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  #2081  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2011, 5:36 AM
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Originally Posted by freeweed View Post
Unless your buddies have been working the door for 40 years, my point is that all you're seeing is the current swing of the pendulum.

Trust me, when our dollar was 60 cents (and no minimum drink prices in Winnipeg... ah 25 cent draft nights) we had a LOT of Americans coming up to drink. I can't see anything that would be drawing even more now.
Well, I'm referring to the last 10 or so years. I refer to them as the "bar bouncer professionals" since they have made a profession out of bar bouncing. And within that time, yes, they have seen great increases in young Americans coming to Winnipeg to party it up, even during this last recession.

This is specifically what I'm referring to.
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  #2082  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2011, 8:35 AM
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probably just a wave of americans at "that" age isn't there some stat that that age group is huge the kids of generation X whose generation is outnumbering their parents - the xer's
andthey wanna drink in a bar and party which they porbably cant do so easily back home
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  #2083  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2011, 2:36 PM
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probably just a wave of americans at "that" age isn't there some stat that that age group is huge the kids of generation X whose generation is outnumbering their parents - the xer's
andthey wanna drink in a bar and party which they porbably cant do so easily back home
Yes, I know. That is the point of my comment as to why they come up here.
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  #2084  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2011, 3:23 PM
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Originally Posted by Duke-Of-Waterloo View Post
Why is Angelina Jolie in this render?


I guess Paris Hilton has shopped at Yorkdale in the past, so it is possible...
God, that is too funny.

Zarrah and one of those blond pittspawn is there too!
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  #2085  
Old Posted Feb 2, 2011, 8:00 PM
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http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe...rticle1891602/

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The chain, which has recently introduced numerous chic clothing brands in an effort to change its image, says it is partnering with upscale restaurant operator Oliver & Bonacini and food services company Compass Group Canada.

The company says it wants to attract "die-hard foodies" while offering higher quality options to shoppers.

Ontario-based Oliver & Bonacini will focus on flagship locations in major Canadian cities while Compass will handle technology and facelifts at smaller stores.
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  #2086  
Old Posted Feb 4, 2011, 11:04 PM
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Tim Hortons signs deal with Apparel Group to expand in Persian Gulf region

By The Canadian Press | The Canadian Press

OAKVILLE, Ont. - Tim Hortons (TSX:THI) is looking to the Persian Gulf for growth.


The coffee shop chain signed a master license agreement Friday with Dubai-based Apparel Group to open up to 120 restaurants in the Persian Gulf region over five years.

The deal covers the Gulf Co-operation Council which includes the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait and Oman.

Tim Hortons president and chief executive Don Schroeder said Canada and the United States remain the company's main drivers of growth but "there is an opportunity over the long-term to explore international opportunities and seed the Tim Hortons brand in various markets outside of North America."

The locations will be developed and operated by Apparel with five locations open this year.

"Our partners at Apparel have considerable knowledge of the local markets and consumer expectations and have introduced world-leading brands to the GCC," Schroeder said in a statement.

Apparel Group operates over 50 brands including Tommy Hilfiger, Kenneth Cole and Cold Stone Creamery with more than 600 stores in 14 countries.

Tim Hortons has more than 3,600 locations in Canada and the United States.

Late last year, Tim Hortons said it would shutter some 54 locations in New England, a money-losing market for the company.

...

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/tim-hortons...15743-360.html
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  #2087  
Old Posted Feb 5, 2011, 2:17 AM
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Man, those people better get used quick to weak watery coughee.
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  #2088  
Old Posted Feb 12, 2011, 9:56 AM
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7 For All Mankind to open first Canadian store in Calgary's Chinook Centre

BY MARIO TONEGUZZI, CALGARY HERALD

CALGARY — Another high-profile American retailer will open a new location at Chinook Centre.

The popular shopping centre in southwest Calgary will be home for 7 For All Mankind beginning March 9 as the Los Angeles-based premium denim-lifestyle brand aggressively expands with its first fully-owned stores in Canada.

The brand has been available in Canada since 2003 through high-end department stores including Holt Renfrew, Harry Rosen and Simons. But the company said it made a decision to focus on a "direct to consumer strategy due to the Canadian consumers' increasing demand" and "the strong, resilient buoyancy of the Canadian market."

