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This page was last edited on 3 February 2025, at 15:09 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Addition Elle — Plus sized clothing store; Beaver Lumber — hardware/lumber store chain; Big V - Pharmacy; BP Canada — Convenience store; Bi-Way — discount clothing store chain; Blockbuster Video — Canadian unit of US-based video rental shop chain; The Book Room — At the time of its closing in 2008, it was the oldest bookstore in Canada.
It was originally named the Simpson's Department Store, and operated as the flagship store of the Simpsons department store chain from 1895–1991. It became a flagship store of its successor, The Bay, in 1991 (rebranded to Hudson's Bay in 2013). The building was retrofitted to house the first Saks Fifth Avenue department store in Canada in 2016.
Toronto Premium Outlets is an outlet mall in Halton Hills, Ontario, Canada. Being the first Premium Outlet Center in Canada, [ 1 ] and the first conglomeration of stores of its type in that nation, [ 2 ] the facility opened on Thursday, August 1, 2013. [ 3 ]
The Toronto Eaton Centre (see above) is connected to the complex. The complex has 1,200 stores, and according to Guinness World Records, the Path is the largest underground shopping complex in the world, with 371,600 m 2 (4,000,000 sq ft) of retail space. [4] Bay Adelaide Centre (Bay Street and Adelaide Street West)
Retailer had a downtown Edmonton store since 1950. [18] Hudson's Bay Company: department: May 2020: 1: Closure of a 207-year-old location [2] [19] Lowe's Canada: department December 2023 - [20] Jean Machine: clothing: November 2018: 24: Remaining stores. [21] Mariposa: clothing: September 2008: Bankruptcy due to the Financial crisis of 2007 ...
Converted from a former Eaton's store. Ontario: Toronto: Hudson's Bay Centre: Hudson's Bay Centre: 31,800 m 2 (342,000 sq ft) [56] 1974 2022 This was Toronto's flagship store until 1991, when Hudson's Bay Queen Street was opened. The store was closed on 13 May 2022. [41] Saskatchewan: Saskatoon: J.F. Cairns Department Store
Roots store in Yorkdale Mall, Toronto Roots store on Bloor St. in Toronto. As the demand for Roots' negative-heel shoes continued, the Roots factory expanded. By the fall of 1975, the factory that had made only 30 pairs of shoes a day was making more than 2,000. [12] Later that year, Roots decided to experiment with casual apparel. [13]