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  #6241  
Old Posted Apr 1, 2021, 11:14 PM
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I like KFC, the one in Burquitlam is really good, others in the area just aren't as good, the quality really changes from location to location. Also the coleslaw seems to be different sometimes too, sometimes you get a bright green version and other times you get a white and orange version and they are quite different. Also some places I have ordered tenders are using a Sysco brand tender and are nothing like the original KFC tenders which are just like boneless versions of their chicken. I always think I should write to head office and complain about their tenders.

This will be the first Canadian location for Paul. It's on Robson street in Vancouver.
https://www.paul-bakeries.com/en/

2021-04-01_03-53-52 by snub_you, on Flickr
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  #6242  
Old Posted Apr 1, 2021, 11:40 PM
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Vancouver has gotten a few French chains in the past number of years like L’Éclair de génie (now closed) and Ladurée.
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  #6243  
Old Posted Apr 1, 2021, 11:57 PM
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There’s probably a Paul in every train station of a certain size in France. It looks like they only have 5 locations in the US, all in the Washington DC area. Looks like their expansion plan for North America is still in its preliminary stage.
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  #6244  
Old Posted Apr 2, 2021, 3:43 AM
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I was wondering why that chain doesn't exist in Montreal but then I looked at what they sell. Many independent and some bakery chains exist across much of the province that sell the same products so it wouldn't be anything new to Quebec. Even many grocery stores there sell that stuff.
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  #6245  
Old Posted Apr 2, 2021, 7:34 AM
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the chain is owned by the same company as Ladurée, The local Vancouver Ladurée franchisee is the one who opened the Paul here.
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  #6246  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2021, 2:52 AM
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Ouch! Disney is closing all Disney stores across Canada.
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  #6247  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2021, 4:07 AM
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Ouch! Disney is closing all Disney stores across Canada.
I was in a couple of them last Summer and I'm not surprised. Disney could just fit their merchandise into a section of Toys R Us Canada stores. (store within a store concept) And let another company run it.
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  #6248  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2021, 10:30 AM
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This will be the second time CF Masonville in London will lose its Disney store. They had one 15 or 20 years ago and it closed, then another opened 4 or 5 years ago.
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  #6249  
Old Posted Apr 30, 2021, 12:41 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Loco101 View Post
I was in a couple of them last Summer and I'm not surprised. Disney could just fit their merchandise into a section of Toys R Us Canada stores. (store within a store concept) And let another company run it.
I visited the one in Rideau Centre couple years ago and I thought it was underwhelming. Basically a few figurines spread over the entire store and not much to see, really. Weird given the near-unlimited potential of the various Disney IPs.
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  #6250  
Old Posted May 17, 2021, 10:42 PM
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A very well informed member of Mtlurb says that Apple has leased a new space on Ste-Catherine street in downtown Montreal to replace its present store which is way too small. No detail on the exact location, but it is at an intersection and it should open late in 2022.
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  #6251  
Old Posted May 19, 2021, 12:56 AM
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Hudson's Bay is closing its Topshop & Topman departments this fall. Reported today by retail-insider.com
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  #6252  
Old Posted May 19, 2021, 4:35 AM
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Hudson's Bay is probably closing for good ha. Unless they get in the cannabis game.
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  #6253  
Old Posted May 19, 2021, 5:25 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by urbandreamer View Post
Hudson's Bay is probably closing for good ha. Unless they get in the cannabis game.
I don't even know how they still have so many stores open.


Now about cannabis:

There have been quite a few cannabis stores that have recently opened here in Timmins and a couple opening soon. Is this the case in other communities in Ontario? And I mean just this year.
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  #6254  
Old Posted May 19, 2021, 2:25 PM
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Quote:
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Hudson's Bay is probably closing for good ha. Unless they get in the cannabis game.
Goodness! I hope not!

And I hope not!
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  #6255  
Old Posted May 19, 2021, 2:28 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Loco101 View Post
I don't even know how they still have so many stores open.


Now about cannabis:

There have been quite a few cannabis stores that have recently opened here in Timmins and a couple opening soon. Is this the case in other communities in Ontario? And I mean just this year.
I've heard this commentary from a number of people and observed it too.

I've always suspected that the demand for cannabis was much higher than expected. I've known many high-functioning substance users.

I guess it's also a relatively easy game to get into, cost-wise.
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  #6256  
Old Posted May 19, 2021, 4:01 PM
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Pretty much every vacant Tim Hortons or convenience store I've seen has turned into a cannabis store.
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  #6257  
Old Posted May 19, 2021, 5:23 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SteelTown View Post
Pretty much every vacant Tim Hortons or convenience store I've seen has turned into a cannabis store.
Just saw my first former Starbucks that was being turned into one.
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  #6258  
Old Posted May 19, 2021, 6:41 PM
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Somewhat unrelated to the pot shops.....yet so deeply linked....my favourite kind of pop up shops are opening this week: those sketchy fireworks "stores" that run out of vacant storefronts or in the case of the one I visited this week literally out of the back of a truck. I've love fireworks since I was a kid and my two daughters have birthdays this month, giving me an excuse to set some off!

