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  #1761  
Old Posted Sep 2, 2015, 6:08 PM
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Pop-up patio pilot project gets OK

By Jon Willing, Ottawa Sun
First posted: Wednesday, September 02, 2015 10:03 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, September 02, 2015 01:40 PM EDT




The city’s transportation committee wants to try converting as many as 25 on-street parking spaces into patios or “parklets” next spring and summer.

The committee didn’t even need to talk about the program Wednesday. A unanimous vote sufficed.

The city would start with 25 locations as a test run and begin taking applications in October. The “greatest geographical diversity possible” will be the city’s guiding principle. Five spots will be reserved for parklets, which could simply be public places for people to sit.

The city would only allow the patios on streets with speed limits of 50 km/h or slower. Only establishments that already don’t have an outdoor patio, or can’t install a sidewalk patio, would be eligible.

Creativity and design will also be factors the city considers in the application phase.

The infrastructure would be allowed between April and October.

The cost for patios and vendors will be the same as what the city charges for sidewalk patios. In 2015, the rate is $1.18 per square metre, per day. The fee could increase in the 2016 budget. There are also administration fees.

Parklets will be considered in the same league as cafe seating, which has annual fees.

On the downside, the city could lose a bit of revenue if some popular on-street parking spots are occupied by patios and parks.

The city plans to study the pilot project next spring and summer and report back to the transportation committee in late 2016.

Council still needs to sign off next Wednesday.

Twitter: @JonathanWilling

http://www.ottawasun.com/2015/09/02/...roject-gets-ok
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  #1762  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2015, 2:22 AM
canabiz canabiz is offline
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Wowzers...I've been wondering about this development, it seems to be filling up slowly after the Lowes was completed. I like Panera Bread as far as chain places go, I think it will do well here.
2 years has passed and only Panera is open from the list. Although construction is well under way for the other parts of the complex.

I also like Panera Bread, we try to grab some bread whenever we drive by the area.
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  #1763  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2015, 10:53 AM
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A&W at St-Laurent Mall temporarily closed due to cockroaches!

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa...ches-1.3213543
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  #1764  
Old Posted Sep 9, 2015, 12:43 PM
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Popeyes and Baton Rouge coming to the Lowes Hunt Club power centre as well
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  #1765  
Old Posted Sep 9, 2015, 11:46 PM
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Apparently the Sears stores in Renfrew and Arnprior are closing soon, and I imagine there are more going along with them. They are mostly appliance stores and catalogue pickup locations. Interesting times, as much of their business outside of cities is catalogue based. Though maybe they're moving towards online delivery?
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  #1766  
Old Posted Sep 10, 2015, 12:17 AM
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Popeyes and Baton Rouge coming to the Lowes Hunt Club power centre as well
Fit or fat — is that Popeye's the health supplement store, or the Louisiana fried chicken franchise?
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  #1767  
Old Posted Sep 10, 2015, 12:59 AM
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There is another row of shops well under construction at the south end of the trainyards next to Movati. Here we grow again!
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  #1768  
Old Posted Sep 10, 2015, 1:12 AM
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I dropped by Merivale Mall today and was really impressed with the renos. Marshall's will open tomorrow and it looks really nice from the outside, clean and organized.

Rest of the mall looks good as well, a number of places is still under construction but I don't expect that to last too long.
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  #1769  
Old Posted Sep 16, 2015, 1:39 AM
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West End Well grocery store, café to close this month

Laura Robin, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: September 15, 2015 | Last Updated: September 15, 2015 3:43 PM EDT




Hintonburg’s West End Well grocery store and café will close by the end of the September.

“After months of adjusting operations, seeking advice from food service specialists, and consulting co-op members and customers, we have concluded that the current business model is not financially viable,” said Bill Shields, the co-op’s co-founder, in a release Tuesday. “We will therefore close the co-op’s grocery and café by the end of September.”

Shields and others had hoped that the for-profit co-op, which opened one year ago at 969 Wellington St. W. (where Wellington turns into Somerset Street), would provide a new kind of business model, with employees as members of the co-op and ways to help people of all income levels afford local, healthy food.

He said Tuesday that the venture didn’t fail because of any one thing.

“It was a combination of numerous factors. We had a major financial setback with the delayed opening last summer, followed by three very good months … (but then) a terrible winter, and very slow sales since then. Many people in the food services industry have told us this has been their worst year in a very long time.”

