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  #1321  
Old Posted Jan 15, 2015, 8:16 PM
Norman Bates Norman Bates is offline
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What happened to Sony?
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  #1322  
Old Posted Jan 15, 2015, 8:23 PM
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What happened to Sony?
Sony has been losing money and shedding employees globally since about 2010. I see this as nothing more than part of their overall consolidation rather than anything specific to do with Canada.
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  #1323  
Old Posted Jan 15, 2015, 8:33 PM
Norman Bates Norman Bates is offline
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They were the kings of television. Absolute leaders. In the picture tube days that is.
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  #1324  
Old Posted Jan 15, 2015, 8:38 PM
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^^^ and they weren't slouches during their Playstation boom in the early 2000's either... The ebb and flow of the tech industry I guess ..
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  #1325  
Old Posted Jan 15, 2015, 11:04 PM
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Bad week for retail.
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  #1326  
Old Posted Jan 16, 2015, 4:16 AM
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Sony hits home...I opened the Sony Store in Bayshore in 1998. I worked there for a few years and some of my co-workers still work there. We used to do a lot of business out of that little store back in the day.
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  #1327  
Old Posted Jan 16, 2015, 2:11 PM
Norman Bates Norman Bates is offline
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Sony hits home...I opened the Sony Store in Bayshore in 1998. I worked there for a few years and some of my co-workers still work there. We used to do a lot of business out of that little store back in the day.
And I did a lot of business with you.

The Sony store was a destination. Like a tiffanys if you will. It was a place to go, see what's new, and spend money.

I still have my KV32XBR450 it's like a tank - although it needs some kind of repair because the colours bleed red.

Then my parents bought one of the Grand Wega flat screens. Not a product worthy of the brand. They dumped it in the trash after only a few years and never looked at Sony again.
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  #1328  
Old Posted Jan 16, 2015, 7:50 PM
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I walked by Forum Apparel on Wellington West (across from Absynthe) and it looks like they closed down. They've been open for around a year now, and they had some decent stuff, though they were expensive. I tried finding their facebook, but I guess they deleted it.

It sucks to see another business leave Hintonburg in the last while. There's not a whole lot surviving more than a year.
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  #1329  
Old Posted Jan 16, 2015, 8:00 PM
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It sucks to see another business leave Hintonburg in the last while.
Heavens to Betsy is closing in the spring.
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  #1330  
Old Posted Jan 16, 2015, 8:05 PM
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Heavens to Betsy is closing in the spring.
Really? Wow...

Hintonburg saw a spur of people move in and businesses open, and now we're seeing a lot of these businesses close. Not looking very good for the neighbourhood.
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  #1331  
Old Posted Jan 18, 2015, 2:14 AM
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Originally Posted by Harley613 View Post
Sony hits home...I opened the Sony Store in Bayshore in 1998. I worked there for a few years and some of my co-workers still work there. We used to do a lot of business out of that little store back in the day.
I remember Sony Store was the place to go before Future Shop, Best Buy and Canada Computers establishing their presence

I was yesterday and no sales on yet. They do have 50% off demo camera lenses but I suspect that is par for the course.
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  #1332  
Old Posted Jan 20, 2015, 2:40 AM
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City to hold public consultation on micro-retailers on Wednesday

Joanne Chianello, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: January 19, 2015, Last Updated: January 19, 2015 8:18 PM EST


The city wants to save your corner store — and hear from you before planners put the final touches on an innovative zoning amendment that could see micro-retailers pop up in residential neighbourhoods.

Almost 60 corner stores are grandfathered into established urban communities zoned exclusively for homes. If a convenience store closes or its owner dies, it’s very difficult to keep the shop as a shop — the property’s use automatically switches to residential to match the rest of the neighbourhood’s zoning. And applying for a rezoning is prohibitively expensive for many small business owners: the application fee alone starts at $15,000.

But in six inner-city wards — Rideau-Vanier, Rideau-Rockcliffe, Alta Vista, Capital, Somerset and Kitchissippi — the city planners are proposing to change that by creating a new “residential commercial” zoning category for very small businesses that take up less than 100 square metres (or about 1,000 square feet).

“We’ve been speaking with the communities involved for about a year, “said Alain Miguelez, the city’s planner for intensification and neighbourhoods. “It started with a questionnaire that asked people if they liked the idea of having little corner stores and little retail services within the neighbourhood that they could walk to. We asked what they’d like to see, what they wouldn’t like to see.”

More than 1,200 people responded, mostly in favour of changing the zoning. Miguelez credited the Citizen story on vanishing corner stores with helping to bring attention to the issue, as “it shone some light on the phenomenon that we’re dealing with.”