It is planning to open 10 to 15 stores in mall locations within the next five years. Currently the brand operates 119 stores worldwide.

"The new Canadian stores will feature design characteristics similar to other 7 For All Mankind retail locations but will also uphold a regional feel," it said in a news release. "7 For All Mankind will offer shoppers a broad assortment of the brand's collection for men and women including denim, sportswear, and eyewear."

The company was founded in 2000.

Darryl Schmidt, vice-president of leasing at Cadillac Fairview Corp. Ltd., said the American retailer's decision to make Calgary the launching point for Canada was primarily driven by two factors.

...

Read more: http://www.calgaryherald.com/Mankind...#ixzz1DjksYS4L
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  #2089  
Old Posted Feb 12, 2011, 8:35 PM
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zumiez is opening in Park Royal here in Vancouver...

U.S. retail invasion gathers pace

Two more major U.S. retailers have confirmed they will open stores in Canada this year, beating out giant American discounter Target Corp. by almost two years and highlighting the frenzy of foreign demand for domestic mall space.

Express Inc., the sixth-largest American fashion chain, will open its first six stores in Canada this year and a total of 50 in five years, executive vice-president Matt Moellering said.

Zumiez Inc., the hot skateboard apparel retailer that considered bidding for Canadian rival West 49 last year, is also launching its first outlets here this year.

“Everything we’ve seen and read from other retailers and the uniqueness of our business model tells us we will be very successful up there,” Trevor Lang, chief financial officer at the Everett, Wash.-based chain, told analysts recently. It will start with a “handful” of stores in Canada this year before getting “more aggressive.”

The impending entry of new chains underscores the growing appeal of the Canadian retailing landscape in an economy more buoyant than many U.S. and European markets. But it also puts pressure on existing merchants to raise their game and snag quality locations in an increasingly tight retail property market.

“The supply side of the equation is changing,” said Donald Marleau, a credit analyst at Standard & Poor’s. “It means more selection for consumers in virtually all segments … That’s where the Canadian retailers will find themselves walking the tightrope between a potentially difficult cost environment and competition that is just getting more and more intense.”

It all points to a challenging 2011 for retailers, Mr. Marleau said. The merchandising market will probably grow modestly by about 3 per cent this year, roughly the same as in 2010, he estimated. At the same time, consumers – grappling with record debt levels – are demanding low prices while retailers struggle with higher costs for goods.

Nevertheless, the economics of Canadian retailing can be attractive. Domestic retailers generated $578 of sales per square foot in malls – excluding department-store anchor tenants – compared with $398 (U.S.) among U.S. mall retailers, according to September figures from the International Council of Shopping Centers.

In a bid to cash in on the Canadian market, Target Corp. of Minneapolis announced last week a $1.8-billion (Canadian) deal to buy most of the Zellers stores and convert many of them to the Target banner by early 2013. Rival Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and home improvement specialist Lowe’s Cos. are among U.S. retailers expanding here this year.

“Canadian retailers will just have to be just a bit more focused,” said Rick Chad of executive recruiter Chad Management Group. Sears Canada could be hurt the most, he added. Weighed down by weakening results, Sears competes head-on with the newcomers.

Express of Columbus, Ohio, which runs more than 580 stores catering to twenty-somethings, is set to add further pressure on incumbents. A “rising star” that competes with such upscale fashion chains as J. Crew – which is also launching in Canada this year – and Gap Inc.’s Banana Republic, Express is breathing new life into its operations, said Neely Tamminga, senior research analyst at Piper Jaffray & Co. in Minneapolis. It has a formula of testing out-of-season products to keep on top of trends and minimizing the need to slash prices on unpopular merchandise, she said.

...

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repor...rticle1877963/
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  #2090  
Old Posted Feb 12, 2011, 8:42 PM
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according to the express career web site they are hiring for a toronto store at Fairview Mall and for a store in Hamilton at Limeridge mall
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Last edited by SpongeG; Feb 12, 2011 at 8:55 PM.
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  #2091  
Old Posted Feb 20, 2011, 5:38 PM
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The little big-box stores that could
SIRI AGRELL — URBAN AFFAIRS REPORTER
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Feb. 18, 2011 7:26PM EST
Last updated Saturday, Feb. 19, 2011 9:55PM EST

When Steven Alikakos was negotiating the lease for the basement space of 96 Spadina Ave., a few concessions were required on both sides.

