a competitor which operational cost advantages from opening in of the other planned/proposed developments from opening. This would likely lead to the one best able to cut costs winning.
In summary, it is not the idea of a downtown grocery store that I think is a poor choice but that putting a grocery store with a large frontage on Portage Ave, and specifically that location, that is disappointing.