Shields said he and his partners “will take time over the winter to explore the possibility of a more viable alternative business model that still realizes the co-op’s vision, mission, and values.”

He said that after the grocery store and café close, “we will make the ground-floor kitchen and retail space available for rent to interested food producers, pop-up ventures, special events teams, or other community initiatives.

“The meeting space on the second floor will continue to be available for co-op meetings and community gatherings. We will also lease part of the second floor to a new Sustainability Capacity Centre that will host several small environmental and social justice NGOs beginning on Oct. 1.”

The more than 750 co-op members will be able to get a financial report from auditors at an annual general meeting to be held Sept. 24 at St. Luke’s Anglican Church, 760 Somerset St. W.

“We are keenly aware of the tremendous support the co-op has received from community members who invested significant time and money to support this enterprise,” says Shields. “We have sought to honour that investment to the best of our ability and remain committed to the co-op’s original vision.”

The business has 14 employees, five of them full-time, but Shields said Tuesday that most knew the closing was coming, or at least possible, and that several long-time employees had recently returned to school or gone travelling.

“We’ve given the remaining staff notice, and will be fulfilling all of our financial obligations to them.”

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...ose-this-month
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  #1770  
Old Posted Sep 23, 2015, 12:36 AM
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Mac's convenience store banner to be retired as Circle K becomes global brand

Ross Marowits, The Canadian Press 09.21.2015


LAVAL, Que. - Alimentation Couche-Tard is retiring the 54-year-old Mac's convenience store brand as it unites under the Circle K banner in most areas of the world.

The change has been in the works for more than two years and follows several acquisitions that have added different brands to the Quebec-based company since its founding in 1980.

"Today we may be a little bit of distant cousins being from different banners and different companies. We think this has an opportunity to have us act more as brothers and sisters," said CEO Brian Hannasch.

He said the change will accelerate the introduction of new products, including its house brand coffee, across its network of convenience stores.

The company (TSX:ATD.B) will keep its Couche-Tard banner in Quebec because of "unique circumstances."

"The notoriety of the brand is so strong here," executive chairman Alain Bouchard told a news conference on Tuesday. "It would be an even bigger challenge to change Couche-Tard to Circle K, so it was never really considered."

The company will begin rolling out its Circle K brand to other parts of Canada in May 2017, following rollouts in the United States and Europe that will mostly begin next year.

No job cuts are expected among the approximately 8,000 employees that work at about 800 Mac's stores in Canada. Couche-Tard already operates about 125 Circle K stores in Atlantic Canada.

The change will also see the disappearance of Scandinavia's Statoil store brand acquired in 2012, and The Pantry's Kangaroo Express, bought last year. Couche-Tard has the rights to use the Statoil name until 2018.

Circle K is already Couche-Tard's most widely used store banner, primarily in the United States in addition to 12 other countries.

The Circle K brand licensed in stores across Asia is part of Couche-Tard's future growth plans but Hannasch wouldn't say if it's a precursor to a large expansion or acquisition.

"We're pretty well known in Asia today but this decision was very independent of our aspirations of growing in any particular part of the world," he told reporters.

Couche-Tard acquired Mac's in Quebec in 1993. Six years later, the company bought the remaining 980 Mac's, Mike's Mart and Becker's stores operating in Ontario and Western Canada from Silcorp Ltd.

Mac's Milk Ltd. was founded in 1961 by Ontario businessmen Ken and Carl McGowen. The name changed to Mac's Convenience Stores in 1975.

The announcement was made before the company removed at the last minute a shareholder vote at its annual meeting to extend the voting advantage of the company's four founders.

The proposal failed to receive the required two-thirds support from proxy votes cast before the meeting.

"It was a shock for me to get that answer," Bouchard told reporters, adding some changes may be required before being reintroduced.

The proposal would have allowed the founders to retain multiple voting shares as long as one sits on the company's board.

Under current rules, the advantage ends when the last of the four turns 65 or dies. Jacques D'Amours is 58, while Bouchard, Richard Fortin and Real Plourde are all at least 65.

Couche-Tard's shares have surged over the years, including by more than 60 per cent in the past year, making the retail chain the 15th largest Canadian company by market capitalization at nearly $35 billion.