The new tenant wanted access to a back-alley loading dock, where palettes of wrapping paper, plastic toys and seasonal decor could be dropped on a regular basis.

The landlord had a somewhat more delicate request.

“They had to change their signage,” said Mr. Alikakos, the senior vice-president of retail Canada for commercial real-estate player DTZ Barnicke. “A forty-foot Dollarama sign on the side of the building would have completely altered that historic brick-and-beam building.”

With suburban growth slowed and city populations soaring, stores such as Wal-Mart, Loblaw and Target are changing their focus, modifying their big-box model to squeeze into the high-density Toronto core. And even if some urban shoppers cringe at the idea, swearing they will never forsake their neighbourhood bistros and boutiques for Milestones and HomeSense, the fact of the matter is that the success of these stores has already been written in receipts.

“The numbers are extremely compelling,” said Ed Sonshine, chief executive officer of shopping-mall developer RioCan. “It costs a lot more to be in the city, but places like Winners have proven that it’s well worth it.”

The major hindrance to big-box expansion in Toronto has not been attracting customers, but actually finding space big enough to accommodate even miniature versions of stores known primarily for their scale.

“They’re used to building a one-storey store that’s 100,000 feet with another seven acres of parking,” said Mr. Sonshine. “That just is impossible in the city. Even if you could find it, you could never afford it.”

In the U.S., the urban big-box invasion has been abetted by the fact that many large cities were once home to a large number of department stores, whose expansive footprints can be easily taken over and modernized.

In Toronto, stores are settling for space in the 8,000-to-20,000-square-foot range, with the understanding that city shoppers won’t necessarily buy as much, but they’ll come back more often.

The new Dollarama on Spadina is 9,700 sq. ft. below sidewalk level, marked with three relatively demure signs. But even with its low-profile look, the store’s midday lineups have demonstrated a surprising downtown demand for paper plates and party supplies.

Others are staking a claim to large-scale space that has not historically been associated with high-volume retail.

In December, Mr. Sonshine’s company bought a site on Dupont Street that is currently home to high-end car dealer Grand Touring Automobiles. He sees Dupont, with its numerous warehouse-scale buildings, as a potential “power centre” for Toronto big-box retail.

Other brands have been similarly creative in their choices.

In 2009, Leon’s moved into the Roundhouse and this summer, Crate & Barrel offshoot CB2 will open in the former Big Bop building at Queen and Bathurst, bringing young condo dwellers into a space that was once the sole domain of disaffected punks and underage drinkers.

Even the club district is being considered retail friendly, with the U.S. department store Marshalls reportedly eyeing the former location of Circa nightclub on John Street.

But because existing buildings can be hard to modify for a large-scale retailer, many brands are focusing instead on the opportunities of new build condominiums.

At Queen Street West and Portland, Mr. Sonshine’s RioCan is building a development that will house a 45,000-sq.-ft. Loblaws, an 8,000-sq.-ft. Joe Fresh and a 29,000-sq.-ft. Winners outlet in the base of a condo tower.

And in the Avalon condo being built at Yonge and Gerrard Streets, a 40,000-sq.-ft. Bed, Bath & Beyond will move in, along with a large-format Alice Fazooli’s.

Tony Hernandez, director of the Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity at Ryerson University, said these retailers are desperate to follow the population growth, and this means thinking differently about the kind of stores they open, and where they go.

“They have to be a bit more inventive, and that’s the challenge,” he said.

Downtown iterations of supermarket chains Sobeys and Loblaws have been successful by selling a large amount of prepared food, while scaling back the diaper and baking aisles.

Other retailers have had to drastically rethink the layout of their stores in an urban market, and modify their delivery methods for locations where private loading docks are not always an option.

The new shopping centre at Queen and Portland was built with underground loading facilities, while some big-box stores are investing in fleets of smaller delivery trucks that can more easily navigate city streets.

The next phase of big-box growth in Toronto will be vertical, said Mr. Hernandez, with stores stacked on top of one another like brightly coloured Lego blocks.

“It’s maximizing the use of the footprint,” he said. “The challenge with that is consumers. Do you want to go up to the fourth floor to shop?”

Of course, not every downtown big box works. Canadian Tire, which has pioneered large-scale urban retail, has struggled with its location at Bay and Dundas Streets.