In addition to trying to retain existing commercial locations in neighbourhood, the city also asked residents in there were additional locations where a micro-retail shop might work if the opportunity existed in the zoning. If the zoning changes go through, it would be possible for residents in some otherwise purely residential neighbourhoods to open a small businesses, including an artist’s studio, repair shop or even a small restaurant with a tiny (30-square-metre) patio.

“There is a real pent-up demand for that kind of micro-opportunity to incubate small businesses,” said Miguelez.

The concept of jobs that are somewhere between a home-based business — think a single hair stylist working out a spare bedroom — and a full-on retail store isn’t new: already 28,500 jobs exist in this “in-between” sector in Ottawa. Changing the zoning will simply make it a bit easier to create new ones.

City planners will present their ideas to the public at Wednesday’ evening’s public consultation and will ask for public feedback on the proposal.

[email protected]


Public consultation for proposed commercial zoning in residential neighbourhoods

Date: Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2015
Time: 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Location: Jean Pigott Place, Ottawa City Hall, 110 Laurier Avenue West

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...-corner-stores
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  #1333  
Old Posted Jan 20, 2015, 4:06 PM
DEWLine DEWLine is offline
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Guessing that there are other neighbourhoods where such measures might be helpful...?
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  #1334  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2015, 3:32 PM
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City of Ottawa looks to open more small businesses in residential areas

Public consultation on zoning changes tonight

The City of Ottawa is looking at potentially changing the feel of urban neighbourhoods by making it easier to run a small business on a residential street.


As it stands, it can cost thousands of dollars to rezone a house to commercial in order to start a business such as a barber shop or corner store in a residential area.


The city said Tuesday it’s looking at adding a commercial designation to dozens of residentially zoned properties in urban wards.


"Really what we’re doing is looking at opportunities to make neighbourhoods more complete and more walkable, having that access to goods and services," said city planner Andrew McCreight.

Some current businesses grandfathered in



Gennaro Di Rienzo says the proposed changes will be good for businesses and their communities. (Giacomo Panico/CBC)

Di Rienzo’s grocery store runs out of a multi-unit house on Beech Street which is technically zoned residential.


It’s been there for 40 years and benefits from a grandfathered rule allowing it to stay open, but the proposed changes would make it permanently commercial.


"It's a very good idea to let small business operators decide if they want to expand, if they want to do something else with it, incorporate some other business with it,” said Gennaro Di Rienzo, who co-owns the store.


"It's good for the community around, too.”




http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/city-of-ottawa-looks-to-open-more-small-businesses-in-residential-areas-1.2920216
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  #1335  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2015, 3:55 PM
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This will be great for the city. Hopefully they go further with this in the future.
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  #1336  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2015, 6:19 PM
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’Tis the season for mall expansions

Michael Prentice, OBJ
Published on December 19, 2014


The numbers are staggering in the battle of the giants between the Rideau Centre and Bayshore Shopping Centre as they move into the late stages of massive renovations and expansions.

Cindy VanBuskirk is the general manager of the Rideau Centre.

When work is complete, Ottawa’s two leading shopping emporiums will have spent a total of at least $560 million on adding retail and parking space and, they hope, enhancing the shopping experience of their customers.

The total cost of the Rideau Centre redevelopment is about $360 million. For Bayshore, the sum is between $200 million and $225 million.

Combined sales of stores and businesses in the two malls already exceed $1 billion annually, according to retail analysts. When the expansions are both complete in 2016 this figure will probably exceed $1.5 billion a year, experts say.

Analysts track the retail industry by annual sales per square foot of leased retail space. Prior to expansion, the Rideau Centre and Bayshore each had about three-quarters of a million square feet of retail space. That number will increase to about one million square feet at each mall.

The Rideau Centre has the third- or fourth-highest retail sales per square foot in Canada, according to Barry Nabatian, an Ottawa retail analyst and director of market research for Shore Tanner & Associates.

The mall’s annual sales per square foot are more than $1,000, based on what the manager has publicly announced, he says. His estimate for Bayshore is about $800 and roughly $700 for St. Laurent Shopping Centre.

Rideau Centre and Bayshore have dramatically improved the appearance of their common areas – the hallways and walkways that connect the individual stores. Both have installed new flooring, lighting and furnishings and refurbished washrooms.

Both malls have also recently unveiled expanded food courts that are a huge improvement over the old ones. Besides offering a place to eat in pleasant surroundings, they offer much greater choice than before.

For the fashion-conscious, the Rideau Centre landed a huge catch by convincing trendy U.S.-based retailer Nordstrom to locate its one and only Ottawa store there. The Nordstrom store will open in March 2015 in part of the space formerly occupied by Sears, which was never a good fit in such an upscale downtown mall.