Bouchard said he hopes the company will double its size to about 20,000 stores in the next six to seven years.

Follow @RossMarowits on Twitter

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/busines...518/story.html
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  #1771  
Old Posted Sep 24, 2015, 5:04 PM
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Local shopping centres in play as RioCan, Kimco wind up real estate partnership in stages

The Canadian Press ~ OBJ
Published on September 24, 2015


The RioCan and Kimco real estate businesses are unwinding their Canadian partnership, which jointly owns 35 properties in six provinces.

RioCan Real Estate Investment Trust (TSX:REI.UN) will pay $715 million to acquire Kimco Realty Corp.'s stake in 22 of the properties and assume Kimco's share of their existing debt.

The properties in this group – primarily shopping centres, plazas and power centres in British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec and Alberta – will be transferred to RioCan in two phases, to be completed by the first quarter of 2016.

The properties include Ottawa's Lincoln Fields Shopping Centre, RioCan St.Laurent and Viewmount Centre, as well as the RioCan Gatineau.

RioCan and Kimco will also seek to dispose of 13 additional institutional-quality retail properties, including the Halifax Walmart Centre in Nova Scotia and Charlottetown Mall in Prince Edward Island.

They expect to have 10 of those properties sold by the second half of 2016 and three – which housed Target Canada stores – at a later date.

RioCan chief executive Edward Sonshine said it's a rare opportunity to acquire a large number of properties that can be easily absorbed by the real estate trust.

"This acquisition improves RioCan's Canadian portfolio by increasing the concentration of the trust's portfolio located in Canada's six largest markets, most notably in the Greater Toronto Area," Mr. Sonshine said.

Kimco chief executive Dave Henry says the divestment continues efforts to simplify its operations "and provides an important source of capital to fund redevelopment activities and further strengthen our balance sheet."

http://www.obj.ca/Real-Estate/Non-re...ip-in-stages/1
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  #1772  
Old Posted Sep 25, 2015, 3:03 AM
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According to Retail Insider, a Le Creuset store has opened on Sussex beside Wolf & Zed:

Quote:
This week, Le Creuset opened its first Ottawa store at upscale address 517 Sussex Drive, located between retailers Kalyana fashions and Wolf & Zed footwear. The 1,130 square foot streetfront location is two blocks north of the CF Rideau Centre, and neighbours Ottawa's popular ByWard Market area.
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  #1773  
Old Posted Sep 25, 2015, 11:08 AM
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A nice score. I've been waiting for this one. Interesting location, too; I would have predicted Rideau or Tanger.
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  #1774  
Old Posted Sep 25, 2015, 12:18 PM
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I was just on Sussex yesterday and did a double take when passing the Le Creuset store. A nice (very bright, somewhat empty) store - but a bit of a random location. I wonder how long it will last. They'll have to sell an awful lot of cocottes and skillets to pay the rent.
And shame about Mac's - so the store will now be called Circle K? Really?
To be honest, that "brand" has been a bit dead to me since it went from Mac's Milk and MacTavish the Cat to just Mac's and the owl. We still call it Mac's Milk at home.
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  #1775  
Old Posted Sep 25, 2015, 12:25 PM
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Frou Frou has moved from William Street to York Street. The store is now in the periphery of the market in a space vacated by Sassy Bead Company (which had itself originally moved there from Wiliiam Street). Sassy has closed down - beads are no longer en vogue.

The space left empty on William Street will be occupied by Sweet Tea (yes, another tea shop), as well as a vintage shop, and Bang On which is currently on another section of York Street.
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  #1776  
Old Posted Sep 26, 2015, 12:13 PM
canabiz canabiz is offline
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Originally Posted by movebyleap View Post
I was just on Sussex yesterday and did a double take when passing the Le Creuset store. A nice (very bright, somewhat empty) store - but a bit of a random location. I wonder how long it will last. They'll have to sell an awful lot of cocottes and skillets to pay the rent.
And shame about Mac's - so the store will now be called Circle K? Really?
To be honest, that "brand" has been a bit dead to me since it went from Mac's Milk and MacTavish the Cat to just Mac's and the owl. We still call it Mac's Milk at home.
Good observation. I believe the Bay (maybe Nordstrom too?) also sells Le Creuset. I also occasionally see them at Winners/Marshall's and obviously there is the Outlet.