Neighbourhoods outside of the core are more challenging to infiltrate, with shoppers less likely to embrace a Joe Fresh at Queen and Logan than they would be at Queen and Bay.

Somewhat surprisingly, John Kiru, executive director of the Toronto Association of Business Improvement Areas said his members welcome brand names, which bring increased foot traffic and membership revenue to a shopping district.

“I think the knee-jerk reaction is, ‘Oh my god, these guys are going to wipe us out,’” he said. “Quite frankly we could never match the marketing and promotion budgets that these operators have.”

But some big-box brands still present too large a psychological hurdle for Toronto shoppers. While we might be salivating over the arrival of Target, the prospect of a downtown Wal-Mart is decidedly less popular.

In 2009, the Ontario Municipal Board backed the city in blocking the development of a Wal-Mart near the intersection of Lake Shore Boulevard and Leslie Street after a concerted neighbourhood campaign.

The chain continues to experiment with smaller, more subtle urban models in U.S. cities, and most commercial developers believe it is only a matter of time before it finds its way onto downtown Toronto streets, popping up under shoppers’ feet like the Spadina Dollarama.

Mr. Alikakos said he can’t think of a big box brand that would not be accepted somewhere in Toronto.

“I really don’t know if there are any,” he said. “I think the downtown shopper has a similar mentality as somebody in Oakville or Pickering or Markham or Vaughan. Everybody wants the same thing, and that’s to save money.”
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  #2092  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2011, 8:46 AM
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Great news! Hopefully all Canadian stores will close and we'll be completely inundated by U.S. franchises! After all, we all know that Canadians suck at everything.. we can't even market to ourselves.

No need to shop at a mall in Cleveland when every Canadian city's retail is the exact same as every mall in Cleveland!

Bravo Canada!! We've come such a long way from being an independant country.. or a country with any meaningful aspirations.
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  #2093  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2011, 9:50 AM
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the US knows how to retail!
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  #2094  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2011, 9:59 AM
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Originally Posted by SpongeG View Post
the US knows how to retail!
To you, apparently.
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  #2095  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2011, 1:05 PM
Taeolas Taeolas is offline
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Originally Posted by canarob View Post
The little big-box stores that could
SIRI AGRELL — URBAN AFFAIRS REPORTER
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Feb. 18, 2011 7:26PM EST
Last updated Saturday, Feb. 19, 2011 9:55PM EST

*snip*
Not sure what the big deal is about that. I know Ottawa has (had?) the Giant Tiger in the first floor and basement space just off the Byward market for years. Not to mention there was the Zellers right in Ottawa's downtown core as well (IIRC, isn't there a Zellers or two in Montreal's underground city? I've only passed through there once or twice a decade ago but I could've sworn I saw one down there). Just because it may be arriving to Toronto for the first (yeah right) time doesn't mean it's a 'new' development in retail.
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  #2096  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2011, 1:53 PM
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^Plaza Alexis Nihon has a Zellers (on the underground city).
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  #2097  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2011, 3:03 PM
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Originally Posted by habfanman View Post
To you, apparently.
To most North Americans!
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  #2098  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2011, 3:11 PM
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Originally Posted by SpongeG View Post
the US knows how to retail!
There are a few retailers I'd love to see expand into Canada:

Uniqlo (just for the jeans but their Jil Sander collaboration is pretty great too)

Ben Sherman

Original Penguin (which doesn't even ship to Canada)



Glad we now have a Fred Perry and a Scotch and Soda.
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  #2099  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2011, 4:19 PM
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Originally Posted by Gerrard View Post
There are a few retailers I'd love to see expand into Canada:

Uniqlo (just for the jeans but their Jil Sander collaboration is pretty great too)

Ben Sherman

Original Penguin (which doesn't even ship to Canada)



Glad we now have a Fred Perry and a Scotch and Soda.
They sell some Ben Sherman at the Bay! not a big collection but they update it every two weeks.
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  #2100  
Old Posted Feb 22, 2011, 4:56 PM
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Originally Posted by SpikePhanta View Post
They sell some Ben Sherman at the Bay! not a big collection but they update it every two weeks.
Yeah I know. Plenty of retailers sell the stuff. Just would like a stand alone shop.

I also like Rugby by Ralph Lauren. Which is more fitted and younger than Polo.
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