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  #6259  
Old Posted May 19, 2021, 6:51 PM
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Goodness! I hope not!

And I hope not!
They were my go-to place to buy luggage and blankets. If they close it will be a complete disaster every few years when I need new luggage I would need to buy it from one of those weird luggage stores that survives in dead malls.
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  #6260  
Old Posted Jun 13, 2021, 2:32 AM
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Quote:
Hudson’s Bay Downsizing Downtown Flagship Stores in Canada [Analysis]

Craig Patterson, Retail Insider
June 7, 2021




Downtown Hudson’s Bay flagship stores in Canada are being downsized as parent Hudson’s Bay Company strategizes real estate assets with an eye for redevelopment. So far the downtown Montreal and Calgary Hudson’s Bay stores are confirmed to be downsizing and other flagships are expected to follow if things go as planned with HBC’s development arm Streetworks Development.

The Montreal store, as discussed in April, will be downsized from more than 650,000 square feet to about 295,000 square feet of space over five floors while a 25-storey office tower is added at the back of the site. Last week we reported that in Calgary, the Bay flagship store would be downsized to three floors and we’ll discuss that more below.

Several of Hudson’s Bay’s standalone flagship stores in Canadian cities were relocated after Eaton’s demise in 1999. In Victoria, Edmonton, Regina and Saskatoon, Hudson’s Bay exited larger flagship locations to relocate in former Eaton’s stores which were part of major downtown shopping centres. The downtown Edmonton Hudson’s Bay store shut forever last week in a former Eaton’s space at Edmonton City Centre. In downtown Victoria, Hudson’s Bay moved into the former Eaton Centre shopping complex which was renamed the Bay Centre while the former Bay flagship was converted to a mixed-use residential building. In Saskatoon, Hudson’s Bay moved into a former Eaton’s space at Midtown Plaza which resulted in the repurposing of the standalone Bay store a couple of blocks away into a residential building. In Regina, the former downtown Bay store was repurposed for offices, a bank and a broadcast station after the retailer moved into Eaton’s former space at the downtown Cornwall Centre shopping complex.

In October of 2020 the Hudson’s Bay Company announced a new division called HBC Properties and Investments with Streetworks Development reconceptualizing the downtown flagships as mixed-use buildings. The goal according to HBC is on creating multi-use spaces that feature a range of services and experiences across the workplace, retail, residential and entertainment categories.

The Hudson’s Bay Company owns several large flagship stores in Canada in a joint partnership with RioCan, and these stores could be redeveloped with downsized department store retail spaces. Here’s a breakdown of what might come.

Vancouver: The 636,828 square foot Hudson’s Bay building at the northeast corner of Granville and Georgia Streets in Vancouver spans nine levels with six of those being large above-ground floor plates spanning more than 70,000 square feet each. As with the downtown Montreal flagship, the Vancouver store could be downsized to five levels including the basement putting the store at more than 300,000 square feet, and it’s unclear what will become of a basement level where Topshop/Topman will vacate in the fall. A redevelopment of the building could see the remainder of the historical portion of the building become office space and there’s the potential for one or two large towers to be built on the site, be it for office, residential or other uses.

The Vancouver Hudson’s Bay flagship store opened in 1914 and additions brought it to its current size by 1949. If the store were to downsize, that would mean the end of its large sixth-floor menswear store which is the largest in the city. The downtown Vancouver Hudson’s Bay store attracts some affluent shoppers with its second-floor department The Room which last year also introduced menswear.



Calgary: Few details are known on what will happen to the upper levels of the flagship Calgary Bay store once it is downsized to three levels — the company says for now that they may be used for e-commerce fulfillment. Each of the floor plates in the 448,834 square foot downtown store span about 58,000 square feet which means the three level store would span about 175,000 square feet of retail space. As a comparison, the CF Chinook Centre Bay store spans about 206,500 square feet and the CF Market Mall Bay store is about 200,000 square feet according to landlord Cadillac Fairview.

Several years ago the sixth floor of the downtown Calgary Bay store became an event space operated by Toronto-based Oliver & Bonacini, and part of the main floor of the store was segregated for a 5,000 square foot restaurant called The Guild. The downtown Calgary Bay store lacks the luxury brands found in the Vancouver and Toronto stores with the CF Chinook location having the most robust selection of higher-end brands of any Bay store in Calgary.

Ottawa: The downtown Ottawa Hudson’s Bay flagship store spans about 335,000 square feet and occupies six levels. The former Freiman’s department store could be downsized for a mixed-use project including a site intensification. A Saks OFF 5TH store occupies 34,877 square feet in the basement. The Bay store is connected by a pedestrian overpass to the CF Rideau Centre shopping complex.

Non-RioCan JV Partner Stores

Toronto 44 Bloor Street East: The future of the 340,000 square foot Hudson’s Bay store at the corner of Yonge and Bloor Streets in downtown Toronto is uncertain amid whispers of a redevelopment of the site. An investment surpassing a billion dollars will see upgrades to the subway interchange at the intersection (and below the store) and rumours include a partial demolition of the block including an office tower that could be replaced with a much taller building. Few details are available publicly at this time for the redevelopment of Brookfield-owned Hudson’s Bay Centre.