Rideau Centre general manager Cindy VanBuskirk is keeping close watch on the transformation of the former Sears space.

“The Nordstrom store is going to be spectacular,” she says. It will include such amenities as a coffee bar and a licensed restaurant with an outdoor rooftop patio when weather permits.

In a far less exciting development, Bayshore will have a Target store in place of the Zellers store that formerly anchored one end of the mall. Target will open in the spring of 2015, probably in March. The Minneapolis-based chain’s entry into the Ottawa marketplace as a middle-of-the-road competitor of Walmart has so far been less than spectacular.

Where Bayshore does have a clear advantage over its downtown counterpart is in parking. At Bayshore parking is free, whereas at the Rideau Centre it’s $3 an hour.

By the time the Rideau Centre’s expansion is complete in August 2016, the number of parking spaces will increase from the current 1,300 to about 1,650.

“The lion’s share of our customers come by bus or walk,” Ms. VanBuskirk says. “Fewer than 20 per cent come by car.”

Many of Bayshore’s customers, meanwhile, drive to the west-end mall. Bayshore is expanding the capacity of its indoor parking garages from about 3,400 to 4,000.

Bayshore general manager Denis Pelletier says that during this year’s busy Christmas period, there are slightly more than 4,000 parking spaces, including some at vacant outdoor space nearby. During the holiday season, Bayshore is also offering free valet parking, although users are encouraged to make a donation to the Ottawa Senators Foundation.

Bayshore has already added several hundred parking spaces during the expansion, but Mr. Pelletier says finding a parking spot is complicated by detours due to ongoing construction. The “functionality” of the parking areas will improve once construction is complete, he says.

While the Rideau Centre and Bayshore are arguably the top two fashion destinations in the Ottawa retail market, they now have a new competitor in Tanger Outlets, a collection of 80 name-brand designer stores that opened this fall across from the Canadian Tire Centre.

I like visiting outlet centres, but am suspicious as to whether they really offer bargains. Sometimes they do, says Mr. Nabatian.

“Outlet malls offer products from a large number of manufacturers in one place, some of which are at lower prices, some are lower-quality (minor defects), some are truly bargains, and many are not bargains but perceived to be due to advertisements,” he says.

Tanger Outlets would seem to pose more of a challenge to the nearby Bayshore Shopping Centre than to the Rideau Centre downtown. Bayshore’s Mr. Pelletier accepts the challenge, saying: “We’ve got to be at the top of our game.” He also puts a positive spin on the arrival of Tanger Outlets, saying it makes Ottawa’s western outskirts more of a shopping destination.

So, who will win this battle between the Rideau Centre and Bayshore to hold – if not increase – market share?

For now, it’s too close to call, I’d say.

Michael Prentice is the OBJ’s columnist on retail and consumer issues. He can be contacted at [email protected].

http://www.obj.ca/Opinion/2014-12-19...l-expansions/1
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  #1337  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2015, 6:44 PM
MoreTrains MoreTrains is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rocketphish View Post
’Tis the season for mall expansions

Michael Prentice, OBJ
Published on December 19, 2014


The numbers are staggering in the battle of the giants between the Rideau Centre and Bayshore Shopping Centre as they move into the late stages of massive renovations and expansions.

Cindy VanBuskirk is the general manager of the Rideau Centre.

When work is complete, Ottawa’s two leading shopping emporiums will have spent a total of at least $560 million on adding retail and parking space and, they hope, enhancing the shopping experience of their customers.

The total cost of the Rideau Centre redevelopment is about $360 million. For Bayshore, the sum is between $200 million and $225 million.

Combined sales of stores and businesses in the two malls already exceed $1 billion annually, according to retail analysts. When the expansions are both complete in 2016 this figure will probably exceed $1.5 billion a year, experts say.

Analysts track the retail industry by annual sales per square foot of leased retail space. Prior to expansion, the Rideau Centre and Bayshore each had about three-quarters of a million square feet of retail space. That number will increase to about one million square feet at each mall.

The Rideau Centre has the third- or fourth-highest retail sales per square foot in Canada, according to Barry Nabatian, an Ottawa retail analyst and director of market research for Shore Tanner & Associates.

The mall’s annual sales per square foot are more than $1,000, based on what the manager has publicly announced, he says. His estimate for Bayshore is about $800 and roughly $700 for St. Laurent Shopping Centre.

Rideau Centre and Bayshore have dramatically improved the appearance of their common areas – the hallways and walkways that connect the individual stores. Both have installed new flooring, lighting and furnishings and refurbished washrooms.