I know they are really good and will last a long time (we have 2 Le Creuset pots ourselves) but we got them at the outlet and I don't think we would have bought them at full price.
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  #1777  
Old Posted Sep 30, 2015, 11:45 PM
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Giant Tiger to move Ottawa distribution centre to Prescott

Robert Bostelaar, Ottawa Citizen
Published on: September 30, 2015 | Last Updated: September 30, 2015 4:43 PM EDT


Giant Tiger Stores Ltd. is moving its main distribution centre in Ottawa 80 kilometres south to Highway 401 — and it hopes that 300 warehousing and trucking employees will follow.

“It’s our goal that they’re all going to make the move … we’re committed to doing everything possible to make that a reality,” the discount retailer’s president and chief executive Thomas Haig said Wednesday.

Haig said it was too early discuss financial aid to for relocating employees or severance packages for others but “we will be looking at all options.”

The Ottawa-based chain will close its main warehouse on Walkley Road and two smaller Ottawa facilities by 2017 and open a new centre in the Johnstown Industrial Park on the St. Lawrence River east of Prescott. Giant Tiger’s corporate headquarters and a retail outlet will remain on Walkley Road, he said.

The CEO said the chain has outgrown its Ottawa warehouses and needs a large, well-positioned centre that can further expand as the company continues to add to its 214 outlets, up from 206 last January. The new site is at the heart of what has become a “logistics alley” along Highway 401 in Eastern Ontario for retailers such as Walmart and third-party distributors.

“This one, particularly from Ontario east, serves us very well,” he said of the Johnstown location, which also has a deepwater port and adjoins a bridge to the U.S.

A focus on discount clothing and food has helped Giant Tiger weather the retail pressures that led to the departure of mass-marketers Zellers and Target Canada.

The chain has been moving upmarket in appearance, however, with new layouts and upgraded displays. “That new store experience, as we call it, has been really well received by our customers,” Haig said.

The privately held retailer began with a single ByWard Market store in 1961. Haig, a former executive with Zellers and Danier Leather Inc., was named to the top post in March to replace Greg Farrell, who retired.

With an average 16,000 square feet of floor space and rarely exceeding 25,000 square feet, Giant Tiger outlets are smaller than traditional discount department stores. The chain has, however, moved into two former Target locations, Haig said, and is studying two or three more.

The move to a new central warehouse will not affect Giant Tiger’s recently expanded food warehouses in Brockville and Brantford, the company said.

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http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-...ibution-centre
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  #1778  
Old Posted Oct 6, 2015, 12:32 AM
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I'm not sure if it was posted here or not, but the Expedition Shoppe in Westboro closed down about a month ago. But, in it's place will be another outdoors shop:

Quote:
Excited to see Great Escape Outfitters opening this month at 369 Richmond!





2:14 PM - 5 Oct 2015
[Source]

* Also, the Lululemon down the street is currently undergoing some renovations (should be complete by the end of October or November, I believe) and all of their stock has been temporarily moved to the second level of the same building (entrance on Churchill).
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  #1779  
Old Posted Oct 6, 2015, 12:43 AM
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Originally Posted by canabiz View Post
Good observation. I believe the Bay (maybe Nordstrom too?) also sells Le Creuset. I also occasionally see them at Winners/Marshall's and obviously there is the Outlet.

I know they are really good and will last a long time (we have 2 Le Creuset pots ourselves) but we got them at the outlet and I don't think we would have bought them at full price.
the pricey stuff is still made in france, the more mass market stuff is made in china
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  #1780  
Old Posted Oct 6, 2015, 11:06 AM
canabiz canabiz is offline
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Originally Posted by SpongeG View Post
the pricey stuff is still made in france, the more mass market stuff is made in china
Your post has me intrigued so I checked out the 2 Le Creuset I bought from a) an outlet in the States and b) the Bay Outlet and they both have France engraved at the bottom and underneath the lid. This is supposed to be authentic per this post from Loonietunz

http://www.chowhound.com/post/geniun...-609014?page=2

I have not owned any Le Creuset that is made in China so I don't want to rush to judgment but if what you say is correct (and I have no reason not to believe you), I think they maybe *diluting* their brand a bit there. Perception is reality even though it shouldn't necessarily be like that.
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