Toronto Queen Street: The Hudson’s Bay Company sold the flagship Hudson’s Bay store at 176 Yonge Street to Cadillac Fairview in 2014 for $650 million and the massive department store complex became part of the CF Toronto Eaton Centre. Currently, the building houses a Hudson’s Bay department store spanning about 886,000 square feet with a 150,000 square foot Saks Fifth Avenue store-in-store on three floors and a 20,000 square foot Pusateri’s-operated food hall within the building on the PATH subway level. Each floor plate of the Queen Street Hudson’s Bay store, which was once occupied by iconic retailer Simpsons, exceeds 100,000 square feet. About 34,000 square feet of valuable main floor retail space could be added if Saks were to close.

There’s a possibility that Cadillac Fairview and Hudson’s Bay could partner to redevelop the Queen Street building by adding at least one tower to the site to unlock value through density. The Queen Street Bay store’s sales prior to the pandemic were said to be slightly higher than that of Simpsons which occupied the building in 1979 — and that’s not taking inflation into account. In today’s dollars, Simpsons would have sold nearly $700 million annually in that one store alone, and the Bay’s sales are said to be a fraction of that.



Winnipeg: The 655,755 downtown Winnipeg Hudson’s Bay flagship store shut forever in November of 2020, and HBC wanted nothing to do with it after declaring that the building was a liability rather than an asset. RioCan has no ownership in the building and the building’s future is in discussion. For a time it served as HBC’s primary flagship location until a new flagship opened at 44 Bloor Street West in 1974.

HBC ground leases – potential redevelopment with RioCan

The Hudson’s Bay Company also has ground leases with several of its suburban stores which means that redevelopment could be possible at some point. Suburban RioCan partner stores include Yorkdale in Toronto, Scarborough Town Centre in Toronto, Square One in Mississauga, CF Carrefour Laval near Montreal, CF Promenades St. Bruno near Montreal, and Devonshire Mall in Windsor. Two ground lease Bay locations not jointly held by RioCan include the Centre Laval Bay store near Montreal as well as the Centrepoint store in Toronto.

A missed opportunity?

The downsizings of Hudson’s Bay’s downtown stores come at a time when leading urban department stores in Europe and Asia have in some instances actually been expanding in size to offer attractions and food-and-beverage options to gain shoppers and keep them in-store. There are several examples of incredible department stores globally, some selling more than $1 billion annually in a single location. There are currently no department stores in North America with single locations selling that amount except for possibly Macy’s on Herald Square in Manhattan.

In London, Selfridges occupies a 540,000 square foot store that expanded in 2012. The vibrant and popular store features 20 food and beverage options ranging from champaign bars to full-sized restaurants, and the store also includes such unique features as a movie theatre and skateboarding park. Iconic Harrod’s in London features an expansive food hall, numerous restaurants, and many global brand stores including many luxury brand concessions. Galeries Lafaytette and Printemps in Paris have both expanded over the years into multiple buildings to house a vast assortment of brands and services, and both are incredible stores in their brand offerings. Several years ago the Ka De We store in Berlin and de Bijenkorf in Amsterdam also saw expansions and renovations, as did the popular Castellana flagship branch of the El Cortes Ingles chain in Madrid.

In South Korea, several large department stores sell well in excess of a billion dollars annually under the Shinsegae and Lotte banners — these massive stores include ample food and beverage options as well as exciting interiors and brands. China and Japan are home to numerous large and impressive department stores that are very popular. Concessions and buzzy pop-ups are common among all of the international stores mentioned above.

The David Jones department store in downtown Sydney Australia unveiled an incredible women’s footwear hall in 2018 on its seventh floor housing a vast assortment of brands as well as concessions for many of the world’s top luxury brands. Last year a renovated main floor revealed boutiques for big brands including Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Dior and several others. The footwear hall is particularly notable given its size, spanning more than 40,000 square feet. Selfridges, Galeries Lafayette, Printemps and several other global department store flagships have also opened equally impressive shoe departments which have become attractions for locals and tourists.

Hudson’s Bay has the opportunity to activate its flagship stores with unique offerings including food-and-beverage options and attractions such as massive footwear halls, however, the downsizing of the Canadian flagship stores will limit this potential. It remains to be seen what the renovated smaller downtown flagship Hudson’s Bay stores will look and function like, and from what we’ve heard so far these will be showrooms displaying product with a focus on digital purchases. Hudson’s Bay has said that its stores in the future will be ‘experiential’ with few details.

We will follow up on this article when we learn more about the future of Hudson’s Bay’s downtown flagship stores including what they might do to attract customers. One thing that is becoming apparent is none of these Bay stores in the future will be as large as the global flagship department stores overseas that have been draws for shoppers from around the world. Feel free to let us know your comments below.
https://retail-insider.com/retail-in...nada-analysis/
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