Both malls have also recently unveiled expanded food courts that are a huge improvement over the old ones. Besides offering a place to eat in pleasant surroundings, they offer much greater choice than before.

For the fashion-conscious, the Rideau Centre landed a huge catch by convincing trendy U.S.-based retailer Nordstrom to locate its one and only Ottawa store there. The Nordstrom store will open in March 2015 in part of the space formerly occupied by Sears, which was never a good fit in such an upscale downtown mall.

Rideau Centre general manager Cindy VanBuskirk is keeping close watch on the transformation of the former Sears space.

“The Nordstrom store is going to be spectacular,” she says. It will include such amenities as a coffee bar and a licensed restaurant with an outdoor rooftop patio when weather permits.

In a far less exciting development, Bayshore will have a Target store in place of the Zellers store that formerly anchored one end of the mall. Target will open in the spring of 2015, probably in March. The Minneapolis-based chain’s entry into the Ottawa marketplace as a middle-of-the-road competitor of Walmart has so far been less than spectacular.

Where Bayshore does have a clear advantage over its downtown counterpart is in parking. At Bayshore parking is free, whereas at the Rideau Centre it’s $3 an hour.

By the time the Rideau Centre’s expansion is complete in August 2016, the number of parking spaces will increase from the current 1,300 to about 1,650.

“The lion’s share of our customers come by bus or walk,” Ms. VanBuskirk says. “Fewer than 20 per cent come by car.”

Many of Bayshore’s customers, meanwhile, drive to the west-end mall. Bayshore is expanding the capacity of its indoor parking garages from about 3,400 to 4,000.

Bayshore general manager Denis Pelletier says that during this year’s busy Christmas period, there are slightly more than 4,000 parking spaces, including some at vacant outdoor space nearby. During the holiday season, Bayshore is also offering free valet parking, although users are encouraged to make a donation to the Ottawa Senators Foundation.

Bayshore has already added several hundred parking spaces during the expansion, but Mr. Pelletier says finding a parking spot is complicated by detours due to ongoing construction. The “functionality” of the parking areas will improve once construction is complete, he says.

While the Rideau Centre and Bayshore are arguably the top two fashion destinations in the Ottawa retail market, they now have a new competitor in Tanger Outlets, a collection of 80 name-brand designer stores that opened this fall across from the Canadian Tire Centre.

I like visiting outlet centres, but am suspicious as to whether they really offer bargains. Sometimes they do, says Mr. Nabatian.

“Outlet malls offer products from a large number of manufacturers in one place, some of which are at lower prices, some are lower-quality (minor defects), some are truly bargains, and many are not bargains but perceived to be due to advertisements,” he says.

Tanger Outlets would seem to pose more of a challenge to the nearby Bayshore Shopping Centre than to the Rideau Centre downtown. Bayshore’s Mr. Pelletier accepts the challenge, saying: “We’ve got to be at the top of our game.” He also puts a positive spin on the arrival of Tanger Outlets, saying it makes Ottawa’s western outskirts more of a shopping destination.

So, who will win this battle between the Rideau Centre and Bayshore to hold – if not increase – market share?

For now, it’s too close to call, I’d say.

Michael Prentice is the OBJ’s columnist on retail and consumer issues. He can be contacted at [email protected].

http://www.obj.ca/Opinion/2014-12-19...l-expansions/1
Answer is simple, Rideau. Especially with the arrival of LRT. Bayshore is kinda screwed as Target is not going to open, so seems pretty cut and dried.
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  #1338  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2015, 10:41 PM
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If were looking at current vs. future market share throughout the top 4 malls in metro Ottawa, I'd say Bayshore will likely stay just about where it is (slight increase at best), Les Promenades will see a decent increase, St. Laurent will lose to both Gatineau and Rideau which will be the clear winner in all this.
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  #1339  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2015, 11:21 PM
eternallyme eternallyme is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
If were looking at current vs. future market share throughout the top 4 malls in metro Ottawa, I'd say Bayshore will likely stay just about where it is (slight increase at best), Les Promenades will see a decent increase, St. Laurent will lose to both Gatineau and Rideau which will be the clear winner in all this.
I'd say Bayshore may drop back, St. Laurent even more and Gatineau might climb to #2. However, the Rideau Centre is going to flourish into THE mall for Ottawa...
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  #1340  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2015, 11:22 PM
eternallyme eternallyme is offline
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Originally Posted by MoreTrains View Post
Answer is simple, Rideau. Especially with the arrival of LRT. Bayshore is kinda screwed as Target is not going to open, so seems pretty cut and dried.
That was written before the Target withdrawal. But clearly the Rideau Centre has a massive advantage right now.
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